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Contact-dependent interbacterial competition is a common strategy used by bacteria to fight for their ecological niches. Interbacterial competition is monitored by a competition assay involving co-culturing the attacker and the recipient bacterial cells on agar, followed by recovery of the surviving recipient cells. Conventional interbacterial competition assays rely on serial dilution, plate spreading, and colony counting experiments for the readout. The high demand for time and labor in a competition assay limits its use for large-scale screening. However, a high-throughput interbacterial competition screening method is required to screen genetic factors involved in an interbacterial competition. Here, using as an attacker and as a recipient, we developed a robust, fast, efficient, and high-throughput type VI secretion system-dependent interbacterial competition screening platform. This system allows for 96 simultaneous competition assays without the need for serial dilution and plate spreading. Data analysis of this system relies on only direct and straightforward colony counting. This platform may be easily adapted to identify novel factors involved in any contact-dependent interbacterial competition systems.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.21769/BioProtoc.3736 | DOI Listing |
mLife
August 2025
Department of Biochemistry School of Medicine, SUSTech Homeostatic Medicine Institute, Southern University of Science and Technology Shenzhen China.
, an opportunistic pathogen, often encodes Type VI Secretion System (T6SS) genes. However, the specific functions of T6SS, particularly in the context of clinical strains, remain poorly understood. In this study, we characterize a multi-drug-resistant strain, AH54, which possesses a complete and functional T6SS, composed of a structural cluster and two homologous auxiliary clusters (Aux1 and Aux2).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
September 2025
Department of Functional Biology, Microbiology Area, IUOPA and ISPA, Faculty of Medicine, Universidad de Oviedo, c/Julian Claveria 6, Oviedo, 33006, Spain.
Streptomycetes are biotechnologically valuable bacteria with complex cell division that produce extracellular vesicles (EVs), typically nanometre-sized but can reach 2.5 μm in diameter. Streptomyces also produce dividing wall-deficient L-forms (0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrends Microbiol
August 2025
Host-Pathogen Interactions Group, School of Biochemistry and Immunology, Trinity Biomedical Sciences Institute, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin 2, Ireland. Electronic address:
Staphylococcus aureus is a formidable pathogen and major challenge to human health. However, the bacterium is dichotomous and also acts as an asymptomatic coloniser. Given its ubiquity, every individual has been exposed to the bacterium, which may 'tune' the host immune system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrobiology (Reading)
August 2025
Department of Biology, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Competition assays are a mainstay of modern microbiology, offering a simple and cost-effective means to quantify microbe-microbe interactions . Here, we demonstrate a key weakness of this method that arises when competing microbes interact via toxins, such as those secreted via the type VI secretion system (T6SS). Time-lapse microscopy reveals that T6SS-armed bacteria can maintain lethal T6SS activity against target cells, even under selective conditions intended to eliminate .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
July 2025
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.
Polymicrobial communities where bacteria must compete with each other to persist can serve as a source of uncharacterized antibacterial compounds to develop drugs for the treatment of drug-resistant infections. This study investigates interbacterial competition between bacteria found in the oral cavity, where species comprise a large portion of the resident oral microbiota and is a pathobiont that is commonly found in root canal infections. We used co-cultures to determine whether oral Streptococci and compete with each other.
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