572 research outputs found

    Image-based dynamic phenotyping reveals genetic determinants of filamentation-mediated beta-lactam tolerance

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    Antibiotic tolerance characterized by slow killing of bacteria in response to a drug can lead to treatment failure and promote the emergence of resistance. beta-lactam antibiotics inhibit cell wall growth in bacteria and many of them cause filamentation followed by cell lysis. Hence delayed cell lysis can lead to beta-lactam tolerance. Systematic discovery of genetic factors that affect beta-lactam killing kinetics has not been performed before due to challenges in high-throughput, dynamic analysis of viability of filamented cells during bactericidal action. We implemented a high-throughput time-resolved microscopy approach in a gene deletion library of Escherichia coli to monitor the response of mutants to the beta-lactam cephalexin. Changes in frequency of lysed and intact cells due to the antibiotic action uncovered several strains with atypical lysis kinetics. Filamentation confers tolerance because antibiotic removal before lysis leads to recovery through numerous concurrent divisions of filamented cells. Filamentation-mediated tolerance was not associated with resistance, and therefore this phenotype is not discernible through most antibiotic susceptibility methods. We find that deletion of Tol-Pal proteins TolQ, TolR, or Pal but not TolA, TolB, or CpoB leads to rapid killing by beta-lactams. We also show that the timing of cell wall degradation determines the lysis and killing kinetics after beta-lactam treatment. Altogether, this study uncovers numerous genetic determinants of hitherto unappreciated filamentation-mediated beta-lactam tolerance and support the growing call for considering antibiotic tolerance in clinical evaluation of pathogens. More generally, the microscopy screening methodology described here can easily be adapted to study lysis in large numbers of strains

    Complementarity of PALM and SOFI for super-resolution live cell imaging of focal adhesions

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    Live cell imaging of focal adhesions requires a sufficiently high temporal resolution, which remains a challenging task for super-resolution microscopy. We have addressed this important issue by combining photo-activated localization microscopy (PALM) with super-resolution optical fluctuation imaging (SOFI). Using simulations and fixed cell focal adhesion images, we investigated the complementarity between PALM and SOFI in terms of spatial and temporal resolution. This PALM-SOFI framework was used to image focal adhesions in living cells, while obtaining a temporal resolution below 10 s. We visualized the dynamics of focal adhesions, and revealed local mean velocities around 190 nm per minute. The complementarity of PALM and SOFI was assessed in detail with a methodology that integrates a quantitative resolution and signal-to-noise metric. This PALM and SOFI concept provides an enlarged quantitative imaging framework, allowing unprecedented functional exploration of focal adhesions through the estimation of molecular parameters such as the fluorophore density and the photo-activation and photo-switching rates

    Defocused imaging of UV-driven surface-bound molecular motors

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    Synthetic molecular motors continue to attract great interest due to their ability to transduce energy into nanomechanical motion, the potential to do work and drive systems out-of-equilibrium. Of particular interest are unidirectional rotary molecular motors driven by chemical fuel or light. Probing the mechanistic details of their operation at the single-molecule level is hampered by the diffraction limit, which prevents the collection of dynamic positional information by traditional optical methods. Here, we use defocused wide-field imaging to examine the unidirectional rotation of individual molecular rotary motors on a quartz surface in unprecedented detail. The sequential occupation of nanomechanical states during the UV and heat-induced cycle of rotation are directly imaged in real-time. The approach will undoubtedly prove important in elucidating the mechanistic details and assessing the utility of novel synthetic molecular motors in the future

    Aminobacter sp MSH1 invades sand filter community biofilms while retaining 2,6-dichlorobenzamide degradation functionality under C- and N-limiting conditions

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    Aminobacter sp. MSH1 is of interest for bioaugmentation of biofiltration units in drinking water treatment plants (DWTPs) due to its ability to degrade the groundwater micropollutant 2,6-dichlorobenzamide (BAM). Using a continuous flow chamber biofilm model, MSH1 was previously shown to colonize surfaces and degrade BAM at trace concentrations as low as 1 mu g/L under the oligotrophic conditions found in DWTPs. In DWTP filtration units, MSH1 has to compete with the resident biofilm microbiota for space and nutrients. Using the same model, we examined how a sand filter community (SFC) affects MSH1's BAM-degrading activity and biofilm formation under C-and N-limiting conditions when fed with trace concentrations of BAM. MSH1 was inoculated simultaneously with the SFC (co-colonization mode) or after the SFC formed a biofilm (invasion mode). MSH1 successfully established in the SFC biofilm showing growth and activity. In co-colonization mode, MSH1 decreased in number in the presence of the SFC and formed isolated colonies, while specific BAM-degradation activity increased. In the invasion mode, MSH1 also decreased in numbers in the presence of the SFC but formed mixed colonies, while specific BAM degradation was unaffected. Our results show that MSH1 invades and performs successfully in an SFC biofilm under the oligotrophic conditions of DWTPs

    Size-Dependent Optical Properties of Dendronized Perylenediimide Nanoparticle Prepared by Laser Ablation in Water

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    Fluorescent nanoparticles of dendronized perylenediimide (DPDI) were fabricated by laser ablation in water. We succeeded in the preparation of colloidal nanoparticles of different sizes (150–400 nm) and examined their size-dependent optical absorption and fluorescence properties. The size-dependent extinction spectra can be explained by the effect of light scattering loss, and it was confirmed that their absorption spectrum is similar to that of molecules in solution. The very weak interchromophoric interaction is also confirmed by fluorescence spectral measurement. On the other hand, we found that the fluorescence quantum yield decreases with decreasing of the particle size, and we propose a new mechanism for the size-dependent reduction of emission intensity in organic nanoparticles. On the basis of the size dependent-fluorescence quantum yield and solvent polarity dependence of DPDI fluorescence in organic solvents, we considered that, while the interchromophoric interactions are weak in the nanoparticle, the excited singlet state migrates in a nanoparticle owing to energy hopping and is quenched at the surface, leading to the observed size-dependent fluorescence quantum yield (Φ<sub>f</sub>) and a smaller value of Φ<sub>f</sub> for nanoparticles than for the molecules in nonpolar solvents

    Structural basis for the influence of a single mutation K145N on the oligomerization and photoswitching rate of Dronpa

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    The crystal structure of the on-state of PDM1-4, a single-mutation variant of the photochromic fluorescent protein Dronpa, is reported at 1.95 angstrom resolution. PDM1-4 is a Dronpa variant that possesses a slower off-switching rate than Dronpa and thus can effectively increase the image resolution in subdiffraction optical microscopy, although the precise molecular basis for this change has not been elucidated. This work shows that the Lys145Asn mutation in PDM1-4 stabilizes the interface available for dimerization, facilitating oligomerization of the protein. No significant changes were observed in the chromophore environment of PDM1-4 compared with Dronpa, and the ensemble absorption and emission properties of PDM1-4 were highly similar to those of Dronpa. It is proposed that the slower off-switching rate in PDM1-4 is caused by a decrease in the potential flexibility of certain beta-strands caused by oligomerization along the AC interface

    Super-resolution mapping of glutamate receptors in <i>C. elegans</i> by confocal correlated PALM

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    Photoactivated localization microscopy (PALM) is a super-resolution imaging technique based on the detection and subsequent localization of single fluorescent molecules. PALM is therefore a powerful tool in resolving structures and putative interactions of biomolecules at the ultimate analytical detection limit. However, its limited imaging depth restricts PALM mostly to in vitro applications. Considering the additional need for anatomical context when imaging a multicellular organism, these limitations render the use of PALM in whole animals difficult. Here we integrated PALM with confocal microscopy for correlated imaging of the C. elegans nervous system, a technique we termed confocal correlated PALM (ccPALM). The neurons, lying below several tissue layers, could be visualized up to 10 μm deep inside the animal. By ccPALM, we visualized ionotropic glutamate receptor distributions in C. elegans with an accuracy of 20 nm, revealing super-resolution structure of receptor clusters that we mapped onto annotated neurons in the animal. Pivotal to our results was the TIRF-independent detection of single molecules, achieved by genetic regulation of labeled receptor expression and localization to effectively reduce the background fluorescence. By correlating PALM with confocal microscopy, this platform enables dissecting biological structures with single molecule resolution in the physiologically relevant context of whole animals
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