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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2004, p . 4466-4475, Vol . 186,
No . 14
Identification of psl, a Locus Encoding a Potential Exopolysaccharide
That Is Essential for Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1 Biofilm Formation
Kara D . Jackson,1 Melissa Starkey,2 Stefanie
Kremer,1 Matthew R . Parsek,2 and Daniel J . Wozniak1*
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Wake Forest University School of
Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27157,1 Department of
Microbiology, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 522422
Received 26 January 2004/ Accepted 4 March 2004
Bacteria inhabiting biofilms usually produce one or more polysaccharides
that provide a hydrated scaffolding to stabilize and reinforce
the structure of the biofilm, mediate cell-cell and cell-surface
interactions, and provide protection from biocides and antimicrobial
agents . Historically, alginate has been considered the major
exopolysaccharide of the Pseudomonas aeruginosa biofilm matrix,
with minimal regard to the different functions polysaccharides
execute . Recent chemical and genetic studies have demonstrated that
alginate is not involved in the initiation of biofilm formation in
P . aeruginosa strains PAO1 and PA14 . We hypothesized that there
is at least one other polysaccharide gene cluster involved in biofilm
development . Two separate clusters of genes with homology to
exopolysaccharide biosynthetic functions were identified from the
annotated PAO1 genome . Reverse genetics was employed to generate
mutations in genes from these clusters . We discovered that one group
of genes, designated psl, are important for biofilm
initiation . A PAO1 strain with a disruption of the first two genes of
the psl cluster (PA2231 and PA2232) was severely compromised
in biofilm initiation, as confirmed by static microtiter and
continuous culture flow cell and tubing biofilm assays . This impaired
biofilm phenotype could be complemented with the wild-type psl
sequences and was not due to defects in motility or lipopolysaccharide
biosynthesis . These results implicate an as yet unknown exopolysaccharide
as being required for the formation of the biofilm matrix . Understanding
psl-encoded exopolysaccharide expression and protection in biofilms
will provide insight into the pathogenesis of P . aeruginosa
in cystic fibrosis and other infections involving biofilms .
Recurrent bacterial infections of the lower respiratory tract are the
primary cause of morbidity and mortality in cystic fibrosis (CF)
patients (17, 43) . In the CF lung,
mucociliary clearance is impaired, which results in persistent
microbial colonization by a succession of pathogens, usually
beginning with Staphylococcus aureus and nontypeable
Haemophilus influenzae, followed by Burkholderia cepacia
and Pseudomonas aeruginosa as the terminal pathogens recovered
from the CF lung (17) . P . aeruginosa is a versatile
opportunistic pathogen that is capable of thriving in diverse
environments ranging from water and soil to plant and animal tissues .
This bacterium has an extensive arsenal of virulence factors that it
uses to successfully colonize the lungs of CF patients (30,
43) .
Several lines of evidence indicate that colonization of the CF
lung by P . aeruginosa involves a biofilm mode of growth (7,
27, 51) . Bacteria within biofilms
are attached to either a substratum or each other and are embedded in
a matrix of extracellular polymeric substance (EPS), which may
consist of proteins, polysaccharides, nucleic acids, or combinations
of these macromolecules (8, 39,
58) . One of the most clinically significant characteristics
of biofilm communities is that they are more resistant to antibiotics,
biocides, and host-mediated clearance strategies than are their
planktonic counterparts (33, 53) . Since
the EPS matrix, in certain cases, may play a critical role in the
biofilm resistance phenotype (52,
53), a complete understanding of its organization and composition
may assist in the development of therapeutics aimed at disrupting
biofilms .
The exopolysaccharide alginate has traditionally been considered
the major EPS of P . aeruginosa biofilms during CF pathogenesis .
Initially, the CF lung is colonized by nonmucoid P . aeruginosa
strains, but due to poorly understood selective pressures, these
strains convert to a characteristic mucoid phenotype . The mucoid
phenotype is caused by the overproduction of alginate, a linear
copolymer of mannuronic and guluronic acid joined by ß 1-4 linkages (12,
17) . Despite the extensive work conducted on
alginate biosynthesis and regulation (17), to date there
is no direct evidence that alginate is required for the development
of biofilms by nonmucoid P . aeruginosa strains, which are the
first to colonize CF patients . In most CF patients, mucoid conversion
occurs months or years after the initial colonization (17) .
There remain significant gaps in our understanding of how P .
aeruginosa survives the harsh, inflammation-rich environment of
the CF lung prior to converting to the alginate-producing phenotype .
Recently published data strongly challenged the role of alginate in
biofilm development by nonmucoid strains (19,
37, 62) . An analysis of the EPS derived
from biofilm-grown strain PAO1 revealed that the primary carbohydrate
constituents are glucose, rhamnose, and mannose, not mannuronate or
guluronate (62) . This has led to the hypothesis
that polysaccharides other than alginate may contribute to the
formation of the biofilm matrix in nonmucoid strains . In this regard,
annotation of the P . aeruginosa PAO1 genome revealed at least
four novel putative polysaccharide biosynthetic gene clusters (14,
54) .
For the present study, we identified a locus, psl, which may
encode an alternative EPS that is essential for biofilm formation
in P . aeruginosa PAO1 . The disruption of psl generated a
stable biofilm initiation-deficient phenotype in several assays .
Significantly, most of the genes of the psl cluster are
predicted to encode proteins with sequence homology to enzymes
involved in the synthesis of polysaccharides from glucose, mannose,
and rhamnose, which are the primary carbohydrate constituents of the
EPS purified from biofilm-grown P . aeruginosa (62) .
This suggests that the relationship between the conversion from
nonmucoid to mucoid strains and P . aeruginosa biofilms is not
simply a change in the alginate levels present in the biofilm matrix,
but a fundamental change in its carbohydrate constituents . This
represents a new paradigm for P . aeruginosa biofilm
development and pathogenesis that may reveal new avenues for
immunological or chemotherapeutic interventions for infections caused
by this organism . Two other groups have independently identified the
psl locus and have shown its requirement for biofilm formation
in P . aeruginosa in accompanying papers (15,
34) .
Strains, plasmids, oligonucleotides, media, and antibiotics.
P . aeruginosa PAO, its isogenic pslAB mutant, WFPA60 (see below),
and MS2, an insertion mutant inactivating PA1389-1391 (see below)
were used for this study . Other P . aeruginosa strains used included
PA103 (29), PAK (50), PA388 (4),
and FRD1 (38), as well as a collection of
CF-derived mucoid and nonmucoid strains (3, 61) .
WFPA50 is PAO1 fliC::xylE-aacC1 (63)
and PAO AWO is PAO1 pilA::tet (J . Mattick); J . Goldberg
supplied the PAO1 algC mutant . Escherichia coli strain
JM109 (Promega) was used for all cloning experiments, while strains
SM10 and HB101/pRK2013 (13) were used to transfer
plasmids to P . aeruginosa . PAO1 Smr was a spontaneous mutant
generated by plating an overnight culture of PAO1 onto a selective
medium (100 µg of streptomycin/ml) and screening for spontaneous
streptomycin-resistant mutants . PAO1, WFPA60, and MS2 were tagged
with the green fluorescent protein (GFP)-expressing plasmid
pMRP9 via a linear transformation protocol (11) . PCR was used
to amplify a 2.5-kb fragment, which included pslA (PA2231) and
a portion of pslB (PA2232) (54), with the
primers psl1 and psl2 (Table 1) . The
amplicon was cloned into pALTER1 (Promega) to generate pKDJ1 . Huang
and colleagues used the PAO1 cosmid library and the PAO1 genome
sequence to map a minimal tiling path (22) . This
library was used to identify two overlapping cosmids, pMO011305 and
pMO013305, that span the entire psl cluster . Luria broth (LB;
10 g of tryptone/liter, 5 g of yeast extract/liter, 5 g of sodium
chloride/liter), LB lacking sodium chloride (LBNS), and Jensen's, a
chemically defined medium (23), were used throughout
the study . Unless otherwise indicated, the carbon sources were
used at 0.4% . The plasmids were maintained in E . coli by antibiotic
selection with 15 µg of tetracycline and gentamicin/ml, 100 µg
of ampicillin/ml, and 30 µg of kanamycin or streptomycin/ml . In P .
aeruginosa, antibiotics were used at 100 µg/ml for tetracycline,
streptomycin, and gentamicin and 300 µg/ml for carbenicillin . Sucrose
(5%) and irgasan (25 µg/ml) were utilized for counterselection . All
oligonucleotides used for this study are depicted in Table
1 .
| TABLE 1 . Oligonucleotides used for this study
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Genomic DNA isolation and PCR assays. Genomic DNAs were
purified from P . aeruginosa strains with Wizard genomic DNA
isolation reagents (Promega) . PCR assays were performed with 100 ng
of genomic DNA, the primer pairs indicated in Table 1,
and Taq polymerase according to the manufacturer's recommendations
(Promega) .
Creation of WFPA60 and MS2. A restriction digest of pKDJ1
with BamHI and EcoRI generated a 2.5-kb fragment which was cloned
into the gene replacement vector pEX18Ap (21) and
designated pDJW630 . Plasmid pDJW630 was subsequently digested with
the restriction enzyme XmaI, and a 2.2-kb xylE-aacC1 cassette
from pX1918G (21) was cloned in the plasmid to
create pDJW634, which carries pslAB::xylE-aacC1 . The
digestion of pDJW630 with XmaI removes the 3' end of pslA and
the 5' end of pslB (54) . The aacC1 marker of
pX1918G is reported to create nonpolar insertions during gene
disruptions (21) . We utilized standard reverse
genetics strategies with strain SM10/pDJW634 to disrupt pslAB
(PA2231-2232) (21, 31,
60) . The successful disruption of pslAB was confirmed
by PCR assays . MS2 construction proceeded as follows . A 7.0-kb region
of the PAO1 genome containing open reading frames (ORFs) PA1389
to PA1391 was amplified by using primers PA1389A and PA1391A (Table
1) . The PCR product was digested with EcoRI and XbaI
and ligated into the corresponding restriction sites of pUC18 (57) .
A 1.6-kb SmaI fragment from pGM 1
(48), containing a marker for gentamicin
resistance, was ligated into the EcoRV sites of the construct . The
PvuII fragment of the resulting plasmid was ligated into pEX18Ap (21) .
The MS2 mutant was generated in PAO1 via standard allelic exchange
and was verified by PCR (21) . The growth kinetics
of WFPA60 and MS2 were determined in both LBNS and Jensen's defined
medium .
Microtiter dish assay. For biofilm initiation assays, LBNS
was inoculated (1:100) with an overnight culture of each strain, and
the diluted bacterial suspensions were added to a 96-well microtiter
dish (40) . The microtiter dish was incubated at
30°C for the indicated times . At each time point, the nonattached and
loosely adherent bacteria were removed by discarding the medium and
the cells . The wells were rinsed thoroughly with water . Next, 100 µl
of a 0.1% solution of crystal violet was added to each well and
the plates were incubated at 25°C for 30 min . The washing process was
repeated, the crystal violet staining the attached cells was
solubilized with 200 µl of 95% ethanol, and 125 µl was removed and
place in a fresh polystyrene microtiter dish to determine the A540 .
Motility and LPS assays. For twitching motility assays (50),
the strains were stab inoculated into a thin layer of 1% LANS (LBNS
plus 1% agar), incubated overnight at 37°C, and incubated an
additional 24 h at 25°C to allow motility zones to become more
prominent . Flagellum-mediated motility assays were performed by
inoculating a single colony onto 0.3% LANS . After overnight growth at
37°C, the motility was assessed by examining the distance the
colonies spread beyond the point of inoculation (1) .
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) was extracted, resolved by sodium dodecyl
sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), and silver
stained according to previously published methods (20) .
Confocal laser scanning microscopy. Bacteria were cultured
in Jensen's medium in a flowthrough biofilm culturing system at 30°C
(5, 23) . For visualization, each
strain was tagged with the GFP-containing plasmid pMRP9 (11) .
Biofilm growth was assessed at 12-h time points up to 72 h with
a Zeiss LSM 510 confocal laser scanning microscope .
Quantitative analysis of biofilm formation by silicone tubing
continuous-flow model. To quantitatively analyze biofilm populations of
the wild type and the pslAB mutants, we used a biofilm tubing
assay as previously described (47) . The tubing was
aseptically inoculated with 200 µl of a cell suspension from a
mid-logarithmic-phase culture (A600 = 0.5, or
107
cells) of strain PAO1 or WFPA60 by use of a 25 5/8-gauge needle . The
bacteria were allowed to adhere to the inner surface of the tubing
for 30 min before the flow of the culture medium was resumed (flow
rate,
0.7
ml/min) . At designated time points, a 15.0-cm-long section of tubing
was excised 7.5 cm from the inoculation point . This length of tubing
was longitudinally sectioned, and biofilm-grown cells were harvested
into 1 ml of medium . The bacteria were serially diluted and
enumerated by viable plate counts on LANS . Data are expressed as the
log CFU recovered at each time point examined .
Coinoculation assays. For coinoculation experiments (see
Table 3),
107
PAO1 Smr and WFPA60 bacteria were coinoculated into the
same biofilm tubing system . The experiments were conducted as
described above, except that the cells were enumerated by plate
counts on a selective medium containing streptomycin for PAO1 Smr
and gentamicin for WFPA60 . In sequential coinoculation experiments,
107
PAO1 Smr bacteria were introduced into the tubing system and allowed
to establish a biofilm for 24 h, at which time
107
WFPA60 cells were inoculated 0.5 cm upstream of the PAO1 Smr
inoculation point . WFPA60 was allowed to attach for 30 min, and then
the medium flow was resumed for an additional 24 h . Biofilm cells
were then harvested, resuspended, and enumerated by plating
onto selective medium . Data are presented as fractions of the total
bacteria recovered .
| TABLE 3 . Quantification of bacteria recovered during simultaneous and
sequential coinoculation biofilm tubing assaysa
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Analysis of loci potentially involved in EPS production.
Recently published data suggest that polysaccharides other than
alginate may contribute to the formation of the PAO1 biofilm matrix (19,
37, 62) . A prior annotation of the P .
aeruginosa genome suggested that PAO1 has at least three regions
that are potentially involved in the synthesis of novel
exopolysaccharides (see the supplemental data for reference
54) . A recent report has implicated a fourth
locus, designated pel, that is required for P . aeruginosa
pellicle formation on liquid surfaces and that may be involved in the
synthesis of an extracellular matrix (14) . We
determined whether the genes within these loci are conserved among
P . aeruginosa strains . Chromosomal DNAs were purified from a
variety of commonly used P . aeruginosa strains as well as from
mucoid and nonmucoid isolates derived from CF patients (see Materials
and Methods for a list of the strains analyzed) . PCR assays were
performed, using primers specific for one gene within each cluster
(PA2231 [algD], PA1390, PA3059 [pelF], and PA3559)
(Fig . 1) . The algD gene was chosen as a
control since earlier studies suggested that alginate genes are
widely conserved among Pseudomonas isolates (16) . With
the exception of PA1390 and PA3059 (pelF), these genes were
conserved in all strains examined (data not shown) . This suggests
that P . aeruginosa may utilize common pathways for biofilm
matrix formation .
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FIG . 1 . (A) Schematic of the psl gene cluster from the annotated
P . aeruginosa PAO1 genome . The psl gene cluster is located
between opdE and bkdR and contains 15 putative ORFs ( 18.7
kb), annotated PA2231 to PA2245 (54) . The ORFs of
this cluster are tightly linked in the same orientation, which implies
an operon structure . The position of the xylE aacC1 insertion in
pslAB, as well as a map of cosmid pMO011305, which complements
the WFPA60 mutation, is indicated . Black boxes indicate ORFs that share
homology with proteins involved in polysaccharide synthesis,
modification, or transport . (B) Schematic of the PA1381-PA1392 gene
cluster from the annotated P . aeruginosa PAO1 genome (54) .
This gene cluster is located between aceK and cysC and
contains 12 putative ORFs ( 16.9
kb) . The ORFs of this cluster are tightly linked in the same
orientation, which implies an operon structure . The position of the
aacC1 insertion of strain MS2, replacing the PA1388-PA1391 cluster,
is indicated . Black boxes indicate ORFs that share homology with
proteins involved in polysaccharide synthesis, modification, or
transport.
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Two clusters, PA1381-1392 and PA2231-2240 (which we and others have
designated psl, for polysaccharide synthesis locus), were
selected for further study because most of the genes within these
clusters are predicted to encode proteins with sequence homology to
enzymes involved in the synthesis of polysaccharides (Fig.
1) . For the psl cluster, these biosynthetic genes were
suggested to potentially use the carbohydrates glucose, mannose,
and rhamnose, the primary constituents of the EPS purified from
biofilm-grown P . aeruginosa (62) . An analysis of the
pslA and pslC genes suggested that they encode glucose
and rhamnose glycosyl transferases, respectively . The pslB
gene encodes a probable phosphomannose isomerase/GDP-mannose
pyrophosphorylase, and pslD encodes an exopolysaccharide
transporter (Fig . 1A; Table 2) .
The psl gene cluster, annotated PA2231-PA2245, is located
between opdE and bkdR and contains 15 putative ORFs ( 18.7
kb, designated pslA to pslO) . The ORFs of this cluster
are tightly linked in the same orientation, which implies an operon
structure (Fig . 1A) .
| TABLE 2 . psl ORFs PA2231 to PA2245 with proposed roles in
polysaccharide synthesis
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An analysis of the PA1381-PA1392 cluster revealed a collection of
genes that also encode potential polysaccharide biosynthetic enzymes
(Fig . 1B) . This cluster harbors four genes, PA1385 and
PA1389 to PA1391, that have homology to glycosyl transferases .
PA1384, annotated as galE, is predicted to encode a UDP-glucose
4-epimerase . Interestingly, the genes of this cluster display a
G+C content that is much lower (<60%) than that of the P .
aeruginosa average (67%), suggesting that these genes may have
been acquired through horizontal gene transfer . These genes also
cluster fairly tightly, implying an operon structure .
A pslAB mutant is deficient in the initiation of biofilm
formation. To test whether the psl or PA1381-PA1393 gene cluster
plays a role in biofilm development, we utilized standard reverse
genetics strategies to disrupt both pslA and pslB or
PA1388-1391 in P . aeruginosa PAO1 (see Materials and Methods
and Fig . 1) . The pslAB mutant was generated
with the aacC1 (gentamicin resistance) marker of pX1918G,
which is reported to create nonpolar insertions during gene
disruption (49) . We compared the pslAB mutant,
designated WFPA60, with the parental PAO1 strain for the ability to
initiate biofilm formation by utilizing the biofilm microtiter dish
assay (Fig . 2) . This assay, which measures the
early stages of biofilm formation, is based on the quantitation of
bacterial cells attached at the medium-air interface of a well of a
polyvinyl chloride (PVC) microtiter dish (41) . In
this assay, WFPA60 was severely deficient in the ability to initiate
biofilm formation (Fig . 2A) . This defect was not
due to differences in the growth rate, as PAO1 and WFPA60 had similar
growth rates (data not shown) . The defect in biofilm initiation was
clearly mediated by the disruption of pslAB, since the
introduction of cosmid pMO011305, which harbors a 22.5-kb insert
containing the majority of the psl locus (22)
(Fig . 1A), into WFPA60 restored the biofilm initiation
levels (Fig . 2A) .
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FIG . 2 . Biofilm formation by P . aeruginosa strains . (A) The
biofilm formation of strains PAO1 (circles), WFPA50 (squares), and
WFPA60/pMO011305 (triangles) was assayed at 2-h intervals in a static
microtiter plate system (40) . Surface-attached cells
were stained with crystal violet, the stain was solubilized in ethanol,
and the absorbance was analyzed at 540 nm . (B) Biofilm formation of PAO1
(black) and MS2 (white) at 10 h in a static microtiter plate system (40) .
Bacteria were cultured with the following carbon sources (0.4%): A, LB
medium; B, LB medium with glucose; C, 10x
glucose; D, succinate; E, glycerol; F, glutamate (F).
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An analysis of strain MS2, which had a mutation in the other
potential EPS biosynthetic gene cluster (PA1388-1391), showed no
significant defect in biofilm initiation in the microtiter dish
assay, even when tested under a variety of growth conditions (Fig.
2B) . In flow cell assays, MS2 also produced a robust biofilm
that was structurally similar to that of the wild-type strain
(data not shown) . Because the disruption of PA1388-1391 had no
apparent effect on biofilm formation, the remainder of the study
focused on the involvement of the psl gene cluster in biofilm
development .
The pslAB mutant has no apparent defect in LPS synthesis or
motility. To our knowledge, a function for the psl gene cluster
in biofilm formation has yet to be reported . Since many of the ORFs
may encode enzymes involved in polysaccharide synthesis (Fig.
1; Table 2), psl may
regulate or constitute a portion of the LPS synthesis pathway . LPS
has been implicated in the architecture of P . aeruginosa
biofilms (44), and a prior study suggested that
pslB (designated ORF 488) may be involved in A-band LPS synthesis
(45) . To determine if the psl-dependent effects on
biofilm formation are LPS related, we compared the LPS profiles
of PAO1, WFPA60, a PAO1 algC mutant, and the corresponding algC
complemented strain . P . aeruginosa algC mutants have a defect
in LPS core oligosaccharide synthesis (9) . The LPSs from
these strains were extracted (20), resolved by
SDS-15% PAGE, and silver stained . The silver-stained gel revealed
identical LPS profiles for PAO1, WFPA60, and the complemented
LPS-deficient mutant (Fig . 3A, lanes 3 to 5),
whereas the PAO1 algC mutant clearly lacked core
oligosaccharides (Fig . 3A, lane 2) .
|
FIG . 3 . The pslAB mutant has no defects in LPS synthesis or
motility . (A) LPS profiles of PAO1 (lane 5) or the following
PAO1-derived strains: PAO1 algC (lane 2), PAO1 algC plus
algC (lane 3), and WFPA60 (lane 4) . LPS was extracted from these
strains, separated by SDS-15% PAGE, and visualized by silver staining of
the polyacrylamide gel . Lane 1 contains a protein standard . (B)
Twitching motility assays of PAO1 AWO (pilA::tet) (spot
1), PAO1 (spot 2), and WFPA60 (spot 3) . (C) Flagellum motility assays of
WFPA50 (fliC::aacC1) (spot 1), PAO1 (spot 2), and WFPA60
(spot 3).
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Since prior studies implicated flagellum (swimming)- and type IV
fimbria (twitching)-mediated motility in P . aeruginosa biofilm
development (25, 42), we conducted
standard twitching and swimming motility assays (2,
50) and found no motility defects in WFPA60 (Fig.
3B and C, respectively) . These data strongly suggest that
the defect in biofilm formation described above for WFPA60 is
not due to alterations in LPS biosynthesis or motility .
The pslAB mutant is severely compromised in biofilm formation
in a flow cell reactor. One limitation of the microtiter dish assay is
that nutrients are diminished and waste products accumulate rapidly,
making it difficult to examine biofilm development for extended
periods of time . In addition, microtiter dish-grown biofilms are not
amenable to microscopy . Therefore, we used flow cell devices to
compare the biofilm development of PAO1 and WFPA60 . In this system,
nutrients are continually replenished, allowing for the long-term
observation of living hydrated biofilms on a glass surface . We
generated GFP-tagged derivatives of PAO1 and WFPA60 (11,
64) and combined flow cell culturing technology and confocal
scanning laser microscopy to examine the architecture of these
strains over time (Fig . 4) . The parental strain PAO1 formed
robust biofilms throughout the time course of this experiment
(Fig . 4, top panels) . However, when strain WFPA60 was
examined, we discovered that it was severely compromised in biofilm
development at all time points examined, even though an identical
number of PAO1 and WFPA60 bacteria were initially inoculated into the
flow cells (Fig . 4, bottom panels) . At the latest time
point examined (72 h), some of the WFPA60 bacteria began to develop
into microcolonies, suggesting a severe attenuation in biofilm
initiation .
|
FIG . 4 . Qualitative analysis of PAO1 and WFPA60 biofilm populations .
Strains harboring pMRP9 were inoculated into respective flow devices and
assayed at various time points postinoculation up to 72 h . WFPA60 is
deficient in biofilm formation under laminar flow growth conditions
compared to PAO1.
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Quantitative analysis of PAO1 and pslAB biofilm-grown cells.
A quantitative assessment of the biofilm formation of WFPA60 further
strengthened our assertion that the psl cluster plays a role
in biofilm development . Therefore, we devised a tubing assay to
quantify the population of biofilm-grown cells under continuous
laminar flow conditions with a constant supply of fresh growth
medium . Based on the above results, we hypothesized that there would
be a significant difference in biofilm formation between the PAO1 and
WFPA60 strains . The biofilms were grown in silicone tubes by first
priming the substratum with medium and then inoculating the tubing
with a culture of PAO1 or WFPA60, allowing the cells to attach for 1
h, and initiating a continuous flow of medium . At 6, 12, 24, 36, and
48 h, a defined section of tubing was longitudinally sectioned, and
biofilm bacteria were harvested and enumerated by plate counting .
WFPA60 exhibited a substantial defect in biofilm initiation (up to 105-fold)
compared to the isogenic parental PAO1 strain (Fig . 5) .
Strain WFPA60, which was impaired in the initial stages of biofilm
formation (Fig . 2), appeared unable to overcome the
defect over an extended time period when it was incubated under
continuous laminar flow conditions .
|
FIG . 5 . Quantitative analysis of PAO1 and WFPA60 biofilm populations in
silicone tubing continuous flow devices . Overnight cultures of each
strain ( 107
cells) were inoculated into a section of silicone tubing that had first
been primed with medium . At designated endpoints (6, 12, 24, 36, and 48
h), the tubing was longitudinally sectioned and the biofilm-grown cells
were harvested, resuspended, and enumerated by plate counts (see
Materials and Methods) . Data are expressed as the log CFU recovered at
each time point examined and are the averages of three independent
experiments.
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Since WFPA60 was severely compromised in biofilm development, we
reasoned that one or more factors (likely the EPS) that are required
for cell-surface or cell-cell interactions are lacking in this
strain . Assuming that this was the case, we hypothesized that the
factor(s) may be supplied in trans by the parental strain in a
coculture . To test this, we coinoculated an identical number of PAO1
and WFPA60 bacteria into the biofilm tubing system described above .
After 48 h, the tubing was sectioned and the cells were harvested and
plated onto a selective growth medium . To distinguish between WFPA60
and PAO1, we used a streptomycin-resistant PAO1 derivative (PAO1 Smr)
and WFPA60, which is gentamicin resistant . When they were
simultaneously cocultured, PAO1 Smr was unable to rescue
the pslAB mutant phenotype (Table 3), suggesting that
WFPA60 was unable to effectively compete with the wild-type
strain for a shared substratum .
In the above assay, PAO1 and WFPA60 were inoculated simultaneously .
We also examined whether WFPA60 could be recruited into an established
biofilm formed by a wild-type strain . To test this, we inoculated
PAO1 Smr into the continuous flow silicone tubing system and
incubated it for 24 h . PAO1 Smr readily attached to the tubing
and initiated biofilm development during this period (Table
3) . After this initiation, an identical number of WFPA60 cells
were introduced into the system and incubated for 30 min without
flow, after which the flow was resumed . After 24 h, the numbers
of PAO1 Smr and WFPA60 cells were determined . The results were
consistent with those of the other biofilm assays; even when
cocultured sequentially, WFPA60 was significantly impaired at biofilm
initiation (Table 3) . These data indicate that even
when WFPA60 is deposited onto an established biofilm of wild-type
cells, it is unable to establish a niche . Taken together, the data in
Fig . 2, 4, and 5 and Table
3 suggest that the psl gene cluster
contributes significantly to cell-surface interactions with abiotic
surfaces (glass, PVC, and silicone) as well as to cell-cell
interactions with certain biotic surfaces .
A critical aspect of P . aeruginosa pathogenesis is the ability
to form biofilms in the lungs of CF patients and on many other
surfaces . For some time, alginate has been considered the major
polysaccharide of the biofilm EPS matrix . However, recent studies
have indicated that alginate is not involved in the initiation of
biofilm formation by nonmucoid P . aeruginosa strains, which
are the first to colonize CF patients (19, 37,
62) . Instead, there appear to be other EPS
components that mediate biofilm formation . In this paper, we analyzed
two gene clusters that appear to encode enzymes for the synthesis of
novel polysaccharides . The inactivation of genes within one cluster
(PA1381-PA1393) resulted in no discernible biofilm phenotype .
Although we cannot rule out a role for this cluster in biofilm
development or polysaccharide synthesis in P . aeruginosa, we
concentrated our efforts on discerning the function of the psl
gene cluster . The disruption of the first two genes within the psl
cluster (strain WFPA60) led to a profound biofilm initiation
deficiency . The pslAB mutant cells, which were impaired in the
initial stages of biofilm formation, were unable to overcome this
defect over an extended time period when they were incubated under
continuous flow conditions . This impaired ability of WFPA60 to
initiate biofilm formation was observed for several abiotic surfaces
(PVC, glass, and silicone tubing) and was not due to defects in
motility or LPS biosynthesis . Moreover, by using both qualitative and
quantitative assays, we showed that WFPA60 is deficient in biofilm
formation for up to 72 h . Finally, we report that either simultaneous
or sequential coinoculation of wild-type P . aeruginosa cannot
rescue the biofilm formation phenotype of WFPA60 . Overall, our
interpretation of these data is that the pslAB mutant is
impaired in the initiation phase of biofilm formation . We propose
that genes within the psl cluster play a critical role in
cell-cell and/or cell-surface interactions . This is consistent with
the findings in accompanying papers from two other groups (15,
34) .
Although our present data do not directly address whether the
psl locus encodes a novel exopolysaccharide, there are precedents
for exopolysaccharides from other bacteria having roles similar to
those proposed for P . aeruginosa psl . Exopolysaccharides have
been shown to play an important role in bacterial plant and animal
pathogenesis for a variety of bacterial species (24,
32, 36) . Many of the infections
caused by these organisms are believed to involve biofilms, and
exopolysaccharide-negative strains are typically avirulent .
Exopolysaccharides are often implicated in either mediating
attachment or providing protection . The properties of the exopolysaccharide
matrix that confer protection depend upon the nature of the
antimicrobial agent or stress being applied . In general, the
exopolysaccharide can act as a physical barrier or function as a
chemically reactive barrier . Future studies are aimed at determining
if the psl locus does indeed encode a novel polysaccharide
that plays a protective role in P . aeruginosa biofilms . Nonetheless,
our observations support the conclusion that the psl cluster
encodes gene products that are required for mediating cell-surface
and cell-cell interactions . Initial attachment requires that a
repulsion barrier between a negatively charged bacterial cell and a
surface must be overcome (55, 56) .
Different exopolysaccharides, such as those from Vibrio sp.,
acidic polysaccharides of marine pseudomonads, and Staphylococcus
epidermidis PIA and PS/A clearly promote adherence (6,
18, 32, 35,
65) . The prosthecate marine bacterium
Hyphomonas produces at least two developmentally regulated
exopolysaccharides that serve as adhesins (28) .
Exopolysaccharides can also influence biofilm structure and function,
as has been demonstrated for alginate (19,
37), Vibrio cholerae Vps (65),
and E . coli colanic acid (10) .
The pslAB mutant attaches poorly to abiotic and biotic surfaces
under both static and dynamic culture conditions . This phenotype
is most readily apparent for attachment to these surfaces under
dynamic culture conditions . However, under extended static culture
conditions (>36 h), WFPA60 eventually will form biofilms that are
comparable to those formed by the wild-type strain (K . D . Jackson and
D . J . Wozniak, unpublished data) . When the WFPA60 cells are left
undisturbed for extended periods, they begin the biofilm formation
process, but this is substantially delayed in the dynamic flow tubing
system . This assay was designed to mimic indwelling device biofilms
such as those that form in catheters . Our interpretation of this is
as follows . If WFPA60 is deficient at forming cell-surface and
cell-cell interactions but is left undisturbed, it will eventually
overcome these barriers . However, if it is subjected to laminar or
turbulent flow, it is incapable of mediating such interactions . It is
also possible that the growth conditions in these long-term static
experiments result in the activation of another set of
exopolysaccharide genes, such as pel or PA1388-1391, and that
this can compensate for the loss of psl .
Sauer et al . proposed that during biofilm formation, cells undergo
a two-step attachment process consisting of reversible and irreversible
phases (see reference 46 and references therein) . In
the reversible attachment phase, the cells contact the surface via
the cell pole and are transiently affixed to the substratum,
contrasting with the irreversible attachment stage, in which the
cells reorient to the longitudinal cell axis and begin cell cluster
(microcolony) formation . In future experiments, it would be
worthwhile to investigate more thoroughly at which stage WFPA60 is
impaired (i.e., reversible versus irreversible attachment) .
The biochemical composition of the P . aeruginosa biofilm matrix
in mature nonmucoid biofilms has remained poorly defined . Until
recently, it was assumed that the matrix is composed of alginate, but
several reports have challenged this (14, 19,
37, 62) . A recent study
indicated the importance of extracellular DNA for the initial
establishment of P . aeruginosa biofilms (58) . More
recently, Friedman and Kolter identified a seven-gene locus in
P . aeruginosa strain PA14, designated pel, that is required
for the formation of pellicles at the air-liquid interface (14) .
Most of the predicted proteins of the pel genes have amino acid
sequence similarities with enzymes involved in carbohydrate
processing . Carbohydrate and glycosyl linkage analysis of the matrix
material derived from PA14 and PA14 pel mutants supported the
conclusion that the matrix is composed of a glucose-rich component
that is distinct from cellulose or LPS . Although we did not
investigate the involvement of the pel locus in P . aeruginosa
PAO1 biofilms, it was reported that the laboratory domestication
of strain PAO1 may have precluded identification of the pel
genes in PAO1 biofilm formation (14) . Likewise, strain
PA14 appears to lack the pslA to -D genes (15) .
A recent analysis examined the genomic contents of 18 P .
aeruginosa isolates derived from diverse sources ranging from the
environment to acute and chronic infections (59) .
The data from that analysis showed that the psl and pel
loci were present in every strain analyzed, indicating that most
P . aeruginosa genes possess the genetic potential to produce
these putative EPS types . Interestingly, the putative EPS locus
PA1381-1392 was present in only 11 of the isolates examined .
An earlier analysis of the P . aeruginosa PAO1 biofilm matrix
revealed that the primary carbohydrate constituents are glucose,
rhamnose, and mannose (62) . A neutral extracellular
polysaccharide containing D-glucose,
D-mannose, and L-rhamnose was
previously purified from a clinical P . aeruginosa immunotype 4
isolate (26) . However, there have been no
subsequent reports regarding the genetic basis for the production of
this polysaccharide . Although carbohydrate analysis of the PA14
pellicle matrix did not identify mannose as a component (14),
this sugar subunit is clearly present in the PAO1 biofilm matrix (62) .
Since the pslB gene product is a probable phosphomannose
isomerase/GDP-mannose pyrophosphorylase, it is tempting to speculate
that the psl locus may be involved in the synthesis of a
mannose-containing polysaccharide that contributes to biofilm
formation . Data in one of the accompanying papers (15)
support this hypothesis . It is also possible that P . aeruginosa
has the capacity to synthesize several alternative polysaccharides
that play a role in the biofilm matrix .
Because of their intrinsic resistance to antimicrobial agents,
biofilms are significant in medicine and industry . The chemical
structure of the biofilm matrix is believed to be composed of nucleic
acids and exopolysaccharides . Our data indicate that a previously
uncharacterized locus, psl, may encode a novel polysaccharide
that is required for the formation of the biofilm matrix . Future
experiments will include a thorough comparison of the carbohydrate
constituents and the glycosyl linkages of polysaccharides purified
from PAO1 and WFPA60 . In addition, the role of the remaining psl
genes (pslC to pslO) in biofilm formation requires
further study . In this regard, data in an accompanying paper reveal
that all 15 of the genes within the psl locus are
cotranscribed, suggesting that there is a single operon (34) .
Since mucoid conversion typically occurs months or years after
initial colonization (17), we hypothesize that P .
aeruginosa has the capacity to express alternative
exopolysaccharides that are essential for biofilm formation and the
persistence of P . aeruginosa infections . Further
investigations of these early events in conjunction with data derived
from genetic regulation studies of the psl cluster may open up
new avenues for immunological or chemotherapeutic interventions for
infections caused by this important opportunistic pathogen .
Public Health Service grants AI-35177 and HL-58334 (D.J.W.) supported
this work . The David and Lucile Packard Foundation supported K.J .
This work was also supported by grants to M.P . by the CF foundation
(Parsek 02I0) and the National Science Foundation (MCB 0133833) . NIH
Biotechnology Training grant 5-T32-GM08449-09 supported M.S .
J . Mattick supplied PAO1 AWO and J . Goldberg supplied the PAO1
algC mutant . We thank J . Goldberg and Antonio DiGiandomenico for
assistance with the P . aeruginosa LPS analyses .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology and Immunology, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Medical
Center Blvd., Winston-Salem, NC 27157-1064 . Phone: (336) 716-2016 . Fax: (336)
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