Crosstalk between polymorphic toxin-immunity systems involved in kin discrimination

ABSTRACT Bacterial genomes contain a surprisingly large number of toxin systems that are neutralized by specific cognate antitoxins or immunity factors. Their high abundance is even apparent in common Escherichia coli K12 cloning strains, which contain at least 36 toxin-antitoxin systems, while othe...

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Main Authors: Michael L. Weltzer, Tingting Guo, Daniel Wall
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Microbiology 2025-05-01
Series:mBio
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Online Access:https://journals.asm.org/doi/10.1128/mbio.00468-25
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author Michael L. Weltzer
Tingting Guo
Daniel Wall
author_facet Michael L. Weltzer
Tingting Guo
Daniel Wall
author_sort Michael L. Weltzer
collection DOAJ
description ABSTRACT Bacterial genomes contain a surprisingly large number of toxin systems that are neutralized by specific cognate antitoxins or immunity factors. Their high abundance is even apparent in common Escherichia coli K12 cloning strains, which contain at least 36 toxin-antitoxin systems, while other bacteria frequently contain more. These numbers raise two key questions: why are they so numerous, and to what extent do toxin systems interact or interfere with one another? Recently in mBio, Wang and co-workers addressed these questions in the social bacterium Myxococcus xanthus, where they investigated crosstalk between four homologous toxin-immunity loci involved in kin discrimination. Here, the type VI secretion system delivers toxins into neighboring myxobacterial cells (F. Wang, J. Luo, Z. Zhang, Y. Liu, et al., mBio e03902-24, 2025, https://doi.org/10.1128/mbio.03902-24). If the target cell is clonal and expresses a complete set of cognate immunity proteins—which are not themselves transferred—the cell is protected. However, if immunity is incomplete, the cell is poisoned.
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spelling doaj-art-d48392cd629d4a5db7e55baffdd940c72025-08-20T02:25:02ZengAmerican Society for MicrobiologymBio2150-75112025-05-0116510.1128/mbio.00468-25Crosstalk between polymorphic toxin-immunity systems involved in kin discriminationMichael L. Weltzer0Tingting Guo1Daniel Wall2Department of Molecular Biology, University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming, USADepartment of Molecular Biology, University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming, USADepartment of Molecular Biology, University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming, USAABSTRACT Bacterial genomes contain a surprisingly large number of toxin systems that are neutralized by specific cognate antitoxins or immunity factors. Their high abundance is even apparent in common Escherichia coli K12 cloning strains, which contain at least 36 toxin-antitoxin systems, while other bacteria frequently contain more. These numbers raise two key questions: why are they so numerous, and to what extent do toxin systems interact or interfere with one another? Recently in mBio, Wang and co-workers addressed these questions in the social bacterium Myxococcus xanthus, where they investigated crosstalk between four homologous toxin-immunity loci involved in kin discrimination. Here, the type VI secretion system delivers toxins into neighboring myxobacterial cells (F. Wang, J. Luo, Z. Zhang, Y. Liu, et al., mBio e03902-24, 2025, https://doi.org/10.1128/mbio.03902-24). If the target cell is clonal and expresses a complete set of cognate immunity proteins—which are not themselves transferred—the cell is protected. However, if immunity is incomplete, the cell is poisoned.https://journals.asm.org/doi/10.1128/mbio.00468-25Myxococcus xanthuspolymorphic toxinstype VI secretion systemouter membrane exchangekin discriminationnoncognate immunity
spellingShingle Michael L. Weltzer
Tingting Guo
Daniel Wall
Crosstalk between polymorphic toxin-immunity systems involved in kin discrimination
mBio
Myxococcus xanthus
polymorphic toxins
type VI secretion system
outer membrane exchange
kin discrimination
noncognate immunity
title Crosstalk between polymorphic toxin-immunity systems involved in kin discrimination
title_full Crosstalk between polymorphic toxin-immunity systems involved in kin discrimination
title_fullStr Crosstalk between polymorphic toxin-immunity systems involved in kin discrimination
title_full_unstemmed Crosstalk between polymorphic toxin-immunity systems involved in kin discrimination
title_short Crosstalk between polymorphic toxin-immunity systems involved in kin discrimination
title_sort crosstalk between polymorphic toxin immunity systems involved in kin discrimination
topic Myxococcus xanthus
polymorphic toxins
type VI secretion system
outer membrane exchange
kin discrimination
noncognate immunity
url https://journals.asm.org/doi/10.1128/mbio.00468-25
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AT tingtingguo crosstalkbetweenpolymorphictoxinimmunitysystemsinvolvedinkindiscrimination
AT danielwall crosstalkbetweenpolymorphictoxinimmunitysystemsinvolvedinkindiscrimination