19 research outputs found
Microstructural and Rheological Transitions in Bacterial Biofilms
Abstract Biofilms are aggregated bacterial communities structured within an extracellular matrix (ECM). ECM controls biofilm architecture and confers mechanical resistance against shear forces. From a physical perspective, biofilms can be described as colloidal gels, where bacterial cells are analogous to colloidal particles distributed in the polymeric ECM. However, the influence of the ECM in altering the cellular packing fraction (Ď) and the resulting viscoelastic behavior of biofilm remains unexplored. Using biofilms of Pantoea sp. (WT) and its mutant (ÎUDP), the correlation between biofilm structure and its viscoelastic response is investigated. Experiments show that the reduction of exopolysaccharide production in ÎUDP biofilms corresponds with a sevenâfold increase in Ď, resulting in a colloidal glassâlike structure. Consequently, the rheological signatures become altered, with the WT behaving like a weak gel, whilst the ÎUDP displayed a glassâlike rheological signature. By coâculturing the two strains, biofilm Ď is modulated which allows us to explore the structural changes and capture a change in viscoelastic response from a weak to a strong gel, and to a colloidal glassâlike state. The results reveal the role of exopolysaccharide in mediating a structural transition in biofilms and demonstrate a correlation between biofilm structure and viscoelastic response
A carotenoid-deficient mutant in Pantoea sp. YR343, a bacteria isolated from the Rhizosphere of Populus deltoides, is defective in root colonization
The complex interactions between plants and their microbiome can have a profound effect on the health and productivity of the plant host. A better understanding of the microbial mechanisms that promote plant health and stress tolerance will enable strategies for improving the productivity of economically important plants. Pantoea sp. YR343 is a motile, rod-shaped bacterium isolated from the roots of Populus deltoides that possesses the ability to solubilize phosphate and produce the phytohormone indole-3-acetic acid (IAA). Pantoea sp. YR343 readily colonizes plant roots and does not appear to be pathogenic when applied to the leaves or roots of selected plant hosts. To better understand the molecular mechanisms involved in plant association and rhizosphere survival by Pantoea sp. YR343, we constructed a mutant in which the crtB gene encoding phytoene synthase was deleted. Phytoene synthase is responsible for converting geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate to phytoene, an important precursor to the production of carotenoids. As predicted, the ÎcrtB mutant is defective in carotenoid production, and shows increased sensitivity to oxidative stress. Moreover, we find that the ÎcrtB mutant is impaired in biofilm formation and production of IAA. Finally we demonstrate that the ÎcrtB mutant shows reduced colonization of plant roots. Taken together, these data suggest that carotenoids are important for plant association and/or rhizosphere survival in Pantoea sp. YR343.Work at the University of Notre Dame was supported by DOE grant SC0006642 (RM) and by a subcontract from Oak Ridge National Laboratory (SP).http://www.frontiersin.orgam2016Microbiology and Plant Patholog
Function of a Chemotaxis-Like Signal Transduction Pathway in Modulating Motility, Cell Clumping, and Cell Length in the Alphaproteobacterium Azospirillum brasilenseâż â
A chemotaxis signal transduction pathway (hereafter called Che1) has been previously identified in the alphaproteobacterium Azospirillum brasilense. Previous experiments have demonstrated that although mutants lacking CheB and/or CheR homologs from this pathway are defective in chemotaxis, a mutant in which the entire chemotaxis pathway has been mutated displayed a chemotaxis phenotype mostly similar to that of the parent strain, suggesting that the primary function of this Che1 pathway is not the control of motility behavior. Here, we report that mutants carrying defined mutations in the cheA1 (strain AB101) and the cheY1 (strain AB102) genes and a newly constructed mutant lacking the entire operon [Î(cheA1-cheR1)::Cm] (strain AB103) were defective, but not null, for chemotaxis and aerotaxis and had a minor defect in swimming pattern. We found that mutations in genes of the Che1 pathway affected the cell length of actively growing cells but not their growth rate. Cells of a mutant lacking functional cheB1 and cheR1 genes (strain BS104) were significantly longer than wild-type cells, whereas cells of mutants impaired in the cheA1 or cheY1 genes, as well as a mutant lacking a functional Che1 pathway, were significantly shorter than wild-type cells. Both the modest chemotaxis defects and the observed differences in cell length could be complemented by expressing the wild-type genes from a plasmid. In addition, under conditions of high aeration, cells of mutants lacking functional cheA1 or cheY1 genes or the Che1 operon formed clumps due to cell-to-cell aggregation, whereas the mutant lacking functional CheB1 and CheR1 (BS104) clumped poorly, if at all. Further analysis suggested that the nature of the exopolysaccharide produced, rather than the amount, may be involved in this behavior. Interestingly, mutants that displayed clumping behavior (lacking cheA1 or cheY1 genes or the Che1 operon) also flocculated earlier and quantitatively more than the wild-type cells, whereas the mutant lacking both CheB1 and CheR1 was delayed in flocculation. We propose that the Che1 chemotaxis-like pathway modulates the cell length as well as clumping behavior, suggesting a link between these two processes. Our data are consistent with a model in which the function of the Che1 pathway in regulating these cellular functions directly affects flocculation, a cellular differentiation process initiated under conditions of nutritional imbalance
Pore-scale hydrodynamics influence the spatial evolution of bacterial biofilms in a microfluidic porous network.
Bacteria occupy heterogeneous environments, attaching and growing within pores in materials, living hosts, and matrices like soil. Systems that permit high-resolution visualization of dynamic bacterial processes within the physical confines of a realistic and tractable porous media environment are rare. Here we use microfluidics to replicate the grain shape and packing density of natural sands in a 2D platform to study the flow-induced spatial evolution of bacterial biofilms underground. We discover that initial bacterial dispersal and grain attachment is influenced by bacterial transport across pore space velocity gradients, a phenomenon otherwise known as rheotaxis. We find that gravity-driven flow conditions activate different bacterial cell-clustering phenotypes depending on the strain's ability to product extracellular polymeric substances (EPS). A wildtype, biofilm-producing bacteria formed compact, multicellular patches while an EPS-defective mutant displayed a linked-cell phenotype in the presence of flow. These phenotypes subsequently influenced the overall spatial distribution of cells across the porous media network as colonies grew and altered the fluid dynamics of their microenvironment
Loss of carotenoids from membranes of Pantoea sp. YR343 results in altered lipid composition and changes in membrane biophysical properties
Š 2019 Bacterial membranes are complex mixtures of lipids and proteins, the combination of which confers biophysical properties that allows cells to respond to environmental conditions. Carotenoids are sterol analogs that are important for regulating membrane dynamics. The membrane of Pantoea sp. YR343 is characterized by the presence of the carotenoid zeaxanthin, and a carotenoid-deficient mutant, ÎcrtB, displays defects in root colonization, reduced secretion of indole-3-acetic acid, and defects in biofilm formation. Here we demonstrate that the loss of carotenoids results in changes to the membrane lipid composition in Pantoea sp. YR343, including increased amounts of unsaturated fatty acids in the ÎcrtB mutant membranes. These mutant cells displayed less fluid membranes in comparison to wild type cells as measured by fluorescence anisotropy of whole cells. Studies with artificial systems, however, have shown that carotenoids impart membrane rigidifying properties. Thus, we examined membrane fluidity using spheroplasts and vesicles composed of lipids extracted from either wild type or mutant cells. Interestingly, with the removal of the cell wall and membrane proteins, ÎcrtB vesicles were more fluid than vesicles made from lipids extracted from wild type cells. In addition, carotenoids appeared to stabilize membrane fluidity during rapidly changing temperatures. Taken together, these results suggest that Pantoea sp. YR343 compensates for the loss of carotenoids by changing lipid composition, which together with membrane proteins, results in reduced membrane fluidity. These changes may influence the abundance or function of membrane proteins that are responsible for the physiological changes observed in the ÎcrtB mutant cells
Thermodynamic Characterization of a Thermostable Antibiotic Resistance Enzyme, the Aminoglycoside Nucleotidyltransferase (4â˛)
The aminoglycoside nucleotidyltransferase (4â˛)
(ANT) is an aminoglycoside-modifying enzyme that detoxifies antibiotics
by nucleotidylating at the C4â˛-OH site. Previous crystallographic
studies show that the enzyme is a homodimer and each subunit binds
one kanamycin and one Mg-AMPCPP, where the transfer of the nucleotidyl
group occurs between the substrates bound to different subunits. In
this work, sedimentation velocity analysis of ANT by analytical ultracentrifugation
showed the enzyme exists as a mixture of a monomer and a dimer in
solution and that dimer formation is driven by hydrophobic interactions
between the subunits. The binding of aminoglycosides shifts the equilibrium
toward
dimer formation, while the binding of the cosubstrate, Mg-ATP, has
no effect on the monomerâdimer equilibrium. Surprisingly, binding
of several divalent cations, including Mg<sup>2+</sup>, Mn<sup>2+</sup>, and Ca<sup>2+</sup>, to the enzyme also shifted the equilibrium
in favor of dimer formation. Binding studies, performed by electron
paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy, showed that divalent cations
bind to the aminoglycoside binding site in the absence of substrates
with a stoichiometry of 2:1. Energetic aspects of binding of all aminoglycosides
to ANT were determined by isothermal titration calorimetry to be enthalpically
favored and entropically disfavored with an overall favorable Gibbs
energy. Aminoglycosides in the neomycin class each bind to the enzyme
with significantly different enthalpic and entropic contributions,
while those of the kanamycin class bind with similar thermodynamic
parameters
Microstructural and rheological transitions in bacterial biofilms
Biofilms are aggregated bacterial communities structured within an extracellular matrix (ECM). ECM controls biofilm architecture and confers mechanical resistance against shear forces. From a physical perspective, biofilms can be described as colloidal gels, where bacterial cells are analogous to colloidal particles distributed in the polymeric ECM. However, the influence of the ECM in altering the cellular packing fraction (Ď) and the resulting viscoelastic behavior of biofilm remains unexplored. Using biofilms of Pantoea sp. (WT) and its mutant (ÎUDP), the correlation between biofilm structure and its viscoelastic response is investigated. Experiments show that the reduction of exopolysaccharide production in ÎUDP biofilms corresponds with a sevenâfold increase in Ď, resulting in a colloidal glassâlike structure. Consequently, the rheological signatures become altered, with the WT behaving like a weak gel, whilst the ÎUDP displayed a glassâlike rheological signature. By coâculturing the two strains, biofilm Ď is modulated which allows us to explore the structural changes and capture a change in viscoelastic response from a weak to a strong gel, and to a colloidal glassâlike state. The results reveal the role of exopolysaccharide in mediating a structural transition in biofilms and demonstrate a correlation between biofilm structure and viscoelastic response.</p
Characterization of Indole-3-acetic Acid Biosynthesis and the Effects of This Phytohormone on the Proteome of the Plant-Associated Microbe <i>Pantoea</i> sp. YR343
Indole-3-acetic
acid (IAA) plays a central role in plant growth
and development, and many plant-associated microbes produce IAA using
tryptophan as the precursor. Using genomic analyses, we predicted
that <i>Pantoea</i> sp. YR343, a microbe isolated from <i>Populus deltoides</i>, synthesizes IAA using the indole-3-pyruvate
(IPA) pathway. To better understand IAA biosynthesis and the effects
of IAA exposure on cell physiology, we characterized proteomes of <i>Pantoea</i> sp. YR343 grown in the presence of tryptophan or
IAA. Exposure to IAA resulted in upregulation of proteins predicted
to function in carbohydrate and amino acid transport and exopolysaccharide
(EPS) biosynthesis. Metabolite profiles of wild-type cells showed
the production of IPA, IAA, and tryptophol, consistent with an active
IPA pathway. Finally, we constructed an Î<i>ipdC</i> mutant that showed the elimination of tryptophol, consistent with
a loss of IpdC activity, but was still able to produce IAA (20% of
wild-type levels). Although we failed to detect intermediates from
other known IAA biosynthetic pathways, this result suggests the possibility
of an alternate pathway or the production of IAA by a nonenzymatic
route in <i>Pantoea</i> sp. YR343. The Î<i>ipdC</i> mutant was able to efficiently colonize poplar, suggesting that
an active IPA pathway is not required for plant association
Characterization of Indole-3-acetic Acid Biosynthesis and the Effects of This Phytohormone on the Proteome of the Plant-Associated Microbe <i>Pantoea</i> sp. YR343
Indole-3-acetic
acid (IAA) plays a central role in plant growth
and development, and many plant-associated microbes produce IAA using
tryptophan as the precursor. Using genomic analyses, we predicted
that <i>Pantoea</i> sp. YR343, a microbe isolated from <i>Populus deltoides</i>, synthesizes IAA using the indole-3-pyruvate
(IPA) pathway. To better understand IAA biosynthesis and the effects
of IAA exposure on cell physiology, we characterized proteomes of <i>Pantoea</i> sp. YR343 grown in the presence of tryptophan or
IAA. Exposure to IAA resulted in upregulation of proteins predicted
to function in carbohydrate and amino acid transport and exopolysaccharide
(EPS) biosynthesis. Metabolite profiles of wild-type cells showed
the production of IPA, IAA, and tryptophol, consistent with an active
IPA pathway. Finally, we constructed an Î<i>ipdC</i> mutant that showed the elimination of tryptophol, consistent with
a loss of IpdC activity, but was still able to produce IAA (20% of
wild-type levels). Although we failed to detect intermediates from
other known IAA biosynthetic pathways, this result suggests the possibility
of an alternate pathway or the production of IAA by a nonenzymatic
route in <i>Pantoea</i> sp. YR343. The Î<i>ipdC</i> mutant was able to efficiently colonize poplar, suggesting that
an active IPA pathway is not required for plant association