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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2004, p . 4427-4440, Vol . 186,
No . 14
Biofilms 2003: Emerging Themes and Challenges in Studies of Surface-Associated
Microbial Life
Matthew R . Parsek1* and Clay Fuqua2
Department of Microbiology, The University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52242,1
Department of Biology, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana 474052
For over a century microbiologists have studied liquid cultures of
bacteria . In fact, a common criterion for choosing a microorganism to
study has been its ability to grow in a suspended, homogeneous
culture format, thereby simplifying examination of microbial
physiology and genetics . Although these studies have been tremendously
informative, they neglect the observation that many bacteria in
the natural environment grow aggregated with each other, with solid
surfaces, and at gas-liquid interfaces . There is a growing
appreciation that, although clearly worthwhile, studies of standard
planktonic cultures provide us with a biased view of microbial life .
The study of microbial biofilms has received significant attention
and achieved significant popularity in the last decade . As the
numbers of laboratories and scientists interested in biofilms have
rapidly increased, the field has suffered some growing pains . Anyone
wishing to conduct biofilm research or to compare their results with
those of other laboratories faces the distinct problem of the limited
number of standardized systems or protocols for studying biofilms .
Another challenging aspect of the field is its multidisciplinary
nature . Biofilms are important in environmental, industrial, and
clinical contexts (16, 19,
99) . The study of biofilm communities benefits from the efforts
of investigators from many different disciplines, including
environmental and clinical biologists, surface chemists, engineers,
and mathematical modelers, who bring their unique questions,
perspectives, and technologies to bear on this phenomenon .
Unfortunately, it's difficult to keep abreast of the scientific
literature in one's own field, let alone others . The rapid growth of
biofilm research and the need to bring together people from different
disciplines interested in biofilms led the American Society for
Microbiology (ASM) to sponsor Biofilms 2003, which was held in
Victoria, Canada, on 1 to 6 November 2003 . This was the third such
meeting in a series, with the previous two being held in Snowbird,
Utah, in 1996 and Big Sky, Mont., in 2000 . There were 638
participants including 260 international scientists representing 36
countries and 112 graduate and undergraduate students . The meeting
was divided into six sessions spread over 4 days . One day was set
aside for biofilm workshops and demonstrations . There was a mix
of invited speakers and those selected from submitted abstracts .
Finally, evening breakout sessions were held on four of the nights .
These sessions were organized to provoke a round-table discussion of
key research topics . Most conferees agreed that although the days
were long, the scientific discourse the meeting generated and the
information shared were outstanding .
Three keynote lectures were given on different evenings of the
conference . These talks each captured critical aspects of the field
and helped to set the tone of the meeting . The first was given by J .
William Costerton, Director of the Center for Biofilm Engineering in
Bozeman, Mont . Costerton reminded us how far we have come in the
field and emphasized the point that we continually tend to
underestimate the ability of bacteria to coordinate behaviors and
processes as a community . David Stahl of the University of Washington
gave the second keynote address . He provided us with examples of how
studying pure cultures of organisms in the laboratory can mislead us
and fail to explain observations of their behavior in the context of
environmental communities . In the final keynote address, Sören Molin
of the Danish Technical University pointed out that biofilm
microbiology is a field that relies heavily on microscopic
observation . He described the problems of interpreting such data and
cautioned that alternative explanations are possible for what may
appear to be a straightforward result . With this as the underpinning
theme of his talk, he then proceeded to challenge several points of
emerging biofilm dogma that are based primarily on microscopic data .
The meeting at Victoria also marked a special occasion to recognize
the career of J . William Costerton at an opening-night reception .
He took the lead role in organizing the first three ASM-sponsored
biofilm conferences and has worked tirelessly to promote and to
spread the biofilm concept .
A distinct impression taken from this meeting was the great number
of laboratories doing high-quality research . Much of the work
presented at the previous meeting in 2000 was fairly observational
and had a qualitative feel to it . In Victoria, it was clear that many
laboratories were conducting reductionist research and asking
sophisticated questions . Another impression was how advances in
imaging technology have transformed the field . At the 2000 meeting,
only a few laboratories were capable of sophisticated microscopy,
while at the Victoria meeting reports of confocal and time-lapse
microscopy were commonplace . The great breadth of the meeting was
reflected by the oral platform, which was organized into six
sessions . These sessions were (i) Biofilm Structure/Function and
Physiology, (ii) Developmental Patterns in Biofilms, (iii) Biofilms
in Natural and Industrial systems, (iv) Cross Kingdom Interactions,
(v) Pathogenesis, and (vi) The Biofilm Phenotype . Rather than
providing a summary of every talk, this review intends to capture
emerging themes and report key interesting new findings presented at
the meeting . The following topics were the focus of attention and
discussion .
A general characteristic of biofilm communities is that they tend to
be significantly more resistant to antibiotics and antimicrobial
stressors, including those represented by host-defense responses,
than planktonic bacteria of the same species (35,
65, 97, 98) .
The general consensus in the field is that no one single property of
a biofilm can universally explain this heightened resistance—it is
probably the manifestation of a number of factors . Biofilm properties
thought to contribute to antimicrobial resistance include those that
affect the penetration of the antimicrobial, the metabolic activity
of biofilm cells, and phenotypic variability within the biofilm .
Cells within a biofilm are usually enmeshed within a matrix of
extracellular polymeric substances (EPS), primarily produced by the
microorganisms themselves . The EPS matrix may affect the penetration
of an externally applied antimicrobial stress to cells buried in the
depths of a biofilm . The general consensus is that certain
antibiotics such as fluoroquinolones penetrate Pseudomonas
aeruginosa biofilms readily while other antibiotics, such as
aminoglycosides, penetrate more slowly since they bind to
extracellular polymers such as alginate (38,
76, 100, 109) . Reduced
penetration has been suggested to contribute to biofilm cells evading
components of the host immune response (16, 55) .
However, Jeff Leid reported in Victoria that human leukocytes
could in fact penetrate P . aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus,
and Staphylococcus epidermidis biofilms . He measured the response
of these leukocytes and found that they produce cytokines indicative
of a Th1-type response . Leid also reported that genetic factors
important for biofilm antibiotic resistance (such as ndvB of
P . aeruginosa, mentioned below) also affect susceptibility to
human leukocytes . Michael Givskov used confocal microscopy to study
the interaction of human polymorphonuclear leukocytes with P .
aeruginosa biofilms . He reported that biofilms formed by a
quorum-sensing lasR rhlR double mutant are more susceptible to
polymorphonuclear leukocyte-mediated killing than wild-type biofilms .
Cells within a biofilm are subject to nutrient gradients, which
usually result in metabolically active cells, which have access to
nutrients in the overlying liquid at the periphery of the biofilm,
and metabolically inactive cells within the interior . Most
antibiotics target actively growing cells, so cells in the interior
would be protected from antibiotic killing (9,
94) . Phil Stewart reported a novel approach to assess
metabolic heterogeneity in a P . aeruginosa biofilm community .
Using the tac promoter fused to a stable version of the green
fluorescent protein (GFP), he used de novo protein synthesis as an
assay for metabolic activity . Using biofilms either grown on a filter
placed on solid growth medium or in glass capillary tubes, he
monitored inducible fluorescence in the community and found that
fluorescence localized to the periphery of the biofilm . This zone of
fluorescence corresponded to oxygen gradients measured with
microelectrodes . Oxygen, besides being required for GFP folding, has
been shown to be a limiting substrate for biofilm growth for this
organism (117) . This strategy has been used to
show that zones of metabolic activity correspond to zones of
antimicrobial sensitivity .
Biofilm bacteria exhibit specific physiologies and patterns of
protein and gene expression when associated with a surface, compared
to planktonic cells (86, 113) . This has
been loosely dubbed the "biofilm phenotype . " The phenotypic
differences between biofilm and free-swimming cells has been proposed
to partially explain the heightened resistance of biofilm cells .
Several interesting new findings presented at the meeting shed
light on the impact of the biofilm phenotype on antimicrobial
resistance . George O'Toole's group identified a locus on the P .
aeruginosa PA14 chromosome involved in the resistance of biofilm
communities to the aminoglycosides tobramycin and gentamicin and the
fluoroquinolone ciprofloxacin (68) . A mutation in the
ndvB gene rendered P . aeruginosa biofilms over an order of
magnitude more sensitive to these antibiotics compared to the
wild-type strain, while not affecting planktonic populations . They
went on to demonstrate that ndvB is expressed only in biofilm
communities and based on sequence similarity and initial experimental
evidence, predicted that this gene may be involved in directing the
synthesis of periplasmic cyclic glucans . O'Toole proposed that these
cyclic glucans may bind and sequester these antibiotics in a biofilm
community .
Numerous laboratories have made the observation that after a
majority of a biofilm population has been killed by an antimicrobial,
a very small percentage of the population remains viable despite
prolonged exposure to the antibiotic or increased dosage . These cells
are called "persisters" and confer no heritable resistance to progeny
once the selective pressure is removed (27, 54,
74, 88, 94,
114) . The exact physiology behind the persister phenotype
is unknown; however, the hip genes (for high level of persistence)
have been suggested to control the frequency of the persister
phenotype in Escherichia coli . At the meeting, Peter Gilbert
discussed his group's work investigating the persister phenotype .
Using a constitutive promoter fused to GFP in combination with
fluorescence-activated cell sorting, Gilbert's group was able to show
that a homogenous population of liquid culture-grown cells contained
a bell curve distribution of fluorescence intensities . The end of the
curve representing cells that were less bright than the rest of the
population contained an unusually high level of cells with the
persister phenotype (101) . This led to the
hypothesis that this phenotype is linked to a metabolically less
active subpopulation that is always present within a given
population .
Mark Schinabeck described antibiotic resistance in the fungus
Candida albicans . He described three stages of biofilm development
for this organism . In the earliest stage of biofilm development,
C . albicans, like planktonic populations, relied on the activity
of two efflux pumps, the Cdr and Mdr systems, for resistance to
the antifungal compound fluconazole . At the two later stages of
biofilm development, these pumps were not necessary for resistance .
This led to an analysis of biofilm cells isolated from later stages
of development . These "aged" biofilm cells were shown to have
significant changes in the sterol composition of their membranes,
suggesting that differential regulation of membrane sterol content is
a mechanism for increased resistance in older biofilms .
One of the most distinctive features of biofilms when compared to
planktonic populations is that the cells are embedded in EPS . We know
little about this matrix (15, 103) . This
is in large part due to its dynamic nature . Characterizing the
composition of the EPS matrix is a daunting proposition . The
composition of EPS varies depending upon the organisms present and
environmental conditions . Presumably, under the proper circumstances,
cells can and will attempt to influence their surrounding chemical
and physical environment by secreting specific biological macromolecules .
However, this environment can also harbor components of abiotic
origin as well as matrix nonspecific biological molecules derived
from the lysis of cells . The challenge is determining when, why, and
how a community regulates EPS composition and the ultimate functional
consequences of this behavior .
Several talks and posters at the meeting provided new insight
concerning this matrix . For many years alginate, a polysaccharide
polymer consisting of mannuronic and guluronic acids, was thought to
be the major EPS polysaccharide of nonmucoid strains of P .
aeruginosa . Recent results have indicated that this is not the
case, leaving the question what, if any, polysaccharide is an
important component of nonmucoid EPS (31, 43,
78, 116) . Three groups
converged on this question independently . E . P . Greenberg, Roberto
Kolter, and D . J . Wozniak and M . R . Parsek independently identified a
locus on the PAO1 chromosome, now designated the psl locus,
that harbors a cluster of genes (PA2231 to PA2245) showing homology
to exopolysaccharide biosynthetic genes . Mutations in the psl
locus gave P . aeruginosa a biofilm attachment-deficient
phenotype . Kolter suggested that this cluster of genes might encode
functions for production of a polysaccharide rich in mannose and
glucose . Interestingly, in P . aeruginosa PA14, a separate
locus designated pel was identified that is involved in
producing a polysaccharide involved in biofilm development for this
strain (31) . This locus was identified by screening
microtiter plate-grown biofilms defective in forming a pellicle
at the liquid-air interface . These studies suggest that polysaccharides
distinct from the well-studied alginate play important roles in
P . aeruginosa biofilms . Similarly, Clay Fuqua reported that
Agrobacterium tumefaciens mutants unable to synthesize the
well-characterized exopolysaccharide succinoglycan are unaffected for
biofilm formation and these mutant biofilms contain one or more
different polysaccharides .
Susanne von Bodman presented a poster (S . B . von Bodman, M .
Koutsoudis, C . Herrera, and T . D . Minouge, Biofilms 2003, abstr . 184,
2003) describing the relationship between acyl-homoserine lactone
(HSL)-based quorum sensing and production of the extracellular
polysaccharide stewartan by Pantoea stewartii, a bacterial pathogen
of sweet corn and maize . The quorum-sensing regulators, EsaI
and EsaR, were shown to control stewartan synthesis (107) .
Quorum-sensing mutants appeared to be impaired in biofilm formation
and development, although these mutants show increased initial
attachment to surfaces . Luanne Hall-Stoodley and H . Lappin-Scott
characterized the biofilm matrix of Mycobacterium fortuitum (39)
with lectin and lipophilic fluorescent stains . M . fortuitum
stained with the mannopyranose- and glucopyranose-specific lectin
concanavalin A . The matrix also stained with lectins specific for
N-acetylgalactosamine . When lectin and lipophilic stains were
used in conjunction with nucleic acid stains, biofilms showed regions
of lipophilic or carbohydrate staining without concomitant nucleic
acid staining, suggesting an extracellular matrix . This was
particularly pronounced with the lipophilic staining patterns,
raising the question of whether the M . fortuitum matrix is
comprised of excreted lipids or dead cells that have lost nucleic
acid .
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DYNAMICS OF BIOFILM FORMATION AND MATURATION
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Tim Tolker-Nielsen presented some fascinating data describing the
multicellular behavior involved in the formation of mushroom
structures found under certain growth conditions for P . aeruginosa
biofilms (56) . Using surfaces seeded with mixed
populations of wild-type bacteria fluorescently tagged with either
the cyan or the yellow variant of GFP, his group showed that the
stalks of mushrooms are formed by clonal growth of a distinct
population, whereas the caps of the mushrooms are formed by a
distinct motile subpopulation that migrates up onto the stalk .
Time-lapse microscopy and experiments with twitching motility mutants
supported this model for the formation of mushrooms (Fig.
1) .
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FIG . 1 . Three-dimensional reconstructions of P . aeruginosa
biofilms formed in a flow cell reactor after an initial 1:1 inoculation
of the system with yellow fluorescent protein-tagged wild-type strain
PAO1 and a cyan fluorescent protein-tagged pilA mutant defective
in type IV-mediated twitching motility . The stalks of the biofilm
mushroom structures were formed by clonal growth of the nonmotile
pilA mutant . The caps of biofilm mushroom structures were formed by
the wild-type strain, which migrated up the stalks of the pilA
mutant . Magnification, x400 . (Image
courtesy of Mikkel Klausen and Tim Tolker-Nielsen, Danish Technical
University).
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Staffan Kjelleberg presented evidence that a PF1-like filamentous
phage present on the PAO1 chromosome is induced in older P .
aeruginosa biofilms, killing cells in the interior of the biofilm
(111) . Kjelleberg's group has identified other organisms,
Serratia marcescens, Vibrio cholerae, and
Pseudoalteromonas tunicata, that may also induce killing within
older biofilms . Kjelleberg likened this to a form of apoptosis and
drew a parallel between P . aeruginosa biofilm formation and
Myxococcus xanthus fruiting-body formation . He hypothesized that
this may be a mechanism for generating new nutrients in starved
biofilms . Allain Filloux presented his group's work on the
relationship of the three clusters of genes encoding the
chaperone-usher fimbrial assembly pathways to biofilm formation in
P . aeruginosa (105) . He showed that the
cupA cluster is required for biofilm formation on abiotic
surfaces, whereas the cupB cluster is important for adherence
to bronchial epithelial cells . He also identified a regulatory
protein, MvaT, that controls expression of the cup clusters as
well as other adhesins .
Quorum sensing is a term used to describe cell-to-cell signaling
systems . Most gram-negative organisms utilize an acyl-HSL-based
signaling system, while most gram-positive organisms use secreted
peptides . Previous work has implicated quorum sensing in biofilm
formation in a number of organisms . The relationship between quorum
sensing and biofilm formation was a subject that dominated much of
the 2000 meeting; however, there was considerably less material
presented at Victoria . Acyl-HSL-based quorum sensing in P .
aeruginosa has been previously linked to biofilm formation (20,
47, 61, 67) . Michael
Givskov's group characterized a number of quorum-sensing inhibitors
(QSIs) and their effect on P . aeruginosa biofilm formation and
function . Perhaps the best-characterized QSIs are the halogenated
furanones, first isolated from the seaweed Delisea pulchra (37,
42, 44, 69) . The
Givskov group used a DNA microarray approach to show that addition of
this furanone to P . aeruginosa cultures inhibited activation
of quorum-sensing-regulated genes (44) . He went on
to show that treatment of P . aeruginosa biofilms with this
inhibitor rendered them more susceptible to a variety of
antimicrobial compounds . Thomas Rassmussen from the Givskov group
presented a separate study, in which they used a screen to identify
QSIs from natural sources . Several candidate compounds were isolated,
with one rather potent inhibitor isolated from garlic . Some of these
QSIs also inhibited quorum sensing in the lungs of mice .
Biofilm formation in gram-positive organisms was also well represented
in Victoria . Naomi Balaban and colleagues used a linear heptapeptide
called RIP (RNAIII-inhibiting peptide; RNAIII is the quorum-sensing
regulatory effector identified in S . aureus) to target the
peptide-based quorum-sensing systems of S . aureus and S .
epidermidis (5, 34) . This
work utilized an animal model of infection, specifically grafts
inserted subcutaneously in rats . Grafts pretreated with RIP showed
reduced bacterial loads after extended exposure . Balaban suggested
that RIP may be an effective therapeutic agent to target S . aureus
and S . epidermidis biofilm infections . Jeremy Yarwood analyzed
the contribution of the agr quorum-sensing system of S .
aureus in biofilm formation . Yarwood found that an agrD
mutant formed biofilms with less biomass in a spinning disk reactor,
while the mutation had no effect on biofilm formation in a flow cell .
He used a transcriptional fusion of the P3 promoter (controls
expression of the RNAIII gene) to GFP and showed that RNAIII
expression occurred in successive waves throughout a biofilm followed
by waves of detachment, suggesting that agr expression may
induce detachment .
Beth Lazazzera presented work describing genes involved in biofilm
formation in Bacillus subtilis (40, 95) .
She described the regulatory circuitry which determinines if B .
subtilis will form a spore or a biofilm . She demonstrated that
mutations in Spo0A caused deficiencies in B . subtilis biofilm
formation . Lazazzera went on to hypothesize that sporulation is not
essential for biofilm formation . Further experiments led her to
propose that low Spo0A levels determine that B . subtilis will
form a biofilm, while high levels determines that it will form
spores .
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PHENOTYPIC DIVERSIFICATION IN BIOFILM COMMUNITIES
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A number of presentations throughout the meeting had the common
thread that significant phenotypic diversification occurs within
biofilm communities . Presumably, this diversification reflects
adaptation to microenvironments found within a biofilm . Biofilm
communities experience a wide range of gradients, which result in a
landscape of microniches and the accompanying selective pressures .
Evidence was presented that diversification can produce variants with
biofilm-specific phenotypes . Mary Jo Kirisits and Pradeep Singh
reported independently that growth of P . aeruginosa as a
biofilm produced a number of colony morphology variants when older
biofilms were resuspended and plated on solid growth medium . One of
these variants, called the "wrinkly" or "sticky" variant, formed
small rough colonies on solid growth medium and displayed a
hyper-biofilm-forming phenotype on abiotic surfaces . Similar
phenotypes have been reported in the literature for a number of other
species including Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium and
V . cholerae (118, 120) . Biofilms
formed by the sticky variant showed heightened resistance to the
antibiotic tobramycin and the biocide bleach compared to biofilms
formed by the wild-type parental strain . Similar observations have
been reported in the literature concerning this P . aeruginosa
phenotype (21, 23, 41) .
Singh also reported the isolation of "small" colony variants, with a
significantly smaller diameter than that of the wild-type parent when
grown on solid medium . The small-colony variant displayed a
hyperdispersion phenotype and will be discussed in the following
section . Kirisits concluded by showing that 20 randomly selected
isolates derived from an aged biofilm with wild-type colony
morphologies on solid growth medium displayed a wide range of
swimming and twitching motility activity . These were heritable
changes, suggesting that colony morphology variants represented a
small fraction of the diversity present in the population .
Eliana Drenkard reported the isolation of rough, small-colony
variants (RSCVs) from P . aeruginosa PA14 (23) . These
variants were not isolated directly from biofilms but from planktonic
cultures subjected to antibiotic selection . RSCVs displayed a
hyper-biofilm-forming phenotype on abiotic surfaces and increased
antibiotic resistance . A gene encoding a putative transcriptional
regulator, pvrR, was identified that controlled the switch from
an RSCV to a wild-type phenotype . Drenkard also reported that
PvrR is involved in the regulation of biofilm formation and
resistance to antibiotics . This research provided a link between
antibiotic resistance, biofilm formation, and the RSCV-like variants
found in cystic fibrosis patients . Andrew J . Spiers (A . J . Spiers, S .
Gehrig, J . Bohannon, Z . Robinson, and P . Rainey, Biofilms 2003,
abstr . 3, 2003) described a colony morphology variant of
Pseudomonas fluorescens dubbed the "wrinkly spreader" (93) .
This variant resulted from mutations in the wss operon, which
shows homology to genes involved in the acetylation of the
exoploysaccharide alginate . This variant produces an acetylated form
of cellulose that allows the variant to colonize a specific niche—the
air-liquid interface of standing liquid cultures . While the concept
and impact of diversification are most likely important, much work
remains to be done to determine the mechanisms by which diversity is
generated, the identification of phenotypes with specific niche
specialties, and the impact of diversification on the pathogenic or
ecological potential of a community .
There were also data presented at the meeting showing that plasmids
can have a significant impact on the biofilm-forming properties
of a strain, with intriguing implications regarding horizontal gene
transfer . Jean Marc Ghigo expanded upon his earlier published
observation that conjugal plasmids can promote biofilm formation . He
reported the presence of an antigen 43 homolog on the F plasmid of
E . coli . Antigen 43 is an aggregation factor that promotes
biofilm formation . Enhanced biofilm formation by a strain of E .
coli MG1655 harboring the F plasmid was shown to be linked to
F-pilus production (6, 33) . On the other
hand, Lori Burrows reported that in certain instances plasmid-encoded
functions impair biofilm formation . The TEM-1 gene, used as a marker
for ampicillin resistance in E . coli, had a negative effect on
biofilm formation . Inactivation of this gene, specifically the
encoded beta-lactamase activity, restored normal biofilm formation .
This observation extended to other commonly used ampicillin
resistance genes . Burrows hypothesized that encoded beta-lactamases
bind to peptidoglycan, competing with penicillin binding proteins,
which have been shown to be important for biofilm formation . Her talk
provided a sobering word of caution regarding evaluating the biofilm
phenotype of an organism after addition of new genetic capabilities,
no matter how innocuous they may seem .
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DISPERSION OR DISSOLUTION
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There is building evidence that certain species of bacteria can
actively leave a biofilm in a process that has been termed dispersion
or dissolution . This is presumably achieved by coordinating the
breakdown of the surrounding extracellular matrix through the action
of secreted (e.g., polysaccharide lyases) or cell surface-associated
enzymes, with the activation of motility functions (Fig.
2) . This activity is thought to represent a final
step in biofilm development, in which biofilm cells return to the
planktonic state . Karin Sauer described dispersion in P .
aeruginosa, a process she could reproducibly induce in biofilms
by changing the culture conditions (e.g., a rapid decrease in pH) .
Dispersion was accompanied by induction of genes involved in
flagellar swimming motility and repression of the gene, pilA,
encoding the type IV pilus structural subunit . She also demonstrated
that the transition from a biofilm to a planktonic state was
accompanied by large changes in protein phosphorylation patterns as
assayed by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis . David Davies reported
the isolation of a factor from the spent culture fluid of P .
aeruginosa that upon addition could induce dispersion in a
biofilm . Although the identity of this factor is unknown, it is heat
stable and smaller than 5 kDa in size . Paul Stoodley described a
similar phenomenon he termed "seeding dispersal," in which cells
leave a biofilm microcolony at a particular minimum size threshold of
100 µm in diameter . The mechanism appears to involve activation of
swimming motility and, interestingly, does not occur with tested
mucoid backgrounds of P . aeruginosa . Pradeep Singh described
the isolation of a small-colony variant of P . aeruginosa that
showed an enhanced dispersion/dissolution phenotype . This variant was
shown to overproduce rhamnolipids . Rhamnolipid biosynthetic mutations
generated in the variant eliminated the enhanced dispersion
phenotype . Furthermore, addition of exogenous rhamnolipid could
induce premature dispersion in wild-type P . aeruginosa
biofilms .
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FIG . 2 . Detachment process as observed in wild-type P . aeruginosa
biofilms . In older mature biofilms, central cavities develop that become
filled with swimming bacteria . Dispersion occurs when the cavities
rupture and motile bacteria are released . Represented is a PAO1 biofilm
cultured in a flow cell reactor . Cells are constitutively expressing
GFP . Magnification, x630 . (Image
courtesy of Pradeep Singh, University of Iowa).
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Jeffrey Kaplan described dispersion in a nonmotile, gram-negative
oral pathogen, Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans . This organism
aggressively forms biofilms on abiotic surfaces (52,
53) . The A . actinomycetemcomitans
dispersion mechanism appears to involve ejection of single cells or
small clusters of cells from the interior of the biofilm into the
overlying liquid . Transposon mutagenesis identified
dispersion-defective mutants . Functions required for dispersion were
related to lipopolysaccharide O-side-chain biosynthesis; PtsI, a
regulator of sugar uptake and catabolite repression; and DspB, a
beta-hexosaminidase . Alfred Spormann described genetic elements
involved in biofilm detachment for the Fe- and Mn-reducing bacterium
Shewanella oneidensis MR1 . Detachment events were controlled
by oxygen tension in a flow cell reactor system . Spormann's group
identified an FNR-homolog, EtrA, and a two-component response
regulator, ArcA, that are involved in sensing oxygen levels and
controlling the detachment process .
Future work will probably uncover a variety of dispersion/dissolution
mechanisms utilized by different species . These mechanisms represent
an attractive target for antibiofilm therapy .
One current area of intense focus in biofilm research has been
determining the "biofilm phenotype" of different organisms . The
biofilm phenotype is loosely defined as the patterns of protein and
gene expression associated with biofilm cultures in comparison to
those associated with planktonic culture . The general hope is that
such studies may identify candidate genes or proteins that may
explain some of the antibiotic resistance phenomena associated with
biofilms . Several studies have been reported in the literature, and
even the most conservative estimate reports significant changes in
expression patterns (85-87,
113) . Several groups presented findings
describing global genomic or proteomic studies of biofilm protein and
transcriptional profiles of a variety of interesting organisms other
than some of the traditional model gram-negative proteobacteria . Mark
Shirtliff reported his proteomic analysis of planktonic and
biofilm S . aureus, noting that approximately 20% of the proteome
was differentially regulated when comparing liquid and biofilm
cultures . Specific proteins identified included enzymes involved in
central metabolism that were upregulated in older biofilms and a
membrane-bound potassium transporter . Microarray experiments
validated the trends seen with proteomics . Shirtliff voiced the
dilemma facing anyone conducting such a study—how does one sift
through and evaluate all the data? Phil Marsh evaluated changes in
gene expression associated with intracellular growth inside
macrophages in the pulmonary pathogen Mycobacterium tuberculosis .
A GFP-based approach was employed using differential fluorescence
induction as a readout in conjunction with a cDNA microarray
analysis . Using differential fluorescence and a promoter trap
strategy, he sorted cells by fluorescence-activated cell sorting .
This study identified genes upregulated in macrophages involved in
cell wall biosynthesis as well as a number of genes with unknown
function . Hillary Lappin-Scott reported her DNA microarray-based
analysis of S . enterica serovar Typhimurium biofilms . She
found upregulation of the thin aggregative fimbriae called curli and
cell division-associated genes . One of the more interesting results
was that they observed downregulation of all but one of the
salmonella pathogenicity islands, perhaps suggesting that
downregulation of genes involved in acute, invasive infection is
coordinated with the onset of chronic infection . She also observed
that swimming motility functions were both up- and downregulated in
biofilms . Jean Marc Ghigo presented work determining the
transcriptional profiles of mature E . coli K-12 biofilms . He
showed that 10% of the E . coli genome in biofilms is
significantly differentially expressed compared to that in
logarithmically growing planktonic cells . This work provided evidence
that the expression of stress envelope response genes, such as the
psp operon or elements of the cpx and rpoE pathways,
is a general feature of E . coli mature biofilms (6) .
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INTERSPECIES INTERACTIONS
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Outside of certain types of infections or symbioses, most biofilms
consist of multiple species of both eukaryotic and prokaryotic
organisms . There are obvious consequences to different organisms in a
biofilm being present in high density and close proximity . The
potential for interspecies communication, competition, and
cooperation is high . How different species perceive and respond to
one another is a key feature of any multispecies system . Although
this fact is widely appreciated, most of the biofilm research being
conducted in the field today involves pure-culture systems . This is
not surprising—trying to study the complexity present in simple,
pure-culture biofilms is daunting enough . Microbiologists studying
complex environmental systems have developed wonderful, sophisticated
tools to determine what organisms are present, where they are, and
their metabolic disposition . However, the tractability of natural,
complex communities is limited . Important questions such as the
physiological response of one population to another and how this
impacts community structure and function are usually difficult to
answer . Researchers have taken an alternative route by developing
closed, artificial multispecies systems, where the composition of the
community and environmental parameters can be carefully controlled .
The downside to this approach is that the system is artificial and
may not accurately represent the complex community being modeled .
The advantages are that the researcher can ask basic reductionist
questions and take advantage of technologies such as genomics/DNA
microarrays and proteomics .
The meeting had a number of excellent presentations on the subject
of interspecies interactions . Morten Hentzer described his model
system for studying P . aeruginosa and Burkholderia cepacia
interactions in the context of cystic fibrosis lung infections, where
they can be found together . Both bacteria utilize acyl-HSL-based
quorum sensing to regulate virulence factors (28,
32, 91, 92) .
Hentzer conducted a DNA microarray analysis of P . aeruginosa
grown alone and in coculture with B . cepacia, finding that
50
genes were differentially expressed in coculture . Interestingly,
no quorum sensing-regulated genes appeared to be differentially
regulated, although P . aeruginosa in pure culture was able to
respond to exogenous addition of the B . cepacia purified signal
molecule, octanoyl-HSL .
Several studies of eukaryote-prokaryote interactions were also
presented . Anne Dunn from Jo Handelsman's laboratory described the
interaction of the soil microbe Bacillus cereus and tomato
plants (25, 26) . She described B .
cereus genes induced by the plant host, studied by using a
fluorescence-based promoter trap strategy . Two promising genes were
identified, tspX, a protease homolog, and lipA, a
putative chaperone . Mutations in lipA rendered B . cereus
competition defective in colonizing tomato seeds . Ann Hirsch
presented work on the rhizobium-legume symbioses, using alfalfa and
either Bradyrhizobium japonicum, Sinorhizobium meliloti, or
Rhizobium leguminosarum as a model system . She described the
importance of lectins in plant-symbiont interactions (106) .
Rhizobial strains that normally do not nodulate alfalfa would
establish nodules on roots of transgenic alfalfa expressing different
lectins . She then described a biofilm screen of mutants that
indicated S . meliloti used many of the same factors to
colonize abiotic surfaces and roots . Work presented from the Fuqua
lab studying A . tumefaciens biofilms reported identification
of an FNR-type regulator called SinR that controls biofilm maturation
on model surfaces and on Arabidopsis tissues and functions as
a component of an oxygen limitation response pathway .
Ian Joint reported on the role that acyl-HSL signaling plays in
zoospore settlement by the green alga Enteromorpha (49,
81) . His previous published work demonstrated that
older biofilms of Vibrio anguillarum are able to promote
zoospore settlement through acyl-HSL signaling . Investigation of the
algal partner indicated that acyl-HSLs elicit a calcium influx event .
Joint went on to propose that plasma membrane ion channels might play
a role in this signaling event in Enteromorpha . Anthony Smith
reported his latest findings in another prokaryote-simple eukaryote
interaction, P . aeruginosa and the protozoan Acanthamoeba
polyphaga . Smith demonstrated that P . aeruginosa survives
the intracellular environment of Acanthamoeba . Several
different mutants were tested, and although type III secretion
mutants had no phenotype in uptake or intracellular survival, rpoS
mutants showed enhanced uptake and reduced intracellular survival .
This led Smith to propose that rpoS plays an important role in
allowing P . aeruginosa to survive predation by this protozoan .
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BIOFILMS AND CHRONIC INFECTION
|
Although defining what constitutes a biofilm infection remains to be
resolved, most clinicians agree that biofilms are responsible for a
variety of chronic bacterial infections (16,
80) . Bacteria tend to stick to and colonize foreign bodies or
dead tissue in the human body . Many of these infections are caused by
opportunistic pathogens that are also human commensals (16,
22) . Clinical biofilms have received a great deal
of attention in the last 10 years . Much recent research has focused
on identifying genetic factors that contribute to biofilm formation
and assessing the relative antimicrobial susceptibility of different
key mutants that exhibit a biofilm phenotype . One biofilm disease in
particular that has received much attention is cystic fibrosis (CF)
airway infections . The evidence that biofilms play a role in CF
pathogenesis is steadily building (14,
62, 72, 89) . CF lung
infections are chronic and extremely difficult to treat with
antibiotics . Microscopic evidence shows striking images of bacterial
aggregates present both in the sputum of patients and colonizing the
surface lung airways, supporting the contention that CF infections
adopt a biofilm conformation . P . aeruginosa present in CF
sputum also produces acyl-HSL signals in ratios similar to those
produced by laboratory biofilms . Several presentations at Biofilms
2003 focused on CF airway infections . Gerd Doering presented his
group's work on the "anaerobic hypothesis" (8,
115, 119) . This hypothesis is
that oxygen tension in CF airways is very low and that P .
aeruginosa relies on anaerobic metabolism to grow as a biofilm in
CF airways . According to the hypothesis, P . aeruginosa grows
on mucous plugs in the lung and according to microsensor
measurements, oxygen gradients in the plugs are very steep, with much
of the system being anaerobic . Using antibodies specific to the
exopolysaccharide alginate, his group showed that alginate production
is induced in this environment . Claus Moser reported on the effect of
the macrolide azithromycin on the immune system in a murine model of
chronic infection . According to Moser, the balance of the Th1/Th2
immune responses is key to features of chronic infection (73) .
Although azithromycin is ineffective against P . aeruginosa as
an antibiotic, in the murine model it stimulated an increase in the
number of and activation state of CD4+ cells and a
decrease in interleukin-4 . A similar analysis was conducted with
azithromycin-treated CF patients, where a decrease in the
interleukin-4/gamma interferon ratio was observed . Collectively,
these data suggest that azithromycin asserts its effect through
modulation of the immune response in CF .
Another area of marked growth in the field since the meeting in
2000 was the significant amount of new research on pathogenic
organisms other than P . aeruginosa . Greg Anderson of Scott Hultgren's
laboratory, presented his work on the role of biofilms in urinary
tract infections by uropathogenic E . coli (2,
50) . He presented microscopic data suggesting that
E . coli invades urinary epithelium and establishes
intracellular "pods" or biofilms that help E . coli evade the
host immune response . E . coli within these pods is enmeshed in
an EPS network and produces type 1 pili and antigen 43, factors known
to participate in biofilm development for this bacterium . Another
organism that has been implicated in biofilm infections is
Enterococcus faecalis, which can cause endocarditis and
postoperative infections . A surface protein, Esp, had been previously
identified as important for biofilm formation for this organism (104) .
C . J . Kristich of Gary Dunny's laboratory reported that many
Esp-deficient strains have been isolated from patients suffering from
E . faecalis infections, suggesting that Esp may not be
required for biofilm formation by all strains . Kristich presented
data on a plasmid-free strain, E . faecalis OG1RF, that is Esp
deficient and found that indeed this organism is capable of forming a
biofilm in vitro (58) . Biofilm formation was also
highly dependent upon the growth medium . Other Esp-deficient strains
were shown to produce biofilms, suggesting that Esp is not a critical
requirement for biofilm development . Furthermore, his group
demonstrated that expression of a secreted metalloprotease, GelE,
enhances biofilm formation . Garth Ehrlich presented work on the
distributed genome hypothesis . The distributed genome hypothesis
states that chronic bacterial pathogens utilize a survival strategy
wherein certain contingency genes are distributed among a population
and are not found in all members of a species; thus, there exists a
supragenome at the population level which is greater than the genome
of any one organism . The distribution of contingency genes among a
population serves as a supravirulence factor that provides for
improved population survival through increased rates of genomic
dynamics, which provide for rapid adaptation to environmental
conditions through the reassortment of genes . The observation that
many bacterial pathogens possess inducible competence and
transformation mechanisms, which are activated during times of
stress, supports these hypotheses, as do the observations that
bacteria in biofilms exchange DNA at much greater rates than do
planktonic counterparts .
Perhaps the best-studied model biofilm communities in terms of human
health are oral biofilms (57, 83) .
Hundreds of species have been identified in the oral microbiota (59) .
Enamel surfaces in the mouth undergo a distinct pattern of
colonization or succession . Early colonizers such as Streptococcus
spp . are followed by secondary colonizers such as Fusobacterium
nucleatum . Specific interspecies interactions drive the
colonization process . Species participate in coaggregation and
coadhesion events mediated by specific adhesin-receptor interactions .
Biofilms are known to contribute to dental caries and gingivitis .
There is an appreciation that the composition of the community can
dictate disease, as opposed to the presence of a single bacterial
species . This has been dubbed "the ecological plaque hypothesis" (70,
71) . The oral microbiological community was well
represented at this meeting . Annette Moter described her group's
efforts to characterize the unculturable organisms associated with
periodontal disease (102) . They used fluorescent
in situ hybridization (FISH) to characterize subgingival biofilms
grown in periodontal pockets . The probe EUB 338, specific for the
domain Bacteria, was used together with a number of
species-specific 16S rRNA-directed oligonucleotide probes to identify
bacteria . Porphyromonas gingivalis, Prevotella intermedia,
Tannerella forsythensis, and treponemes of phylogenetic group I
were detected with specific probes . This was also the theme of Ann
Griffen's presentation . Griffen's group cloned 16S rDNA amplicons
from the subgingival pockets of healthy and diseased patients (60):
4,500 clones were identified, and over half of the bacteria detected
were uncultivated microbes . Over 75% of the subgingival clones
belonged to the phylum Clostridiae . Of the 19 species
statistically shown to be associated with disease in this study, 15
were uncultivated species, while traditionally regarded cultivatable
periodontal pathogens such as P . gingivalis were detected much
less frequently . Her group also reported similar work on dental
caries, where again the cultivatable species commonly associated with
this disease, including Streptococcus mutans, were outnumbered
by complex microbial communities, including many uncultivated
species .
Coaggregation interactions (cell-cell recognition resulting in
clumping between different bacterial species) have been described for
the vast majority of oral bacterial isolates . The focus of Rob
Palmer's presentation was the evidence that this occurs in vivo . He
and his colleagues used immunofluorescence and confocal microscopy to
monitor the spatial distribution of possible coaggregation partners
on enamel chips retrieved from the human oral cavity . They found that
cells reactive with an antibody against RPS (the streptococcal cell
surface polysaccharide that is the receptor for protein adhesins on
appropriate coaggregation partner cells) and cells reactive with an
antibody against a streptococcus that bears appropriate protein
adhesins (Streptococcus gordonii strain DL1) were closely
associated with one another early in biofilm development . They also
used an antibody directed against the streptococcus receptor
polysaccharide together with an antibody directed against the
specific protein adhesin found on Actinomyces naeslundii
strain T14V to show that streptococcus-actinomyces coaggregation
partnerships occur in vivo . Dennis Cvitkovitch presented his work on
the role of quorum sensing in biofilm formation in S . mutans (17,
66) . He initially demonstrated that ComD, a
two-component sensor kinase that responds to the competence-stimulating
peptide, was defective in biofilm formation . However, a comC
(the gene encoding the competence-stimulating peptide precursor)
mutant had a different phenotype . This prompted an analysis of
13 different two-component systems, identifying 3 that were impaired
in biofilm formation and that also responded to the
competence-stimulating factor . Richard Ellen presented his lab's work
on the periodontal pathogen Treponema denticola . Along with
collaborators from Boston and Zurich they found that the outer sheath
protease, dentilisin (PrtP), which aids the bacterium's degradation
of extracellular matrix, has homologs in several other oral
treponemes . The T . denticola prtP gene is differentially
transcribed in biofilms versus planktonic cells in vitro . The T .
denticola major outer sheath protein (Msp) dysregulates actin and
calcium dynamics in gingival fibroblasts, cells that normally mediate
the healing of the extracellular matrix of damaged periodontal
tissues .
Biofilms contribute to many industrial processes and problems .
Therefore, the ability to control biofilm formation has been an area
of intense interest for academic and industrial researchers .
Corrosion is one of the hallmark problems caused by biofilms in
industry (63) . A number of different metabolic groups of
bacteria, such as sulfate-reducing bacteria, have been shown to
promote corrosion on metal piping . New findings presented at the
meeting shed light on how some bacteria cause corrosion and how this
process might be controlled . Anne Camper examined multispecies
communities and showed that the presence of Fe oxides and humic
substances promoted the growth of corrosion-associated biofilm
bacteria, while not affecting similar planktonic populations (11,
12) . Dianne Newman described how biofilms of dissimilatory
iron-reducing bacteria use Fe(III) to respire in the absence of
oxygen, which, in some contexts, might protect steel from corrosion (24) .
She then proposed a model in which redox-active compounds such as
phenazines act as extracellular electron shuttles to stimulate
Fe(III) reduction under conditions relevant for biofilms (46) .
Both dissimilatory and nondissimilatory Fe(III)-reducing bacteria can
reduce phenazines, and because most phenazines have redox potentials
that are lower than those of Fe(III) minerals, this suggests that
phenazines may promote microbial mineral reduction in the environment
(45) . Tom Wood described the use of benign
biofilms as a biocontrol strategy to prevent corrosion . Biofilms
containing bacteria engineered to produce corrosion inhibitors or
antimicrobial compounds active against corrosion-causing bacteria
were shown to impede the corrosion process (48,
121) . Bacillus brevis, secreting
gramicidin S, protected pipes from corrosion in the presence of
sulfate-reducing bacteria .
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MODEL ENVIRONMENTAL BIOFILM SYSTEMS
|
Another theme of the meeting was the use of model environmental
systems to study biofilm communities . One such model system described
by Dave Ward was hot spring phototrophic mats (110) .
These mats represent highly stratified and metabolically integrated
communities structured around light and, in certain cases, temperature
gradients . These communities are also somewhat stable due to
the lack of eukaryotic predation at higher temperatures . In his talk
Ward described the distribution and specialization of a key mat
community member, the cyanobacteria belonging to the genus
Synechococcus . He identified several subgroups of
Synechococcus within these mat communities that have distinct
phototrophic metabolic properties that were indistinguishable from
one another at the resolution provided by 16S rRNA-based phylogenetic
analysis (29) . This finding pointed out one of the
limitations of using 16S rRNA as a molecular chronometer and the use
of this approach in defining a species . Another interesting result
presented by Ward was that although many mat community members showed
a high degree of metabolic activity, the growth rates of these
organisms were fairly low .
A second model system described at the meeting was wastewater
treatment biofilms . These biofilms are extremely important in the
wastewater treatment process since they remove many key chemical
wastewater contaminants such as nitrogen-containing and
phosphorous-containing compounds (77, 108) .
They also are excellent model systems for examining biogeochemical
cycling in microbial communities . Satoshi Okabe presented data
showing the distribution of sulfate-reducing bacterial populations in
a wastewater biofilm in relation to key redox gradients such as
oxygen, nitrate, and sulfate/sulfide, which were spatially resolved
by microelectrodes . Using FISH, Okabe's group was able to show that
bacteria of the sulfate-reducing genus Desulfobulbus were
concentrated at the oxic-anoxic interface . Using microautoradiography,
he showed that Desulfobulbus bacteria were present throughout
the biofilm, even in the oxic regions, and were incorporating
and oxidizing 14C-labeled propionate (79) . Andreas
Schramm used a similar multifaceted approach to study the nitrogen
cycle in wastewater biofilms . He demonstrated that nitrogen loading
levels dictated the types of ammonia-oxidizing and nitrite-oxidizing
bacteria that would predominate in sequential batch wastewater
biofilm reactors . Both activity and population size increased
significantly with higher ammonium concentrations . FISH revealed
three distinct ammonia-oxidizing populations, related to the
Nitrosomonas europaea, Nitrosomonas oligotropha, and Nitrosomonas
communis lineages . This finding suggested that coexistence of
these ammonia oxidizers depends upon where they are spatially
located in the biofilm in relation to ammonia and oxygen gradients .
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ENVIRONMENTAL BIOFILMS AS RESERVOIRS FOR PATHOGENS
|
There were several laboratories interested in the concept of
environmental biofilms harboring pathogenic organisms (30) .
Timothy Ford suggested that this might constitute a serious
problem for immunocompromised individuals using contaminated hospital
water supplies . In his presentation, Ford reported that
Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) could be isolated from biofilms
of hospital hot water systems and these isolates corresponded to the
same strains that had infected AIDS patients in the same hospital . He
then showed that MAC can be isolated from and thrive within drinking
water biofilms and that drinking water is a serious route of exposure
to MAC . Along the same lines, a poster presented by G . A . James (G .
A . James, R . Hiebert, A . Cunningham, and A . Camper, Biofilms 2003,
abstr . 159, 2003) reported that drinking water biofilms exposed to
water containing planktonic S . enterica serovar Typhimurium,
spores of B . cereus, and oocysts of Cryptosporidium parvum
retained these organisms in the biofilm after they were removed from
the bulk liquid . Immunoassays detected S . enterica serovar
Typhimurium 35 days after the biofilms were exposed to the pathogen,
indicating that these organisms persist within the biofilm community .
Genetic exchange between community members in environmental
biofilms is another key aspect of environmental biofilms harboring
pathogens . The acquisition of new genetic traits may cause a pathogen
to become more virulent or more resistant to antimicrobials . Biofilms
have been experimentally shown to facilitate conjugal plasmid
transfer, and the extracellular matrix of biofilms has been shown to
contain nucleic acids as a major constituent . This topic was the
subject of a poster presented by Ursula Obst (U . G . Obst, T .
Schwartz, and H . Volkmann, Biofilms 2003, abstr . 108, 2003), who
reported that a key gene involved in vancomycin resistance, vanA,
was detected in a drinking water biofilm in the absence of any
detectable enterococci, indicating that the biofilm community had the
genetic potential to be a source of vancomycin resistance .
Biofilms are also relevant to bioterrorism . Ron Atlas summarized
many of the ways indigenous biofilms might be important if biological
agents are released into the environment (3, 4) .
Biofilms could be colonized by pathogens introduced into the
environment, potentially complicating detection and decontamination .
Another potential issue would be the spread of genes derived from
genetically modified pathogens to indigenous species . David White
suggested that monitoring drinking water biofilms for toxins and
pathogenic microbes would increase detection sensitivity, since
biofilms tend to concentrate these agents at their surface (112) .
He presented data showing that when laboratory biofilms were exposed
to pathogens in the bulk liquid, they retained these pathogens
and protected them from biocides . Jon Calomiris (Biofilms 2003,
abstr . 170, 2003) developed a model laboratory system to grow
municipal water-fed biofilms on copper pipes . Copper tubing in the
presence and absence of biofilms was subjected to a pulse of
Bacillus anthracis (ATCC 4229) spores . The number of spores
attached to the biofilm was an order of magnitude higher than the
number attached to the naked copper surface, suggesting that biofilms
may concentrate spores . These studies strongly indicate that an
examination of native biofilms would be key to understanding the fate
of pathogens released into the environment .
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|
EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES FOR STUDYING HETEROGENOUS
COMMUNITIES |
One of the distinct benefits of attending this meeting was to see how
scientists representing different disciplines try to study biofilm
communities . What are commonly used and effective tools for studying
biofilms in one field may be conspicuously absent in another . In the
context of wastewater biofilms, Michael Wagner demonstrated how
environmental microbiologists determine what organisms are present,
where they are localized in relation to key chemical gradients, and
which metabolic activities they are participating in . In an
impressive display of technology, Wagner's group analyzed wastewater
biofilms and determined the (i) spatial resolution of individual
bacterial species and phylogenetic groups (using FISH), (ii) profiles
of key chemical gradients (using microsensors), and (iii) types of
metabolic activity in the community (using
microautoradiography-stable isotope probing) (Fig . 3)
(1, 18, 36,
64) . Clinical researchers are just now starting to
regularly employ these tools to study medical biofilms and will
probably gain new insight into biofilm infections as a result . Thomas
Neu presented his group's work using fluorescently labeled
carbohydrate-specific lectins to analyze EPS distribution in complex
environmental biofilms (7, 75) . In
conjunction with confocal microscopy, Neu used the full range of
commercially available lectins to evaluate the presence of
biofilm-specific glycoconjugates as well as the volume of biofilm
cellular and polymeric constituents . He showed that changing the
carbon source fed to these biofilms impacted EPS glycoconjugate
composition .
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FIG . 3 . Combining FISH with microautoradiography . Confocal laser
scanning microscopic images of artificial mixtures of E . coli and
Herpetosiphon aurantiacus incubated with [3H]glucose
and analyzed by a combination of microautoradiography and FISH by using
Cy3-labeled probe GAM42a (red) and Cy5-labeled probe EUB338 (colored
green by image analysis) . (Top left) Microautoradiographic image of
E . coli and H . aurantiacus after 3 h of incubation with [3H]glucose .
(Bottom left) Whole-cell hybridization of the microscopic field in the
top left panel . E . coli cells appear yellow because of the
overlapping labels . (Top right) Microautoradiographic image of E .
coli and H . aurantiacus after 3 h (E . coli) and 24 h (H .
aurantiacus) of incubation with [3H]glucose . (Bottom
right) Whole-cell hybridization of the microscopic field in the top
right panel . (Reprinted with permission from Applied and
Environmental Microbiology [64]).
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The P pilus is an important adhesin of uropathogenic E . coli .
Jana Jass described the use of optical tweezers and atomic force
microscopy to measure the adhesive properties of the P pilus of E .
coli . She reported strong interactive forces ( 150
pN) between recombinant E . coli heterologously expressing the
P pilus and polystyrene beads . These forces were absent when the
beads were incubated with P pilus-negative E . coli . Interestingly,
in the presence of specific P-pilus receptors, the interactive
forces were an order of magnitude weaker . Her work also indicated
that the P pilus exhibits a great deal of flexibility .
Another challenge in studying biofilm communities is the inability
to assess gradients of gene or protein expression in a heterogenous
system . Almost every study to date that has conducted a DNA
microarray or proteomic analysis of a biofilm population had to take
an average expression profile for the entire population . Marvin
Whiteley described applying a variation of the recombination in vivo
expression technology-based approach to P . aeruginosa PA14 in
order to assess expression profiles (90) . This system
is based upon creating genomic libraries in which the DNA fragments
are fused at random upstream of a promoterless gene encoding
the TnpR recombinase . By using sacB selection, if TnpR is expressed
P . aeruginosa will not grow on sucrose . This approach can be
used to identify promoters expressed in a biofilm . By varying
the translational efficiency of tnpR by modifying the Shine-Dalgarno
sequences, promoters with a range of strengths can be identified .
Although this analysis is just beginning, Whiteley's approach
highlights a new genetic tool that should eventually allow dissection
of the heterogeneity present in biofilms .
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BIOFILM FORMATION AS DEVELOPMENT—FITTING A SQUARE PEG
INTO A ROUND HOLE? |
Significant discussion centered on whether biofilm formation is a
form of differentiation and a form of "true" development . The strict
definition of a differentiation process would be a state where other
environmental inputs are ignored in order to proceed through a
programmed series of structural and/or behavioral changes . The
concept of vectoral checkpoints, through which the organism cannot
reverse its course of differentiation, is a central concept of
development . This paradigm is based on metazoan developmental
pathways that are largely controlled through temporal and structural
checkpoints (e.g., Hox genes of Drosophila) (13) .
There are clearly examples of prokaryotic differentiation, including
endospore development in Bacillus and Clostridium (84,
96), fruiting body and spore formation in
myxobacteria, and stalk-to-swarmer transition in Caulobacter (51,
82, 84) . These examples satisfy most if
not all the criteria used to define classical developmental
processes .
The general features and three-dimensional complexity achieved in
some biofilms has led to the idea that biofilm formation is a
developmental process, with true differentiation of at least some of
the cells within a biofilm into a new, nonplanktonic state . Given the
definition of development and differentiation, this would require
that cells within the biofilm enter into a rigid path towards the
sessile, biofilm-specific state, including the successful transit of
checkpoints along the way (see reference 10 for
such a definition) . The differentiation of these cells should at some
point be independent of additional environmental inputs . While there
are certainly some examples of such fixed, metazoan-type development
in prokaryotes, biofilm formation in most systems does not appear to
meet all of the criteria described above . In most cases, the process
is still strongly influenced by prevailing environmental conditions
(flow properties, nutrient conditions, etc.) and is reversible at
many steps along the way . Individual cells can dissociate from the
biofilm apparently at any time . Likewise, biofilms are readily
colonized by planktonic cells virtually at any point . Given such
observations, it seems that the consideration of microbial biofilms
in terms of metazoan development may miss the target . Defining
experimental approaches and evaluative criteria based on
metazoan-type development may ignore or miss some of the important
features and emergent properties of biofilm communities . Furthermore,
restricting our studies and conceptual framework in terms of
development is probably selling biofilms short .
If we accept that most biofilm formation is not true development,
does this mean that it is simply single-cell physiology of multicellular
proportions? Undoubtedly, the answer to this question is no .
There are clearly emergent properties of biofilms that distinguish
them from single cells . Antimicrobial resistance, diffusion-gradient-dependent
growth patterns, distributive behaviors such as quorum sensing,
and microscale phenotypic radiation are properties of biofilms that
are not or cannot be reproduced by single cells . Biofilms are clearly
more than the sum of their parts . Biofilm formation also exhibits
directionality, if not absolute checkpoints . Processes that exhibit
hysteresis, where there is a greater barrier to moving in reverse
than moving forward, clearly occur within biofilms . Once a
structurally complex biofilm begins to form, the likelihood of all
the cells of that biofilm reverting to a planktonic state is clearly
less likely than continued accumulation of the biofilm . Although the
process is reversible, there is directional momentum . Therefore,
while true checkpoints may not exist or at least be rare in microbial
biofilm development, directionality in biofilm formation seems a
certainty . The inherent flexibility in biofilm formation is in fact
one of the key attributes of these multicellular structures and
distinguishes them from the lock-step developmental pathways of
metazoan organisms . It seems that we are in a situation where most
biofilm formation is more than simply adaptive physiology as defined
for single cells but not quite a true developmental process .
Complexity is introduced by the structure, chemical and physical
heterogeneity, and differential genetic potential of the biofilm
constituents . In some cases, distributive behaviors, such as quorum
sensing, may further solidify the behavior of the biofilm as a single
unit . If we hope to understand biofilms to the point where we
can manipulate their formation, final architecture, and eventual
dissolution, we must recognize and appreciate their unique position
across the spectrum of cellular behaviors .
Much progress has been made in this area since the last biofilm
meeting, changing the general disposition of the field . There was a
sense at the 2000 biofilm meeting in Big Sky, Mont., that biofilm
development was a fixed program that could ultimately be explained
and controlled through genetic analyses . The paradigm for biofilm
development at the time was based mainly upon the study of P .
aeruginosa . In this developmental scheme single cells attached to
a surface, multiplied, moved together by twitching motility to form
small aggregates or microcolonies, and ultimately grew to form mature
biofilms characterized by mushrooms of bacteria encased in EPS . Each
of these steps was thought to require the indispensable contribution
of different gene-encoded functions . The literature at the time
reinforced this notion, and eventually the point was reached that if
you weren't growing mushrooms, there was something terribly wrong
(Fig . 4) . Much research was conducted and reported
in the format of "factor X is required for biofilm development." The
truth is that although there are mutants that are severely impaired
in forming biofilms, no one factor has yet been identified that is
absolutely required . Findings presented at the Victoria meeting
indicate there is a growing appreciation for the multifactorial
nature of biofilm formation .
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FIG . 4 . "The perfect mushroom" Micrograph represents a three-dimensional
image of a P . aeruginosa PAO1 biofilm grown in a flow cell
reactor . The biofilm field has propagated the perception that all
species march through a program of gene expression to form mature
biofilms with this characteristic structure . Much data presented at the
meeting contradicts this: biofilms come in all shapes and sizes, and
their architecture is as much a consequence of the environment as it is
of gene expression . Cells are expressing GFP . Magnification,
x630 . Image courtesy of Ehud Banin,
University of Iowa.
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|
The field of biofilm research has progressed tremendously since the
previous Biofilms conference in 2000 . One of the major themes to
emerge from this conference was that of diversity . The increased
diversity of different labs performing sophisticated studies on
biofilms and the range of new approaches in use to examine microbial
biofilms are particularly striking . Also striking is the diversity of
microorganisms that are being studied in the context of biofilms . The
range of microbial assemblages that are considered to be biofilms has
undergone diversification since the previous meeting, now embracing
structures such as pods and host-associated aggregates in addition to
those structures previously accepted as representing biofilms .
Findings presented in Victoria additionally reveal the diverse
mechanisms by which microbes can associate with interfaces and with
each other, under a range of conditions . One of the major reasons
that biofilm research has progressed so rapidly in recent years is
the advent of more sophisticated and more standardized physiological,
microscopic, genetic, and molecular approaches for their study . This
is a process that needs to continue in order for the field to
maintain its considerable momentum .
Among all of this diversity however, the Biofilms 2003 conference
made it abundantly clear that the field of biofilm research still
requires of a certain level of unification . The Biofilms 2003
conference highlighted the things we do not know as much as those
that we do . The field of biofilm research is still in its early
stages . Many of the complex processes that dictate biofilm formation
and stability are just now being identified, and far from completely
understanding the process, we are to some extent still gathering the
pieces of the puzzle before beginning to assemble them into a
coherent whole . The common threads and mechanisms shared among many
if not all biofilms are just now coming to light, through much of the
work presented at this conference . However, a great deal of research
remains to be done in order for the biofilm puzzle, with all of its
myriad essential pieces, to come together . Along the way, the
findings generated from this field of investigation will continue to
provide practical benefits and conceptual insights into many aspects
of biology, biotechnology, and medicine . We look forward to the
continued emergence of this unique and inherently multidisciplinary
branch of microbiology over the coming years and expect the next
Biofilms conference to foster the same excitement and high-level
scientific discourse as its predecessors .
We thank E . Banin, P . Singh, and T . Tolker-Nielsen for supplied
micrographs .
C.F . is supported by the NSF and USDA . M.R.P . is supported by the
NSF, NIH, and CFF . The meeting was supported by the NIH (Public
Health Service grant R13 DE015759-01) .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: The University of
Iowa, Department of Microbiology, 540E EMRB, Iowa City, IA 52242-1109 . Phone:
(319) 335-8228 . Fax: (319) 335-7949 . E-mail: parsekm@mail.medicine.uiowa.edu.
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