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Scientific
Publications - Work Done by Microbiology Reader Free Online Full-text Article Journal of Bacteriology, May 2002, p. 2699-2708, Vol. 184, No. 10 A Quorum-Sensing Signaling System Essential for Genetic Competence in Streptococcus mutans Is Involved in Biofilm FormationYung-Hua Li, Nan Tang, Marcelo B. Aspiras, Peter C. Y. Lau, Janet H. Lee, Richard P. Ellen, and Dennis G. Cvitkovitch* Dental Research Institute, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5G 1G6 Received 10 September 2001/ Accepted 15 February 2002
In gram-negative bacteria, quorum-sensing systems generally consist of two components, a small, soluble signal molecule and a transcriptional regulatory protein or R protein (41). A large number of gram-negative quorum-sensing systems studied so far utilize N-acyl homoserine lactones as signal molecules (35). When a critical concentration is reached in a growing culture, these molecules can diffuse into the cells, binding to R protein and, in turn, activating transcription of target genes responsible for the cell density-dependent phenotypes (12). Studies of Pseudomonas aeruginosa have shown that cell-to-cell signaling through quorum sensing plays an important role in biofilm differentiation of this organism. A mutant (lasI) defective in the production of N-acyl homoserine lactones had a dramatic effect on the maturation of P. aeruginosa biofilms, resulting in a biofilm that lacked the three-dimensional architecture observed in the parent strain (11). In addition, detection of these quorum-sensing signals in the sputum of a cystic fibrosis patient has been suggested to be an indicator of infection by P. aeruginosa biofilms (40). In gram-positive bacteria, quorum-sensing systems generally consist of three components, a signal peptide and a two-component regulatory system (TCS) that has a membrane-bound histidine kinase (HK) sensor and an intracellular response regulator (RR) (14, 22). Quorum sensing in gram-positive bacteria has been found to regulate a number of physiological activities, including competence development in Streptococcus pneumoniae (25) and Streptococcus mutans (30), sporulation in Bacillus subtilis (16), antibiotic biosynthesis in Lactococcus lactis (17), and induction of virulence factors in Staphylococcus aureus (21). Although these systems have been well characterized for several gram-positive organisms, their involvement with signaling in biofilm initiation and formation has not yet been defined. The first evidence to suggest that these systems operate in gram-positive biofilms came from a recent study of Streptococcus gordonii Tn916 mutants that were defective in biofilm formation (32). One of these mutants was found to have a transposon insertion in the comD gene, encoding the HK sensor protein of the TCS required for genetic competence. This evidence suggested that biofilm formation by S. gordonii might involve cell-cell communication through quorum sensing. S. mutans is a bacterium that has evolved to depend on a biofilm "lifestyle" for survival and persistence in its natural ecosystem, dental plaque. It is also considered to be one of the principal etiological agents of dental caries (4, 18). The tooth surface is an indispensable natural habitat for S. mutans, since this organism cannot be detected in the mouth until eruption of the teeth and disappears soon after loss of the teeth (5). S. mutans is capable of forming biofilms through a number of well-studied mechanisms, including expression of the surface adhesin SpaP (27) and the ability to synthesize insoluble, extracellular polysaccharides that enhance its accumulation on the tooth (18). It is, however, unclear whether biofilm formation by S. mutans involves coordinated activity via cell-cell communication. A quorum-sensing system essential for genetic competence in S. mutans was recently identified. This cell-cell signaling system involves at least five gene products encoded by cslAB(comAB) (36) and comCDE (30) (Fig. 1). The comC, comD, and comE genes respectively encode a competence-stimulating peptide (CSP) precursor, its HK sensor protein, and a cognate RR. comC and comDE lie adjacent on the chromosome and, together with their gene products, constitute a peptide (CSP)-signaling system including a generating pathway and a responding pathway, respectively. The other two genes, cslA and cslB, are located in a separate region of the chromosome and encode a CSP-specific secretion apparatus consisting of an ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter (ComA) and its accessory protein (ComB), which are presumably involved in the processing and export of the CSP (36). This quorum-sensing system functions optimally when the cells are living in actively growing biofilms (30), suggesting that the cell-cell signaling system might play a role in the formation of S. mutans biofilms. Another gene suspected of being involved in signal transduction via CSP is comX, a homolog of an alternate sigma factor found in S. pneumoniae that directs transcription of RNA polymerase to a number of competence-related genes as part of the CSP-induced signal cascade (25). To test this hypothesis, we examined the ability of S. mutans mutants defective in various components of the quorum-sensing and signal transduction system to form biofilms.
Biofilm formation and quantification. Biofilm initiation and formation by all strains was assayed and quantified by a modification of methods described previously (9, 32). To facilitate quantification and microscopy, both 96-well and 24-well polystyrene microtiter plates were used to develop biofilms. The growth of biofilms was initiated by inoculating 5 µl of pregrown cell suspension into 200 µl of SDM medium in the individual wells of a 96-well microtiter plate or by inoculating 25 µl of cell suspension into 2 ml of SDM medium in 24-well plates. The microtiter plates were then incubated at 37°C with 5% CO2 for 16 h without agitation. After the 16-h incubation, liquid medium was removed and wells were rinsed once with sterile distilled water (dH2O). The plates (96 wells) were then air dried and stained with 0.1% safranin for 10 min. After being stained, the plates were rinsed with dH2O to remove excess dye and then air dried for 3 h. Biofilms were quantified by measuring the absorbance of stained biofilms at 490 nm with an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay microplate reader (model 3550; Bio-Rad Laboratories, Richmond, Calif.). Each assay was performed in triplicate, and wells without biofilms were used as blank controls after safranin staining. Biofilms formed in 24-well plates were photographed without staining immediately after the removal of planktonic cells. Our experiments confirmed that the modified minimal medium favored sessile biofilm growth of S. mutans and that it facilitated analysis of the biofilm-producing phenotype of mutant strains. During growth in an aerobic atmosphere with 5% CO2, S. mutans showed little difference in biofilm formation from growth under anaerobic conditions. This result differed from that of a previous study in which S. gordonii formed heavier biofilms when it was grown anaerobically (32). Therefore, we routinely grew biofilms of all strains in air with 5% CO2 for 16 h before further analysis. Adherence assay. All the strains were assayed for initial adherence to a mucin-coated polystyrene surface to determine if inactivation of individual genes involved in quorum sensing affected bacterial attachment. The surfaces of the polystyrene microtiter plates were first conditioned with 2 ml of 1% hog gastric mucin in an adherence buffer (10 mM KPO4, 50 mM KCl, 1 mM CaCl2, 0.1 mM MgCl2 [pH 7.0]) (26). The plates were incubated at room temperature for 2 h with gentle shaking and air dried for 2 h after removal of excess mucin solution. Resting cells were prepared by centrifugation of an overnight culture that was washed twice and resuspended in the adherence buffer at a density of 108 cells/ml (optical density at 600 nm [OD600], 0.6). Adherence to the mucin-coated surface was initiated by the addition of 2 ml of an already prepared resting cell suspension, and the plate was then incubated at 37°C with gentle shaking for 2 h. After incubation, the liquid cell suspension was removed and adherent cells were dissociated into 2 ml of the buffer by gentle sonication. Both adherent and nonadherent cells were assayed by viable-cell counting to determine percentages of adherent cells. Growth kinetics. All the strains were grown in THYE medium to assay their growth kinetics by using a Bioscreen C Labsystems (Helsinki, Finland) Microbiology Reader with multiwell disposable microtiter plates. The Bioscreen reader was equipped with Biolink software that allowed automatic recording and conversion of optical density readings into growth curves. An aliquot (4 µl) of cell suspension was inoculated into each well containing 400 µl of fresh medium. All cell suspensions were adjusted to the same OD600 before inoculation. The microtiter plates were then placed in the Bioscreen reader, which was set up to read optical density automatically every 15 min with shaking. Each sample was assayed in triplicate, and wells without inocula were used as blank controls during the 16-h incubation. S. mutans CSP was added at a final concentration of 500 ng/ml. As a negative control, S. pneumoniae CSP-1 (19) was added at a concentration of 500 ng/ml in parallel growth experiments. Complementation of the comC mutant. A 21-amino-acid synthetic peptide (CSP) based on the deduced amino acid sequence encoded by the comC gene (30) was used to determine if the CSP could restore defective phenotypes of the mutants, including genetic competence and the initiation of biofilm formation. During the experiments, the CSP was freshly dissolved in sterile dH2O to a final concentration of 1 mg/ml before use. The CSP solution was then added to the cultures at a saturating concentration 2 h after inoculation at a final concentration of 500 ng/ml as previously described (30). To ensure that the comC mutant biofilm phenotype resulted from the absence of active CSP and to negate the possibility of an effect from the N-terminal cleavage product, we constructed an S. mutans strain that harbored a shuttle vector, pDL277, carrying a wild-type copy of comC to assay for restoration of the wild-type biofilm phenotype. To construct the comC-complemented strain, we used PCR to amplify a 651-bp fragment containing the entire comC gene and its promoter region from S. mutans NG8 genomic DNA using primers ComC-F5 and ComC-B5. The amplicon was then ligated into the multiple cloning site of plasmid pDrive (Qiagen, Mississauga, Ontario, Canada) and transformed into an Escherichia coli host (XL-10 Gold; Stratagene, La Jolla, Calif.). Transformants selected from Luria-Bertani agar plates containing ampicillin (100 µg/ml) and 2% X-Gal (5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-ß-D-galactopyranoside) were confirmed further by restriction analysis. The recombinant plasmid DNA was digested with SacI and BamHI to generate a 650-bp SacI/BamHI fragment harboring the comC region. This fragment was then ligated into the same restriction sites of plasmid pDL277. The resulting plasmid, pCOMC, was first transformed into the E. coli XL-10 host for propagation. pCOMC was then transformed into the comC mutant (SMCC-1) by a CSP-mediated transformation technique (30). Transformants were selected on THYE plates containing spectinomycin (1,200 µg/ml). The resulting complemented strain, designated SMCC1-pCOMC, was assayed for competence and its ability to form biofilms. Microscopy. To examine the spatial distribution and architecture of biofilms by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), biofilms formed on the surface of a polystyrene microtiter plate were washed once with 10 mM phosphate-buffered saline, fixed by the addition of 2 ml of 3.7% formaldehyde in 10 mM phosphate-buffered saline, and incubated at room temperature for 1 day. The samples were then dehydrated through a series of ethanol rinses (30, 50, 70, 95, and 100%) and dried at critical point with liquid CO2. The bottom surface of the well was cut off, mounted, and sputter coated with gold. The samples were then examined by SEM (model S-2500; Hitachi Instruments, San Jose, Calif.). Confocal scanning laser microscopy (CSLM) was performed to characterize a larger field view of real-time biofilms on the surfaces of polystyrene microtiter plates. Biofilms were grown for 16 h in SDM medium and stained with LIVE/DEAD BacLight bacterial viability stain (Molecular Probes, Eugene, Oreg.) at a ratio of 1:10,000 of SYTO 9 to propidium iodide in dH2O, ensuring that biofilms were completely covered with the stain. The biofilms were examined with a 40x water immersion objective lens lowered directly into the biofilm-coated polystyrene plates with careful avoidance of biofilm disruption. Samples were examined by CSLM, and images were collected and analyzed with the packaged software (microscope model LSM 510; Carl Zeiss Canada, Toronto, Canada).
S. mutans comX appears to be related to the S. pneumoniae comX gene in that inactivation leads to a competence-defective phenotype (data not shown). The S. mutans comX mutant formed biofilms that were indistinguishable from those of the comD and comE mutants (Fig. 2). Two biofilm-defective phenotypes suggest the existence of a second CSP receptor. Our results clearly showed that individual inactivation of the comC, comD, comE, or comX gene resulted in the formation of two types of abnormal biofilms, one with a defect in the formation of the wild-type architecture or a thin biofilm with a reduced biomass. These results suggested that there might be a second receptor in S. mutans which sensed the same CSP but activated a different pathway, possibly related to cell septation or separation. To test this hypothesis, we made a comCDE deletion mutant, a strain unable to produce and respond to the CSP through the identified pathway. The comCDE deletion mutant was defective in genetic competence, resulting in a significant impairment in natural transformation whether or not synthetic CSP was added (data not shown). The comCDE deletion mutant formed a biofilm with a reduced biomass which was similar to the comD, comE, and comX mutant biofilms, but its architecture appeared more like that of the comC mutant biofilm (Fig. 4). Addition of synthetic CSP to the culture of the comCDE deletion mutant partially restored the wild-type biofilm architecture, also suggesting the existence of a second receptor that interacted with CSP. Growth kinetics of the comCDE mutant in liquid cultures showed that it had a significantly reduced growth rate (doubling time, 1.92 h-1) and yield compared to those of the wild-type strain (1.2 h-1) (P < 0.01) (Fig. 6). As expected, partial complementation of the comCDE mutant, strain SMCDE-L4, with pCOMC generated a biofilm phenotype similar to that of the comD and comE mutants (Fig. 2 and 4). Addition of the synthetic CSP into the SMCDE-L4 culture resulted in a biofilm phenotype similar to that of SMCC1-pCOMC (data not shown); SMCDE-L4 also had an increased growth yield but showed no change in growth rate (Fig. 6). It was likely that the increased growth yield resulted from decreased formation of aggregates in the liquid culture after the addition of the CSP. Aggregate formation by the parent and comD and comE mutant cultures appeared to have a minimal effect on growth rate measurements.
Molecular genetic dissection of biofilm development has revealed that the formation of biofilms is a complex, dynamic process that involves multiple, convergent signaling pathways (34). A general pattern of biofilm formation includes initial adherence of cells to a solid surface, followed by multiplication of the adherent cells, formation of microcolonies, production of an extracellular polysaccharide matrix, and finally, differentiation into a three-dimensional biofilm (28, 33). Some "mature" biofilms are characterized by the formation of mushroom- or tower-shaped structures with intervening water channels that allow the flow of nutrients into and waste products out of the biofilms (8, 23). Recent works have discovered that cell-cell communication through quorum sensing influences the formation of mature biofilms by P. aeruginosa (11, 12, 35). A mutation that blocked the generation of the signal molecules hindered the differentiation of P. aeruginosa biofilms and resulted in a biofilm lacking differentiated structure. Such an undifferentiated biofilm may be more susceptible to treatment by antimicrobial agents (11). Thus, at least some bacteria must not only be able to sense surfaces and nutritional conditions for the transition to biofilm life but also apparently require cell-to-cell signaling and other coordinated activities to form differentiated, mature communities. Despite the significant advances that have been made in our understanding of quorum sensing in biofilm differentiation and maturation of gram-negative bacteria, little is known of cell-to-cell signaling systems or networks in biofilm formation by gram-positive organisms. The data from our study show that the architectural change in the comC mutant biofilms may be associated with a defect in cell separation. Because of this defect, the comC mutant tends to form extremely long chains that result in the formation of large aggregates or web-like biofilms. The molecular mechanisms that regulate cell separation modulated by the CSP gene remain unclear, since the comD and comE mutants defective in sensing and responding to the synthetic CSP do not exhibit a phenotype similar to that of the comC mutant. These data suggest that there may be a second receptor that also responds to the same signal peptide (CSP) as the comD sensor protein but apparently affects a process responsible for other phenotypes, such as cell separation. The mechanisms governing cell separation in gram-positive bacteria are unresolved, yet it has been suggested that separation involves both lytic and mechanical processes (15, 38). The partial restoration of the wild-type phenotype by CSP in the comC mutant may have resulted from depletion of an effective CSP concentration in the mutant cultures; only one dose of the CSP was used throughout the 16-h incubation, whereas wild-type cells presumably continuously secrete CSP. This idea was strengthened when we compared the growth of the genetically complemented comC mutant with that of the parent strain; little difference was observed (data not shown). Predictably, the comX mutant displayed a phenotype similar to that of the comD and comE mutants, providing evidence for a link in S. mutans between the signal peptide and signal transduction via comX. comX may encode an alternate sigma factor that directs transcription of a number of late competence-specific genes, similar to its homolog in S. pneumoniae (25). S. mutans comX appears to be related to S. pneumoniae comX in that inactivation leads to a competence-defective phenotype (data not shown). However, there are apparent differences between the species since S. pneumoniae has two copies of comX, both of which must be inactivated to abolish competence. In S. mutans strain NG8, we also found two copies of comX (unpublished data); yet inactivation of one copy (comX1) rendered the resultant mutant transformation defective. DNA microarray analyses of expression patterns of CSP-induced genes in S. pneumoniae revealed that a number of genes apparently unrelated to competence are under the regulatory influence of comX (13, 37). Most of these genes have a "com-box" TACGAATA sequence located in their promoter region (25). We have discovered a similar com-box 5' of and proximal to many S. mutans open reading frames, including several that encode late-competence gene homologs (unpublished data). S. mutans also appears to have multiple CSP-mediated phenotypes, including genetic competence (30), acid tolerance (29), and, as we have just demonstrated, biofilm formation. Identification of the genes encompassing the Com regulon is under way. It was previously shown that inactivation of the genes (comD or comE) encoding a TCS resulted in concomitant defects in genetic competence and growth yield (30). Both comD and comE mutants grown in fluid cultures had decreased cell densities compared to that of the wild-type strain, suggesting that the TCS plays an important role in the detection of population density. This phenomenon is also apparent with the comD and comE mutants that formed biofilms with decreased biomasses compared to that of the wild-type strain. Previous studies showed that biofilm formation by S. mutans grown in the controlled environment of our model system was characterized by a rapid accumulation phase following initial adherence to surfaces (28, 30). During this active accumulation phase, the number of biofilm cells increased exponentially, which accounted for most of the biomass in the first 20 h of cell accumulation. A similar active accumulation phase of S. gordonii in an in vivo model was also noted by Bloomquist et al. (2) and Liljemark et al. (31), who found that density-dependent cell multiplication contributes to 90% of the biomass in the first 24 h of dental plaque formation. These authors also showed that a cell-free supernatant taken from growing S. gordonii cultures could induce an exponential increase in the incorporation of [3H]methyl-thymidine into biofilm cells, suggesting that a cell-cell signaling mechanism was activated. More recently, Loo et al. (32) observed that a Tn916 insertion in the comD homolog of S. gordonii resulted in a phenotype defective in biofilm formation similar to that which we observed with S. mutans. Those authors suggested that cell-cell signaling involving the TCS involved in genetic competence might be important in the formation of S. gordonii biofilms. Thus, evidence from both in vivo and in vitro studies supports the concept that signal peptide-mediated cell-cell signaling functions to regulate the formation of biofilms by gram-positive streptococci. Inactivation of any gene encoding a component of the quorum-sensing system was expected to produce the same phenotypic effect on biofilm initiation and formation. However, the mutants unable to produce or secrete the CSP formed biofilms that differed from those formed by the mutants defective in the comD or comE gene. After analysis of the S. mutans comC, comD, and comE loci, we found that the orientation of the genes in this region was clearly different from that of previously described orthologs in other streptococci. In S. pneumoniae, Streptococcus mitis, Streptococcus oralis, S. gordonii, and Streptococcus sanguinis, the comC, comD, and comE genes are organized as an operon in which the genes are arranged beginning with comC and followed immediately 3' by comD and comE (6). In S. pneumoniae, all three genes are transcribed together and phosphorylated ComE acts as a transcriptional activator that binds to its own promoter region 5' of and proximal to the comC gene (42). In S. mutans, however, the comC gene is encoded divergently on the strand complementary to the comD and comE genes (30). There are also promoter-like sequences observed 5' of and proximal to both the comC and comE genes (30). Therefore, it is possible that transcription of comC in S. mutans may not only be coregulated with comDE for the induction of genetic competence but may also be divergently regulated to signal an unknown pathway related to other cell density-dependent phenotypes. Investigation of the regulation of these genes is under way in our laboratory. Based on the results of previous work (29) and our results from the present study, we propose a two-receptor cell-cell signaling model to illustrate how the quorum-sensing system in S. mutans functions to regulate both genetic competence, acid tolerance, and biofilm formation (Fig. 1). The principle of this model is that the signal peptide (CSP) encoded by comC can simultaneously interact with two cognate receptors, one encoded by comD and the other encoded by an unknown gene. These receptors likely transfer the input signal through two different pathways. Environmental cues, such as nutrient concentration, pH, and adherence to a surface, may modulate the level of the CSP or the effectiveness of CSP interaction with the receptors. As cell density in a growing culture or biofilm increases, basal expression of comC may cause the absolute concentration of CSP outside the cells to increase and reach a threshold concentration at which CSP can effectively activate the cognate sensor proteins. In S. pneumoniae, the activated HK sensor protein (ComD) activates its cognate regulator (ComE) via phosphorylation (20). Phosphorylated comE, in turn, is known to activate at least two competence-specific operons, comAB and comCDE, as well as the comX gene, resulting in the induction of genetic competence (20, 25). This forms a positive feedback loop for quorum sensing. In S. mutans, the CSP may interact with the HK product of comD and a second receptor that can activate a signal cascade that is apparently associated with cell separation. The genes encoding the components involved in the second pathway are still unknown. Their identification could provide insight into the mechanism of S. mutans biofilm formation and potentially facilitate the development of therapeutic agents to control biofilm-mediated infections by S. mutans.
Our work was supported by PHS grant DE 013230-02 from the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, grant MT-15431 from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, and infrastructure grants from the Canadian Foundation for Innovation and The Ontario Innovation Trust. D.G.C. is supported by a Canada Research Chair. R. P. Ellen is a member of the CIHR group in Matrix Dynamics.
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