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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2004, p . 4159-4167, Vol . 186,
No . 13
Extracellular Proteolytic Activity Plays a Central Role in Swarming Motility in
Bacillus subtilis
Mariah Bindel Connelly,1,2* Glenn M .
Young,2,3 and Alan Sloma1
Novozymes Biotech, Inc.,1 Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Graduate Group,2 Department of Food Science and Technology,
University of California, Davis, California 956163
Received 12 February 2004/ Accepted 26 March 2004
Natural isolates of Bacillus subtilis exhibit a robust multicellular
behavior known as swarming . A form of motility, swarming is
characterized by a rapid, coordinated progression of a bacterial
population across a surface . As a collective bacterial process,
swarming is often associated with biofilm formation and has been
linked to virulence factor expression in pathogenic bacteria . While
the swarming phenotype has been well documented for Bacillus
species, an understanding of the molecular mechanisms responsible
remains largely isolated to gram-negative bacteria . To better
understand how swarming is controlled in members of the genus
Bacillus, we investigated the effect of a series of gene deletions
on swarm motility . Our analysis revealed that a strain deficient
for the production of surfactin and extracellular proteolytic
activity did not swarm or form biofilm . While it is known that
surfactin, a lipoprotein surfactant, functions in swarming motility
by reducing surface tension, this is the first report demonstrating
that general extracellular protease activity also has an important
function . These results not only help to define the factors involved
in eliciting swarm migration but support the idea that swarming and
biofilm formation may have overlapping control mechanisms .
It has long been recognized that bacteria can facilitate their growth
and survival by forming cooperative, multicellular communities that
are most often associated with surfaces (38) . Such organized
populations of microorganisms have been found in both clinical
and environmental settings, where they have positive and negative
impacts on human health and environmental ecology (4,
24) . For these reasons, bacterial multicellularity
is being actively studied, and while biofilms are most commonly
ascribed to this type of behavior, swarming is another primary
example of a surface-associated collective bacterial process . A form
of migration, swarming facilitates the rapid colonization of surfaces
by a population of bacteria . Swarming motility has been linked with
biofilm formation, antibiotic resistance, and virulence factor
production (1, 21,
39) . Many of the virulence factors reported to be associated
with the occurrence of swarming are exoenzymes and, more specifically,
extracellular proteases (12, 47) .
While a strong link between swarming, extracellular protease
production, and pathogenesis has been noted (12,
44, 47), only a few studies have focused
on the requirement of proteases for swarm motility . In a recent
investigation, the extracellular protease Epr was found to be
essential for swarming motility in the domesticated Bacillus
subtilis laboratory strain 168 (6) . Since laboratory
strains of B . subtilis have been shown to exhibit less-robust
biofilm formation and swarm motility (3,
20), we were interested in investigating whether
Epr and other extracellular proteases were involved in swarming in an
undomesticated B . subtilis strain .
First described more than a century ago for the gram-negative
organism Proteus, swarming motility has now been demonstrated
for many different genera of bacteria (9, 10,
39) . Several factors appear to be important in
eliciting a swarming phenotype: cell density, nutrient content, and
viscosity of the of the medium are among the most well defined (10,
14, 28) . In response to these
factors, cells become hyperflagellated and elongated and establish
groups, or "rafts," of cells through cell-to-cell contacts, finally
migrating as microcolonies (16) . The swarming
phenotype has been well documented for certain Bacillus species;
however, the underlying mechanism responsible is just beginning
to be studied (11, 16, 20,
37) . For B . subtilis, the differentiated
swarmer cell is highly adapted for surface colonization, featuring a
considerable increase in flagellar biosynthesis and the secretion of
a slime layer, both of which aid in translocation . In this work we
established that a third component, extracellular protease activity,
is important for swarm motility in an undomesticated isolate of B .
subtilis . Greater than 95% of the extracellular proteolytic
activity in B . subtilis is contributed by the two major
extracellular proteases, subtilisin (AprE) and neutral
metalloprotease E (NprE) (33) . Five minor extracellular or
cell-wall-associated proteases, Epr, Vpr, Bpr, Mpr, and WprA, are
responsible for most of the remaining activity (42) .
A strain compromised for the production of all of the above proteases
was unable to swarm . Additionally, we observed that extracellular
protease activity was critical for biofilm formation . The null
phenotypes exhibited by a protease-deficient strain, under both
swarming and biofilm-forming conditions, present the possibility that
the mechanisms involved in regulating swarming and biofilm formation
may overlap .
Strains, growth conditions, and plasmids. The strains and
plasmids used in this study are described in Table 1 .
All B . subtilis strains, except 168, were derived from the
wild-type strain A164 (ATCC 6051a) . Escherichia coli strains
were used for cloning and plasmid propagation .
| TABLE 1 . B . subtilis strains and swarm motility phenotypes
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Both the B . subtilis and E . coli strains were propagated in
Luria-Burtani (LB) medium or on LB plates containing 1.5% agar
at 37°C . LB medium for E . coli was supplemented with ampicillin
(100 µg/ml) when necessary . B . subtilis was made competent
by the method of Anagnostopoulos and Spizizen (2) . When
a plasmid containing the erythromycin resistance gene (ermC)
was used for transformation in B . subtilis, erythromycin
resistance was induced by adding 0.2 µg of erythromycin per ml to the
liquid culture and incubating for 30 min at 37°C prior to
plating . Tryptose blood agar base (TBAB) (Difco, Detriot, Mich.)
plates supplemented with erythromycin (1 µg/ml) and lincomycin (25
µg/ml) were used for B . subtilis transformations . Unless
stated otherwise, swimming and swarming motilities were analyzed on
LB plates solidified with 0.3 and 0.7% agar (Difco), respectively .
When indicated, swarm motility was tested on Spizizen's minimal
medium (15) solidified with 0.7% agar (Difco) .
The E . coli/B . subtilis shuttle vector pNNB194 (41)
was used as the backbone for all gene deletion and replacement
constructs (Table 2) . This plasmid has an E .
coli origin of replication, a temperature-sensitive B .
subtilis origin of replication, an ampicillin resistance gene (bla)
for selection in E . coli, and an erythromycin resistance gene
(ermC) for selection in B . subtilis . Each gene deletion
construct contained approximately 800 bp of DNA homologous to the
region flanking the deletion . This was achieved by first PCR
amplifying 400 bp at the 5' and 3' ends of each gene to be deleted .
The primers used for each PCR are described in Table 3 .
The first two primers listed for each plasmid and the last two were
used in separate PCRs with A164 genomic DNA as the template . The two
PCR fragments obtained were then joined using splicing by overlapping
extension (17) with the first and last primers
listed for each plasmid (Table 3) and subsequently
cloned into pCR2.1-TOPO (Invitrogen) . Finally, the fragment
containing the mutant allele was subcloned into the multiple cloning
site of pNNB194 to create the deletion plasmid . To generate the
srfAC replacement plasmid, the srfAC gene was cloned by
PCR with the 5' and 3' primers used for the srfAC deletion
vector . This created an intact copy of the srfAC gene, which
contained homology to the region flanking the deletion site . The
srfAC gene was then subcloned into pNNB194 as described above .
| TABLE 2 . Plasmids and E . coli strains
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| TABLE 3 . Primers used for splicing by overlapping extensiona
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Strain construction. Beginning with strain A164, ATCC 6051a,
multiple gene deletions were made in a sequential manner . For the
strains listed in Table 1, each deletion mutation
was introduced into the chromosome by allelic exchange . The
corresponding deletion plasmid was used to transform B . subtilis
competent cells by selecting for erythromycin resistance on TBAB
plates at the permissive temperature of 34°C . A single transformant
was then streaked to TBAB supplemented with erythromycin and
incubated at the nonpermissive temperature of 45°C in order to select
for plasmid integration into the chromosome . To promote homologous
recombination and plasmid loss from the locus targeted for deletion,
LB medium was inoculated with several colonies from the TBAB plate,
which were grown without selection at 34°C . The cultures were
streaked to LB plates, and single colonies were patched to LB
and TBAB plates containing erythromycin . Colonies that were
erythromycin sensitive were screened by PCR (Extract-N-Amp Plant PCR
kit; Sigma-Aldrich) to find strains in which plasmid excision had
occurred with retention of the mutant allele . Gene replacement of
srfAC was obtained in essentially the same manner as described
above . The loss and restoration of surfactin activity were confirmed
by halo formation on whole-blood agar plates (trypticase soy agar
with 5% sheep blood; BD, Sparks, Md.) (41) .
Motility assays. To analyze swimming and swarming motility,
cells were collected with a sterile toothpick from an overnight
culture plate and used to inoculate 0.3% agar to observe swimming and
0.7% agar to observe swarming . The plates were incubated at 37°C and
evaluated over time .
Protease assays. B . subtilis cultures were grown in
MRS medium (Difco) for 24 h at 37°C, and supernatants were collected
following centrifugation at 10,000 x
g for 10 min . Protease activity was measured by using
fluorescein isothiocyanate-casein as the substrate (Sigma Chemical
Co., St . Louis, Mo.) . Forty microliters of fluorescein
isothiocyanate-casein substrate (stock solution: 1:1 with 0.1 M
Tris-10 mM CaCl2 [pH 8.0]) was mixed with 10 µl of culture
sample (diluted appropriately in 0.1 M Tris-10 mM CaCl2 [pH
8]) and incubated for 1 h at 45°C . The reaction was quenched
with 150 µl of 5% trichloroacetic acid and incubated at 4°C for 1 h .
After centrifugation for 10 min, a 10-µl aliquot of the supernatant
was mixed with 1 ml of 0.5 M borate (pH 9.0) . A 200-µl aliquot of the
solution was transferred to a black "U" bottom 96-well plate
(ThermoLabsystems, Franklin, Mass.) . Fluorescence was measured with a
Fluorolite 1000 instrument (ThermoLabsystems, Franklin, Mass.), using
reference channel 3 and a setting of 1176 . Activity was measured in
fluorescent units and expressed in units per milliliter relative to
the protease standard, Subtilisin Carlsberg (Sigma) .
Swarm motility assays in the presence of protease.
Proteinase K (654 U/mg), a serine protease isolated from the fungus
Tritirachium album, and subtilisin Carlsberg (32.0 U/mg) from
B . subtilis were obtained from Sigma-Aldrich and resuspended
in 50 mM Tris (pH 7.5) at 10 mg/ml . Dispase I (6 U/mg), a neutral
protease obtained from Roche Applied Science (Mannheim, Germany), was
resuspended in 50 mM Tris (pH 7.5) at 5 mg/ml . Each protease was
diluted in a final volume of 50 µl and then spread on the surface of
a 0.7% agar plate . Plates were allowed to dry for 20 min prior to
strain inoculation . The effect of various levels of protease activity
on swarming was evaluated: proteinase K, 6.5, 0.65, 0.065, and 0.0065
U; subtilisin, 3.2, 0.32, 0.032, and 0.0032 U; and dispase I, 6.0,
0.6, 0.06, and 0.006 U .
Preparation of conditioned medium. A B . subtilis A164
or A164 10
overnight culture was diluted 1:100 in LB and grown at 37°C to the
end of log phase . The cultures were collected and centrifuged at
4,000 x g to pellet the cells .
The supernatant was removed and passed through a 0.22-µm-pore-size
filter . To make 0.7% agar plates, filtered conditioned medium
was mixed 1:1 with fresh LB containing 1.4% agar . Heat inactivation
of the conditioned medium was performed by autoclaving for 15 min . To
test the effect of protease inhibitors on swarming motility, a
14-mg/ml fresh stock of phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF)
suspended in isopropanol was used . The conditioned medium was
incubated with 140 or 280 µg of PMSF/ml for 20 min prior to preparing
the 0.7% agar plates .
Flagellar analysis. In order to observe flagella produced
under conditions that support swarming, cells were collected from the
surfaces of 0.7% agar plates three hours after inoculation . These
cells were sampled from the edge of a swarming colony or from the
colony edge of a nonswarming colony as indicated . Swimming cells
were obtained from cultures grown in liquid LB medium to an
optical density at 600 nm of 0.5 . Flagella were stained as described
by Kearns and Losick (20) and examined by phase-contrast
microscopy with an Axioplan Universal microscope (Carl Zeiss, Ltd.,
Oberkochen, Germany) .
Biofilm formation. The ability of each strain to form a
pellicle on the surface of a standing culture was tested . The strains
were inoculated onto minimal medium and grown according to the method
described by Branda et al . (3) . The minimal medium
contains the following: 5 mM potassium phosphate (pH 7), 100 mM
morpholinepropanesulfonic acid (pH 7), 2 mM MgCl2, 700 µM
CaCl2, 50 µM MnCl2, 50 µM FeCl3, 2
µM thiamine, 0.5% glycerol, 0.5% glutamate .
Genetic analysis of factors required for swarm motility in the
wild-type strain, A164. B . subtilis strain A164 exhibits robust
swarm motility on 0.7% agar (Fig . 1) . When inoculated to
the center of a 100-mm petri dish, A164 begins to swarm after a
lag period of 2 to 4 h . Progressive expansion of the colony
continues over time, resulting in complete colonization of the
surface of the plate within 8 h (Fig . 1A) . A set of A164
strains containing 10 sequential deletions (A164 1
to A164 10)
(Table 1) was originally constructed as hosts for
enzyme production; therefore, the first deletion rendered them
sporulation negative, and the rest of the deletions removed unwanted
extracellular activities . Although not created for the purpose of
studying swarming, these strains were of interest due to published
results that surfactin (a product of the srfA operon) and Epr
have an established role in swarm migration (6,
25) . The strains were screened for their ability
to swarm, and the results were as follows: swarming was unaffected in
strains A164 1
through A164 4
(Table 1) . A 24-h delay in swarm migration was observed
in strains A164 5
through A164 9
(Table 1 and Fig . 1B) . Strain A164 10
exhibited a nonswarming phenotype (Table 1 and Fig.
1B) .
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FIG . 1 . Secreted proteases are required for swarming motility by B .
subtilis A164 . Swarm motility of B . subtilis A164 (A) and
A164 mutants A164 5,
MBin7, A164 8,
and A164 10
(clockwise from left) (B) is shown . The absence of surfactin production
in A164 5
and A164 8
results in a less-robust swarming phenotype, and a nonswarming phenotype
is exhibited by A164 10,
which is deficient in both surfactin and protease activity . Although
MBin7 appears to have a nonswarming phenotype, swarming is initiated
after 48 h for this strain and is not completely inhibited until
deletions are made in the remaining extracellular protease, aprE,
and sigF (MBin10 strain, data not shown) . All strains were
inoculated with a toothpick onto a 0.7% agar LB swarm plate and
incubated for 20 h at 37°C.
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The results of the phenotypic analysis described above were similar
to those published by Dixit et al., who found Epr to be essential for
swarming in the domesticated B . subtilis laboratory strain,
168 (6) . However, when an epr deletion alone was
introduced into A164 (MBin1), swarm motility was unaffected (Table
1) . Since surfactin is important for swarm motility
and B . subtilis 168 is defective in surfactin production (32),
we wanted to determine the effect of mutations in both srfAC
and epr on the swarming phenotype of A164 . A deletion was made
in the srfAC gene of strain MBin1, creating MBin2 (Table
1) . Swarm motility by MBin2 was delayed but not
eliminated, suggesting that one or more of the other mutations in
strain A164 10
plays a role in swarming .
Genetic epistasis analysis was used to determine which genes are
essential for swarming . This analysis showed that when an epr
mutation was introduced into A164 5
(A164 5E),
no additive effect on swarming was observed compared to results for
A164 5 .
In contrast, deletion of epr from A164 8
(A164 8E)
resulted in a nonswarming phenotype (Table 1) . This
analysis indicated that surfactin and some combination of minor
extracellular proteases, which are the products of the genes deleted
from strains A164 5
through A164 10,
played a major role in swarm motility . To confirm this hypothesis,
the genes encoding surfactin and each of the minor extracellular
proteases were sequentially deleted from A164 . The subsequent strains
were tested for their ability to swarm (MBin2 through MBin6; Table
1) . The results of this screen revealed that MBin6,
which is deficient in surfactin and minor (but not major)
extracellular protease activity, shows significantly more delay in
swarm initiation than A164 5
(48 versus 24 h; Table 1) . However, swarming
motility was not completely abolished for MBin6, as was observed for
A164 10 .
Since A164 10
contains deletions in the genes encoding both the major and minor
extracellular proteases, the major extracellular protease genes were
deleted from MBin6 (MBin8; Table 1) . Protease
activities for strains A164, A164 5,
MBin8, and A164 10
were analyzed and found to be 8.36, 0.024, 0.008, and 0.011 U/ml,
respectively . The protease activities for strains MBin2 through MBin6
(data not shown) were similar to that for A164 . A decrease in
protease activity, due to the removal of any one of the minor
proteases from each of these strains, could not be assayed
accurately, since the removal of one protease often results in an
increase in the remaining protease activity (43) .
Swarming was analyzed for MBin8 to determine if a strain with levels
of protease activity similar to that of A164 10
would have a null phenotype . Strain MBin8 exhibited a severe delay in
swarm initiation (>72 h [Table 1]); however, a
complete nonswarming phenotype was achieved only upon the additional
deletion of sigF (MBin10; Table 1), which
encodes the forespore-specific sigma factor, SigF . The deletion in
sigF, as well as amyE (MBin9; Table 1), was
employed in an effort to determine which deletions in A164 10
were responsible for the null swarming phenotype . These results
demonstrate that extracellular proteases and surfactin have a major
role in swarming motility in A164 and that SigF may exert a minor
influence in regulating this multicellular activity .
Extracellular proteolytic activity is important for swarming.
The swarming phenotypes exhibited by the various mutant strains
described above led to the hypothesis that total extracellular
proteolytic activity, but not specifically activity from Epr, is
important for swarm behavior . To test this idea, exogenous protease
was applied to the surface of swarm medium, and surface translocation
by the protease-deficient strain, A164 10,
was determined . For this analysis, we tested three proteases
originating from different sources: proteinase K, subtilisin, and
dispase I (Fig . 2 and data not shown) . In each
case, preapplication of exogenously derived protease to the medium
rescued swarming for A164 10 .
Interestingly, under these conditions, the resulting phenotype was
indistinguishable from that of the wild-type strain, A164 (Fig.
2) . This not only demonstrates that nonspecific proteolytic
activity contributes to the multicellular process of swarming
but also reveals that exogenous protease can overcome the defect in
swarm initiation created by a lack of surfactin production .
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FIG . 2 . Exogenous protease rescues swarming motility in a nonswarming,
protease-deficient strain . Swarming behavior of A164 10
untreated control (A) or with 0.065 (B), 0.65 (C), or 6.5 (D) U of
proteinase K is shown . Swarm plates were incubated at 37°C for 24 h .
Swarming motility was also rescued by treatment with subtilisin and
dispase I treatment (data not shown) at all concentrations except the
lowest (see Materials and Methods for concentrations tested and
inoculation method).
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As an alternative test of the hypothesis that secreted proteases play
an important role in swarming motility, we tested whether conditioned
medium obtained from cultures of selected bacterial strains could
suppress the swarming-defective phenotype of A164 10 .
Conditioned medium was obtained from either A164 or A164 10
and used to prepare swarm plates . A164 10
was able to swarm on plates containing conditioned medium from A164
but not from A164 10 .
To determine if this observation was directly related to the
protease activity, medium conditioned by A164 cells was either heat
inactivated or incubated with the nonspecific protease inhibitor PMSF
prior to use (Fig . 3 and data not shown) . Previous
work has shown that AprE and most of the minor extracellular
proteases are sensitive to PMSF (33) . Consistent with the
hypothesis, A164 10
did not swarm well in the presence of PMSF-treated, A164-conditioned
medium (Fig . 3) . In addition, heat-inactivated conditioned
medium was not able to restore the ability of A164 10
to swarm (data not shown) .
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FIG . 3 . Conditioned medium from A164, but not A164 10,
rescues swarm motility of A164 10 .
A164 10
was inoculated onto swarm plates prepared with conditioned medium and
incubated for 24 h at 37°C . Conditioned medium incubated with
isopropanol alone had no effect on swarming (data not shown) . (A)
Conditioned medium obtained from A164 (left) or A164 10
(right) . (B) Conditioned medium obtained from A164 and preincubated with
PMSF at a final concentration of 140 (left) or 280 (right) µg/ml,
respectively.
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Minimal medium supports swarming motility. An obvious role for
extracellular degradative enzymes, such as proteases, is the
acquisition of nutrients from the surrounding environment .
Potentially, proteolysis could be required to modify or degrade small
peptides in LB medium that supply the energy necessary to initiate
and sustain the process of swarm migration . To assess swarm motility
in the absence of protein substrate, A164 was inoculated onto 0.7%
agar Spizizen's minimal medium plates . Except for a decrease in the
thickness of the swarming colony, motility was otherwise identical to
that exhibited on 0.7% LB agar plates (data not shown) . Furthermore,
exogenous protease applied to the minimal medium plates rescued
swarming for A164 10
(data not shown) . These results imply that the role of extracellular
proteases is not to fulfill a nutritional requirement necessary to
drive swarm migration . Additionally, this observation suggests that
the proteases are acting on either proteins secreted by the cell or
proteins present on the bacterial cell itself .
Protease-deficient strains exhibit swim motility and display
hyperflagellation on swarm agar plates. Flagellar biosynthesis is
necessary for swarm motility (39) . In addition,
cells isolated from the edge of a swarming colony often exhibit a
dramatic increase in the number of flagella produced compared to
cells isolated from liquid culture (8,
11, 49) . To determine if flagellar
formation was affected for A164 10,
both swim motility assays and microscopic analysis were performed .
Swim motility of A164 10
and other mutants, as assessed by cell movement through the
water-filled channels of a 0.3% agar plate, was equivalent to that of
A164 (Fig . 4) . To evaluate whether A164 10
exhibited any differences in the number of flagellar organelles,
microscopic examination of cells obtained from mid-log-phase cultures
grown either in LB broth or on 0.7% LB agar plates was performed .
Flagellar formation under both conditions appeared to be unaffected
for A164 10
and resembled that of A164 (Fig . 4) .
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FIG . 4 . Protease activity is not required for swimming motility or
hyperflagellation on swarm plates . (A) Swim motility assay at 6 h
following inoculation . Swimming motility for all A164 mutants was
equivalent to that of A164 . The appearance of slightly increased
motility for A164 is due to the small amount of swarming, which still
occurs at this agar concentration and at a faster rate than swimming .
Cells were stained for flagella from mid-log A164 cultures (B), A164
swarm plates (C), A164 10
mid-log cultures (D), and A164 10
swarm plates (E) . The absence of surfactin and protease activity had no
effect on flagellar formation in liquid medium or on swarm plates . All
cells were collected from swarm plates 3 h after inoculation .
Microscopic analysis was performed at a magnification of
x100.
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Surfactin can rescue swarming motility in a protease-deficient strain.
Biosurfactants, such as surfactin produced by B . subtilis, aid
in surface translocation by reducing surface tension . In several
bacterial species, defects in swarm motility have been observed in
mutants lacking surfactant production (5, 9,
31) . Surfactin is a cyclic lipopeptide whose
synthesis is catalyzed by the Srf complex (34) .
Deletion of srfAC eliminates surfactin production and delays
the initiation of swarming for B . subtilis A164 . Since swarm
initiation is completely blocked for A164 10,
a strain deficient for the production of both surfactin and most
secreted proteases, we wanted to assess how the introduction of
wild-type levels of surfactin would affect the nonswarming phenotype .
To do this, the ca . 800-bp deletion at the srfAC locus was replaced
with an intact copy of the gene . Restoration of surfactin production
was evaluated and confirmed by testing B . subtilis A164 10+srfAC
for hemolytic activity when grown on whole-blood agar (data not
shown) . When inoculated to 0.7% agar, A164 10+srfAC
initiated and exhibited swarm motility identical to that of A164
(data not shown), demonstrating that wild-type levels of surfactin,
from the restored srfAC locus, can reestablish swarming motility
in A164 10 .
In addition, this result revealed that surfactin, as well as secreted
proteases, affects swarming by B . subtilis A164 .
Secreted proteases function in biofilm formation. Our
present evidence suggests that extracellular protease, in combination
with surfactin, plays a role in swarming . This led us to consider
whether secreted proteases might have a role in other types of
multicellular behaviors . A few studies have found that certain
factors which affect swarm motility also inhibit other multicellular
behaviors, such as biofilm formation (18,
36, 39) . To determine if proteolytic
activity is involved in the formation of a biofilm,
protease-deficient strains were tested for the ability to form a
biofilm or pellicle on the surface of a standing culture . While the
wild-type strain A164 formed a thick pellicle with prominent surface
structures, strains unable to produce surfactin due to a deletion in
either the sfp or srfAC gene (A164sfp and MBin6,
respectively) formed a thin, flat pellicle (Fig . 5) .
Sfp is a phosphopantetheinyl transferase which primes the
nonribosomal surfactin peptide synthetase (encoded by the srfA
operon) . Sfp and the srfAC operon are both required for the
production of surfactin (34) . Besides surfactin, MBin6
is also deficient in minor extracellular proteolytic activity .
While MBin6 maintained the ability to form a biofilm, A164 10
exhibited a null phenotype . In addition to surfactin and minor
extracellular proteolytic activity, A164 10
is also deficient in major extracellular protease activity .
Significantly, biofilm formation in A164 10
was rescued when exogenous protease (dispase I, subtilisin, or
proteinase K) was added to the media at all concentrations tested (2
to 500 U) (data not shown) . Additionally, strain A164 10+srfAC
was able to form a biofilm (data not shown) . These results suggest
that extracellular factors central for swarm motility, such as
proteases and surfactin, are also important for biofilm formation .
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FIG . 5 . Extracellular protease activity is required for biofilm
formation . A164 deletion strains were analyzed for their ability to form
biofilms . While mutants defective in flagellar formation (A164 hag),
sporulation (A164 1),
or surfactin production (A164 sfp
and MBin6) retained the ability to produce biofilm, a mutant (A164 10)
deficient in both surfactin and extracellular protease activity, as well
as sporulation, did not form a biofilm.
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B . subtilis produces eight characterized extracellular or cell
wall-associated proteases . Seven of these have been detected in the
growth medium, while the remaining protease, a product of the nprB
gene, is not secreted at detectable levels (26,
33, 45, 46) . The
alkaline serine protease subtilisin (AprE), along with the neutral
metalloprotease E (NprE), account for more than 95% of the
extracellular proteolytic activity of B . subtilis and are
commonly referred to as the major extracellular proteases . The
remainder of the protease activity has been attributed to minor
extracellular proteases, with the serine protease Epr being a
principal contributor (42) . None of these proteases
has been found to be essential either for growth or for sporulation
of B . subtilis . However, transcription of each is tightly
controlled, with the highest level of expression almost always
demonstrated to occur at the end of log phase (19,
33) . In a study focused on determining how epr
is regulated, Dixit et al . found that Epr function was necessary for
swarming for the laboratory strain B . subtilis 168 (6) .
These results were consistent with the nonswarming phenotype we
observed for the wild-type strain, A164, deficient in extracellular
protease activity (A164 10) .
However, they conflicted with our observation that a deletion
of epr alone in A164 had no effect on swarming . While it appeared
that Epr did function in swarming, it was apparent that other
extracellular factors are also important .
The published investigations of swarming in strain 168 reveal a
phenotype that appears less vigorous than that exhibited by A164 (6,
30, 31) . While the wild-type strain, A164,
is able to produce surfactin, the domesticated laboratory strain 168
has lost this ability due to a frameshift mutation in the sfp
gene, which is essential for surfactin synthesis (32) .
Based on the established importance of biosurfactants in swarm
motility and the delayed initiation of swarming displayed by A164
strains that are deficient for surfactin production (Table
1; Fig . 1), it seemed plausible
that abolishing the production of both surfactin and Epr in A164
would result in a nonswarming phenotype . A strain containing
deletions in both epr and srfAC (MBin2) was tested and
found to have maintained a somewhat reduced ability to swarm . This
suggested that while Epr and surfactin production appeared to be
important for swarming motility, additional proteins were involved .
Genetic epistasis analysis was performed, and the results suggested
that while sigF, nprE, aprE, and amyE had
a small role, if any, some of the minor extracellular proteases, in
addition to Epr, were important for swarming (Table 1) .
However, only a strain containing deletions in all of the
extracellular proteases, as well as srfAC and sigF,
exhibited a completely nonswarming phenotype (Table 1;
Fig . 1) .
Taken together, the above results led us to hypothesize that total
extracellular proteolytic activity contributes to the initiation of
this multicellular behavior . To investigate this hypothesis, swarming
motility of strain A164 10
(deficient in extracellular protease activity, surfactin, SigF, and
AmyE) was analyzed in the presence of exogenous protease (Fig.
2) . Regardless of the source of the protease or
whether a rich or minimal medium was used, A164 10
displayed a capacity for swarming that was identical to that observed
for A164 . Additionally, swarming of A164 10
was supported on plates made with medium preconditioned with strain
A164 and was inhibited when the conditioned medium was treated with
the protease inhibitor, PMSF (Fig . 3) . Finally, a
strain containing deletions in all seven extracellular proteases, as
well as srfAC and sigF, exhibited a nonswarming
phenotype .
These observations support the hypothesis that the multicellular
behavior of swarming motility is stimulated by the presence of
extracellular protease . However, elucidating the nature of the role
that proteolytic activity plays in swarming will require further
study . Significantly, the ability of exogenous protease to rescue
swarming on minimal medium excludes the obvious idea that proteolytic
digestion of media components alone encourages swarm motility . A
second theory is that proteins secreted by the cells require cleavage
before they can function to promote swarming . This type of regulation
is not foreign to Bacillus and other gram-positive bacteria .
Several processes are controlled through cell-cell signaling mediated
by peptides that are proteolytically processed into signaling
molecules (7, 35) . However, the ability
of wild-type levels of surfactin to complement a deficiency in
proteolytic activity indicates that extracellular protease does not
function by providing an essential signal for swarmer cell
development or initiation of cellular migration . It is conceivable,
however, that the proteases cleave cell surface proteins, leading to
cell surface modifications that aid in bacterium-bacterium or
bacterium-surface interactions which promote surface translocation .
Microscopic inspection of the nonswarming protease-deficient strain,
A164 10,
revealed a random and rapid movement of isolated cells at the
periphery of the colony when inoculated to the surface of a swarm
plate, but no multicellular "rafts" were observed (data not shown) .
Further investigation will be needed to determine the significance of
this observation .
It should be noted that the nonswarming phenotype was observed
with a strain deficient for both protease and surfactin activity .
Since surfactin can promote spreading motility of bacteria by
enhancing surface fluidity, even in nonflagellated mutants (22,
27), it is probable that the ability of surfactin to
compensate for the loss of proteolytic activity during swarming is
due to its surface tension-reducing properties . However, the
mechanism by which exogenous protease restores swarming motility to
wild-type levels in a surfactin-minus strain is unclear .
It has been suggested that bacterial colonization of surfaces
through swarming motility plays a role in biofilm formation (23) .
Recently, Branda et al . showed that wild-type isolates of B .
subtilis form biofilms with complex architectures on the surfaces
of standing liquid cultures . Additionally, the investigators observed
structural defects in this architecture for mutants deficient in
surfactin production (3) . Since it appeared that
surfactin was required for both efficient swarming and structured
pellicle-type biofilms, we wanted to determine if a similar
relationship existed for extracellular proteases . To ascertain
whether or not extracellular proteases function in biofilm formation,
we evaluated A164 10
under conditions that stimulate pellicle formation . Intriguingly, we
found that in addition to the loss of swarm motility, A164 10
was incapable of forming any pellicle structure under the tested
conditions (Fig . 5) . Furthermore, when exogenous
protease was added to the medium, A164 10
produced a pellicle (data not shown), which supports the idea that a
correlation exists between swarming and biofilm formation .
We thank Mike Thomas for providing strains, plasmids, and primers and
Brian Clancy-Gorre for protease assay data . We are also grateful to
Mike Thomas, Régine Behr, and Dan Kearns for technical support and
Bill Widner and Randy Berka for critical reading of the manuscript .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Novozymes Biotech,
Inc., 1445 Drew Ave., Davis, CA 95616 . Phone: (530) 757-8179 . Fax: (530)
758-0317 . E-mail: mbin@novozymes.com.
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