Microbial Proteomics:
A Study on Strategies for Forming Multicellular Organisms via Cell Aggregation
To form multicellular organisms via cell aggregation, cells must distinguish self from nonself to form a cooperative tissue. In this study, myxobacteria serve as model organisms for making these transitions. In this project we tested the role of the TraAB kin recognition system for a role in cell–cell cooperation because these cell surface receptors mediate the bidirectional exchange of proteins and lipids between cells. Strikingly, cells that adapted to environmental stresses shared their beneficial trait with naïve kin in a TraAB-dependent manner. Surprisingly, donor cells also benefited by apparently establishing harmony in the population when confronted with stress. We conclude that TraAB plays diverse roles in myxobacterial multicellular behaviors including their ability to cooperate.
Subedi, Kalpana, Pravas C. Roy, Brandon Saiz, Franco Basile, and Daniel Wall. “Cell–Cell Transfer of Adaptation Traits Benefits Kin and Actor in a Cooperative Microbe.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 121, no. 30 (July 23, 2024): e2402559121.

This work was supported by grants from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences R35GM140886 to D.Wall and P20GM103432 from the NIH. Acquisition of the high-resolution LC-MS/MS instrument was funded by a NSF EPSCoR RII Track-1 grant (NSF 1655726).



