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1.
Microbial communities within the human oral cavity are dynamic associations of more than 500 bacterial species that form biofilms on the soft and hard tissues of the mouth. Understanding the development and spatial organization of oral biofilms has been facilitated by the use of in vitro models. We used a saliva-conditioned flow cell, with saliva as the sole nutritional source, as a model to examine the development of multispecies biofilm communities from an inoculum containing the coaggregation partners Streptococcus gordonii, Actinomyces naeslundii, Veillonella atypica, and Fusobacterium nucleatum. Biofilms inoculated with individual species in a sequential order were compared with biofilms inoculated with coaggregates of the four species. Our results indicated that flow cells inoculated sequentially produced biofilms with larger biovolumes compared to those biofilms inoculated with coaggregates. Individual-species biovolumes within the four-species communities also differed between the two modes of inoculation. Fluorescence in situ hybridization with genus- and species-specific probes revealed that the majority of cells in both sequentially and coaggregate-inoculated biofilms were S. gordonii, regardless of the inoculation order. However, the representation of A. naeslundii and V. atypica was significantly higher in biofilms inoculated with coaggregates compared to sequentially inoculated biofilms. Thus, these results indicate that the development of multispecies biofilm communities is influenced by coaggregations preformed in planktonic phase. Coaggregating bacteria such as certain streptococci are especially adapted to primary colonization of saliva-conditioned surfaces independent of the mode of inoculation and order of addition in the multispecies inoculum. Preformed coaggregations favor other bacterial strains and may facilitate symbiotic relationships.  相似文献   

2.
Dental plaque is a multispecies oral biofilm, the development of which is initiated by adherence of the pioneer Streptococcus spp. Oral Veillonella spp., including V. atypica, V. denticariosi, V. dispar, V. parvula, V. rogosae, and V. tobetsuensis, are known as early colonizers in oral biofilm formation. These species have been reported to coaggregate with Streptococcus spp. in a metabolic cooperation-dependent manner to form biofilms in human oral cavities, especially in the early stages of biofilm formation. However, in our previous study, Streptococcus gordonii showed biofilm formation to the greatest extent in the presence of V. tobetsuensis, without coaggregation between species. These results suggest that V. tobetsuensis produces signaling molecules that promote the proliferation of S. gordonii in biofilm formation. It is well known in many bacterial species that the quorum-sensing (QS) system regulates diverse functions such as biofilm formation. However, little is known about the QS system with autoinducers (AIs) with respect to Veillonella and Streptococcus spp. Recently, autoinducer 1 (AI-1) and AI-2 were detected and identified in the culture supernatants of V. tobetsuensis as strong signaling molecules in biofilm formation with S. gordonii. In particular, the supernatant from V. tobetsuensis showed the highest AI-2 activity among 6 oral Veillonella species, indicating that AIs, mainly AI-2, produced by V. tobetsuensis may be important factors and may facilitate biofilm formation of S. gordonii. Clarifying the mechanism that underlies the QS system between S. gordonii and V. tobetsuensis may lead to the development of novel methods for the prevention of oral infectious diseases caused by oral biofilms.  相似文献   

3.
Streptococcus gordonii is one of the predominant streptococci in the biofilm ecology of the oral cavity. It interacts with other bacteria through receptor-adhesin complexes formed between cognate molecules on the surfaces of the partner cells. To study the spatial organization of S. gordonii DL1 in oral biofilms, we used green fluorescent protein (GFP) as a species-specific marker to identify S. gordonii in a two-species in vitro oral biofilm flowcell system. To drive expression of gfp, we isolated and characterized an endogenous S. gordonii promoter, PhppA, which is situated upstream of the chromosomal hppA gene encoding an oligopeptide-binding lipoprotein. A chromosomal chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (cat) gene fusion with PhppA was constructed and used to demonstrate that PhppA was highly active throughout the growth of bacteria in batch culture. A promoterless 0.8-kb gfp (′gfp) cassette was PCR amplified from pBJ169 and subcloned to replace the cat cassette downstream of the S. gordonii-derived PhppA in pMH109-HPP, generating pMA1. Subsequently, the PhppA-′gfp cassette was PCR amplified from pMA1 and subcloned into pDL277 and pVA838 to generate the Escherichia coli-S. gordonii shuttle vectors pMA2 and pMA3, respectively. Each vector was transformed into S. gordonii DL1 aerobically to ensure GFP expression. Flow cytometric analyses of aerobically grown transformant cultures were performed over a 24-h period, and results showed that GFP could be successfully expressed in S. gordonii DL1 from PhppA and that S. gordonii DL1 transformed with the PhppA-′gfp fusion plasmid stably maintained the fluorescent phenotype. Fluorescent S. gordonii DL1 transformants were used to elucidate the spatial arrangement of S. gordonii DL1 alone in biofilms or with the coadhesion partner Streptococcus oralis 34 in two-species biofilms in a saliva-conditioned in vitro flowcell system. These results show for the first time that GFP expression in oral streptococci can be used as a species-specific marker in model oral biofilms.  相似文献   

4.
Formation of dental plaque is a developmental process involving initial and late colonizing species that form polymicrobial communities. Fusobacteria are the most numerous gram-negative bacteria in dental plaque, but they become prevalent after the initial commensal colonizers, such as streptococci and actinomyces, have established communities. The unusual ability of these bacteria to coaggregate with commensals, as well as pathogenic late colonizers, has been proposed to facilitate colonization by the latter organisms. We investigated the integration of Fusobacterium nucleatum into multispecies communities by employing two in vitro models with saliva as the sole nutritional source. In flow cell biofilms, numbers of cells were quantified using fluorescently conjugated antibodies against each species, and static biofilms were analyzed by quantitative real-time PCR (q-PCR) using species-specific primers. Unable to grow as single-species biofilms, F. nucleatum grew in two-species biofilms with Actinomyces naeslundii but not with Streptococcus oralis. However, enhanced growth of fusobacteria was observed in three-species biofilms, indicating that there was multispecies cooperation. Importantly, these community dynamics yielded an 18-fold increase in the F. nucleatum biomass between 4 h and 18 h in the flow cell inoculated with three species. q-PCR analysis of static biofilms revealed that maximum growth of the three species occurred at 24 h to 36 h. Lower numbers of cells were observed at 48 h, suggesting that saliva could not support higher cell densities as the sole nutrient. Integration of F. nucleatum into multispecies commensal communities was evident from the interdigitation of fusobacteria in coaggregates with A. naeslundii and S. oralis and from the improved growth of fusobacteria, which was dependent on the presence of A. naeslundii.The human mouth contains microbiologically diverse communities. While collectively humans harbor more than 700 bacterial phylotypes, each individual is estimated to have fewer than 100 such phylotypes (1), and approximately 50% of human oral bacteria have yet to be cultivated. Although biofilm communities on tooth enamel are polymicrobial (3, 20), more than 60 to 90% of the bacteria found in initial plaque on saliva-coated tooth enamel are streptococci (6, 19). Other bacterial genera that are among the initial commensal colonizers include Actinomyces, Veillonella, and Neisseria (6, 16, 19), and these organisms contribute to the polymicrobial nature of initial plaque.The structure of a community is dependent upon the nature of the foundation. An integral feature of an oral bacterial biofilm foundation is the ability to coaggregate, which is defined as cell-cell recognition and binding between genetically distinct bacteria. After routine oral hygiene treatment, freshly cleaned tooth enamel is quickly coated with a salivary pellicle, which provides a set of receptor molecules recognized by primary colonizing bacteria, such as streptococci and actinomyces. Besides recognizing salivary receptors, these bacteria coaggregate and provide a foundation for the subsequent attachment and growth of other bacteria, such as veillonellae, that form close metabolic relationships with streptococci (12, 15). As initial colonizers develop into biofilm communities with anaerobic microenvironments, incorporation of the obligate anaerobic fusobacteria into these communities becomes possible. Fusobacteria as a group coaggregate with all other oral bacteria and have been suggested, therefore, to be a crucial link between primary colonizing species and later colonizing pathogens (13, 14). Thus, a foundation consisting of coaggregating streptococci, actinomyces, and veillonellae populates the tooth surface, and these organisms are recognized by fusobacteria, which colonize and become the dominant gram-negative bacterial species. The new foundation is a substratum containing fusobacterial surface receptors available for recognition by late colonizing pathogens. Supporting the crucial link is clinical evidence that fusobacteria appear in dental plaque after commensal species and before the pathogenic “red” complex consisting of Porphyromonas gingivalis, Treponema denticola, and Tannerella forsythia (22, 23).Coaggregation partnerships are highly specific. A significant role for coaggregation in the formation of dental plaque biofilms and particularly in accretion of secondary colonizers to the pioneer species in plaque has been proposed (14) and has been demonstrated for the development of a spatially organized community (20). However, coaggregation may also provide some metabolic advantages (e.g., cross feeding and enzyme complementation) to neighboring cells by facilitating physical juxtaposition of partner cells, as has been shown for glucose metabolism of coaggregates of actinomyces and streptococci (7, 8). One aim of the present study was to examine the structures of two- and three-species communities composed of Actinomyces naeslundii, Streptococcus oralis, and Fusobacterium nucleatum in model biofilm systems. The first two species are initial colonizers and are considered commensals, whereas fusobacteria are secondary colonizers and are postulated to be a coaggregation bridge between initial and late colonizers (14). Our second aim was to investigate the integration and growth of fusobacteria in polymicrobial communities.A variety of experimental methods have been developed to study the formation of biofilms. Model systems often rely on the flow of nutrients over a surface on which bacteria are able to attach and grow. In the present study we used two distinct in vitro models, a saliva-fed flow cell and a polystyrene peg immersed in static saliva. Biofilm communities form naturally and are undisturbed (3, 20, 21). The spatial organization of a multispecies community resulting from colonization and growth is preserved and can be examined noninvasively by confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM). In the static system, the amount of each species in multispecies biofilms formed on polystyrene pegs can be measured by real-time quantitative PCR (q-PCR). We show here with both models that fusobacteria are unable to grow as single species, but they integrate into commensal streptococcus-actinomyces communities and grow. Integration and growth are required for fusobacteria to become crucial links between commensal communities and later colonizing pathogenic communities. In the three-species community studied here, A. naeslundii is required for F. nucleatum to integrate and grow.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Although Streptococcus mutans biofilms have been useful for evaluating the cariogenic potential of dietary carbohydrates and the effects of fluoride on dental demineralization, a more appropriate biofilm should be developed to demonstrate the influence of other oral bacteria on cariogenic biofilms. This study describes the development and validation of a three-species biofilm model comprising Streptococcus mutans, Actinomyces naeslundii, and Streptococcus gordonii for the evaluation of enamel and dentin demineralization after cariogenic challenges and fluoride exposure. Single- or three-species biofilms were developed on dental substrata for 96?h, and biofilms were exposed to feast and famine episodes. The three-species biofilm model produced a large biomass, mostly comprising S. mutans (41%) and S. gordonii (44%), and produced significant demineralization in the dental substrata, although enamel demineralization was decreased by fluoride treatment. The findings indicate that the three-species biofilm model may be useful for evaluating the cariogenic potential of dietary carbohydrates other than sucrose and determining the effects of fluoride on dental substrata.  相似文献   

7.
The success of endodontic treatment depends on the eradication of microorganisms from the root canal system and the prevention of reinfection. The purpose of this investigation was to evaluate the antibacterial and antibiofilm efficacy of N-acetylcysteine (NAC), an antioxidant mucolytic agent, as an intracanal medicament against selected endodontic pathogens. Minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of NAC for Actinomyces naeslundii, Lactobacillus salivarius, Streptococcus mutans, and Enterococcus faecalis were determined using the broth microdilution method. NAC showed antibacterial activity, with MIC values of 0.78–1.56 mg/ml. The effect of NAC on biofilm formation of each bacterium and a multispecies culture consisting of the four bacterial species was assessed by crystal violet staining. NAC significantly inhibited biofilm formation by all the monospecies and multispecies bacteria at minimum concentrations of 0.78–3.13 mg/ml. The efficacy of NAC for biofilm disruption was evaluated by scanning electron microscopy and ATP-bioluminescence quantification using mature multispecies biofilms. Preformed mature multispecies biofilms on saliva-coated hydroxyapatite disks were disrupted within 10 min by treatment with NAC at concentrations of 25 mg/ml or higher. After 24 h of treatment, the viability of mature biofilms was reduced by > 99% compared with the control. Moreover, the biofilm disrupting activity of NAC was significantly higher than that of saturated calcium hydroxide or 2% chlorhexidine solution. Within the limitations of this in vitro study, we conclude that NAC has excellent antibacterial and antibiofilm efficacy against endodontic pathogens and may be used as an alternative intracanal medicament in root canal therapies.  相似文献   

8.
Multispecies biofilms are predominant in almost all natural environments, where myriads of resident microorganisms interact with each other in both synergistic and antagonistic manners. The interspecies interactions among different bacteria are, despite the ubiquity of these communities, still poorly understood. Here, we report a rapid, reproducible and sensitive approach for quantitative screening of biofilm formation by bacteria when cultivated as mono- and multispecies biofilms, based on the Nunc-TSP lid system and crystal violet staining. The relative proportion of the individual species in a four-species biofilm was assessed using quantitative PCR based on SYBR Green I fluorescence with specific primers. The results indicated strong synergistic interactions in a four-species biofilm model community with a more than 3-fold increase in biofilm formation and demonstrated the strong dominance of two strains, Xanthomonas retroflexus and Paenibacillus amylolyticus. The developed approach can be used as a standard procedure for evaluating interspecies interactions in defined microbial communities. This will be of significant value in the quantitative study of the microbial composition of multispecies biofilms both in natural environments and infectious diseases to increase our understanding of the mechanisms that underlie cooperation, competition and fitness of individual species in mixed-species biofilms.  相似文献   

9.
Streptococcus gordonii DL1 (Challis) bears coaggregation-mediating surface adhesins which recognize galactoside-containing surface polysaccharides onStreptococcus oralis 34,Streptococcus oralis C104, andStreptococcus SM PK509. Fifty-nine spontaneously-occurring coaggregation-defective (Cog) mutants ofS. gordonii DL1 unable to coaggregate with partner streptococci were isolated. Six representative Cog mutants were characterized by their coaggregation properties with fourActinomyces naeslundii strains (T14V, PK947, PK606, PK984),Veillonella atypica PK1910, andPropionibacterium acnes PK93. The six representative Cog mutants showed altered coaggregation with their streptococcal partners,A. naeslundii PK947, andP. acnes PK93. Based on the coaggregation phenotypes of these mutants, a model for the lactose-inhibitable coaggregation betweenS. gordonii DL1 and its partner bacteria is proposed. The potential use of these mutants in studies of oral biofilms is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Porphyromonas gingivalis is present in dental plaque as early as 4 h after tooth cleaning, but it is also associated with periodontal disease, a late-developing event in the microbial successions that characterize daily plaque development. We report here that P. gingivalis ATCC 33277 is remarkable in its ability to interact with a variety of initial, early, middle, and late colonizers growing solely on saliva. Integration of P. gingivalis into multispecies communities was investigated by using two in vitro biofilm models. In flow cells, bacterial growth was quantified using fluorescently conjugated antibodies against each species, and static biofilm growth on saliva-submerged polystyrene pegs was analyzed by quantitative real-time PCR using species-specific primers. P. gingivalis could not grow as a single species or together with initial colonizer Streptococcus oralis but showed mutualistic growth when paired with two other initial colonizers, Streptococcus gordonii and Actinomyces oris, as well as with Veillonella sp. (early colonizer), Fusobacterium nucleatum (middle colonizer), and Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans (late colonizer). In three-species flow cells, P. gingivalis grew with Veillonella sp. and A. actinomycetemcomitans but not with S. oralis and A. actinomycetemcomitans. Also, it grew with Veillonella sp. and F. nucleatum but not with S. oralis and F. nucleatum, indicating that P. gingivalis and S. oralis are not compatible. However, P. gingivalis grew in combination with S. gordonii and S. oralis, demonstrating its ability to overcome the incompatibility when cultured with a second initially colonizing species. Collectively, these data help explain the observed presence of P. gingivalis at all stages of dental plaque development.Removal of dental plaque by routine oral hygiene procedures is followed by a repetition of a species succession that starts with initially colonizing streptococci and actinomyces (5, 16). Other species follow as early, middle, and late colonizers, which establishes the following developmental process: successive attachment of saliva-suspended species to already attached bacteria and formation of multispecies communities.Attachment is a critical event essential to preventing the bacteria from being swallowed by salivary flow. Initial colonizers bind to host-derived receptors in the salivary pellicle coating of the tooth enamel. The remainder of typical plaque development occurs by accretion of saliva-suspended species and growth of attached bacteria, thereby increasing the microbial diversity. Adherence of suspended single cells to attached cells is called coadhesion (1). Some suspended cells are already coaggregated and adhere to attached cells as coaggregates; coaggregation is defined as the specific cell-to-cell recognition and adherence of genetically distinct cell types (8). All human oral bacterial species exhibit coaggregation. For example, Streptococcus oralis coaggregates with Streptococcus gordonii (intrageneric coaggregation). Both species pair with Actinomyces oris (intergeneric coaggregation), and all of them coaggregate with Fusobacterium nucleatum (multigeneric coaggregation). Multispecies communities composed of coaggregating species characterize dental plaque biofilms in vivo (3, 17, 18).To increase our understanding of interactions among species, we have employed two in vitro model systems and are testing numerous combinations of seven species for their ability to grow on saliva as their sole nutritional source (20, 21). First, we reported that F. nucleatum (middle colonizer) failed to grow when paired with S. oralis but grew well when A. oris was included in the three-species biofilm (20), indicating specificity by F. nucleatum for the presence of a particular initial colonizer. Recently, we showed that Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans (late colonizer and periodontopathogen) exhibited mutualistic relationships with F. nucleatum and Veillonella sp. (early colonizer and commensal organism), illustrating the ability of commensals and pathogens to grow together (21).Porphyromonas gingivalis, another periodontopathogen, forms three-species communities with F. nucleatum and S. gordonii (11). Proteomics of P. gingivalis in this three-species community revealed a broad increase in proteins involved in protein synthesis, suggesting that a multispecies relationship is advantageous for the porphyromonad (11). This research group had previously reported the presence of differentially regulated porphyromonad genes when P. gingivalis and S. gordonii were together in biofilms (22). Thus, P. gingivalis responds to the presence of other oral species.P. gingivalis is detected in dental plaque samples within 6 h after professional tooth cleaning (5, 13), and its numbers increase in periodontally diseased sites (15). It forms biofilms with S. gordonii but not with Streptococcus mutans (12) or Streptococcus cristatus (23). P. gingivalis required a preformed streptococcal substratum for its incorporation into a biofilm (12). Partner specificity was also noted among four fresh isolates of P. gingivalis, which showed no coaggregation with a variety of oral actinomyces, aggregatibacteria, capnocytophagae, and streptococci (9) but coaggregated with F. nucleatum (7, 10). We show here that P. gingivalis exhibits widespread mutualism with initial, early, middle, and late colonizers but also shows specificity with initially colonizing streptococci, which could help explain its early appearance in the development of dental plaque biofilms. The relationship of porphyromonads with initial, early, middle, and later colonizers during biofilm growth on saliva as a sole nutritional source has not been explored previously. We hypothesize that the ability of P. gingivalis to coaggregate with S. gordonii and A. oris (initial colonizers), Veillonella sp. (early colonizer), F. nucleatum (middle colonizer), and A. actinomycetemcomitans (late colonizer) allows these bacteria to form multispecies biofilm communities.  相似文献   

11.
A microscopic method for noninvasively visualizing the action of an antimicrobial agent inside a biofilm was developed and applied to describe spatial and temporal patterns of mouthrinse activity on model oral biofilms. Three species biofilms of Streptococcus oralis, Streptococcus gordonii, and Actinomyces naeslundii were grown in glass capillary flow cells. Bacterial cells were stained with the fluorogenic esterase substrate Calcien AM (CAM). Loss of green fluorescence upon exposure to an antimicrobial formulation was subsequently imaged by time-lapse confocal laser scanning microscopy. When an antimicrobial mouthrinse containing chlorhexidine digluconate was administered, a gradual loss of green fluorescence was observed that began at the periphery of cell clusters where they adjoined the flowing bulk fluid and progressed inward over a time period of several minutes. Image analysis was performed to quantify a penetration velocity of 4 μm/min. An enzyme-based antimicrobial formulation led to a gradual, continually slowing loss of fluorescence in a pattern that was qualitatively different from the behavior observed with chlorhexidine. Ethanol at 11.6% had little effect on the biofilm. None of these treatments resulted in the removal of biomass from the biofilm. Most methods to measure or visualize antimicrobial action in biofilms are destructive. Spatial information is important because biofilms are known for their structural and physiological heterogeneity. The CAM staining technique has the potential to provide information about the rate of antimicrobial penetration, the presence of tolerant subpopulations, and the extent of biomass removal effected by a treatment.  相似文献   

12.
Despite an increased awareness of biofilm formation by pathogens and the role of biofilms in human infections, the potential role of environmental biofilms as an intermediate stage in the host-to-host cycle is poorly described. To initiate infection, pathogens in biofilms on inanimate environmental surfaces must detach from the biofilm and be transmitted to a susceptible individual in numbers large enough to constitute an infectious dose. Additionally, while detachment has been recognized as a discrete event in the biofilm lifestyle, it has not been studied to the same extent as biofilm development or biofilm physiology. Successful integration of Pseudomonas aeruginosa strain PA01 expressing green fluorescent protein (PA01GFP), employed here as a surrogate pathogen, into multispecies biofilm communities isolated and enriched from sink drains in public washrooms and a hospital intensive care unit is described. Confocal laser scanning microscopy indicated that PA01GFP cells were most frequently located in the deeper layers of the biofilm, near the attachment surface, when introduced into continuous flow cells before or at the same time as the multispecies drain communities. A more random integration pattern was observed when PA01GFP was introduced into established multispecies biofilms. Significant numbers of single PA01GFP cells were continuously released from the biofilms to the bulk liquid environment, regardless of the order of introduction into the flow cell. Challenging the multispecies biofilms containing PA01GFP with sub-lethal concentrations of an antibiotic, chelating agent and shear forces that typically prevail at distances away from the point of treatment showed that environmental biofilms provide a suitable habitat where pathogens are maintained and protected, and from where they are continuously released.  相似文献   

13.
Most biofilms in their natural environments are likely to consist of consortia of species that influence each other in synergistic and antagonistic manners. However, few reports specifically address interactions within multispecies biofilms. In this study, 17 epiphytic bacterial strains, isolated from the surface of the marine alga Ulva australis, were screened for synergistic interactions within biofilms when present together in different combinations. Four isolates, Microbacterium phyllosphaerae, Shewanella japonica, Dokdonia donghaensis, and Acinetobacter lwoffii, were found to interact synergistically in biofilms formed in 96-well microtiter plates: biofilm biomass was observed to increase by >167% in biofilms formed by the four strains compared to biofilms composed of single strains. When exposed to the antibacterial agent hydrogen peroxide or tetracycline, the relative activity (exposed versus nonexposed biofilms) of the four-species biofilm was markedly higher than that in any of the single-species biofilms. Moreover, in biofilms established on glass surfaces in flow cells and subjected to invasion by the antibacterial protein-producing Pseudoalteromonas tunicata, the four-species biofilms resisted invasion to a greater extent than did the biofilms formed by the single species. Replacement of each strain by its cell-free culture supernatant suggested that synergy was dependent both on species-specific physical interactions between cells and on extracellular secreted factors or less specific interactions. In summary, our data strongly indicate that synergistic effects promote biofilm biomass and resistance of the biofilm to antimicrobial agents and bacterial invasion in multispecies biofilms.  相似文献   

14.
Aims: We evaluated the ability of a dual‐species community of oral bacteria to produce the universal signalling molecule, autoinducer‐2 (AI‐2), in saliva‐fed biofilms. Methods and Results: Streptococcus oralis 34, S. oralis 34 luxS mutant and Actinomyces naeslundii T14V were grown as single‐ and dual‐species biofilms within sorbarods fed with 25% human saliva. AI‐2 concentration in biofilm effluents was determined by the Vibrio harveyi BB170 bioluminescence assay. After homogenizing the sorbarods to release biofilm cells, cell numbers were determined by fluorometric analysis of fluorescent antibody‐labelled cells. After 48 h, dual‐species biofilm communities of interdigitated S. oralis 34 and A. naeslundii T14V contained 3·2 × 109 cells: fivefold more than single‐species biofilms. However, these 48‐h dual‐species biofilms exhibited the lowest concentration ratio of AI‐2 to cell density. Conclusions: Oral bacteria produce AI‐2 in saliva‐fed biofilms. The decrease of more than 10‐fold in concentration ratio seen between 1 and 48 h in S. oralis 34–A. naeslundii T14V biofilms suggests that peak production of AI‐2 occurs early and is followed by a very low steady‐state level. Significance and Impact of the Study: High oral bacterial biofilm densities may be achieved by inter‐species AI‐2 signalling. We propose that low concentrations of AI‐2 contribute to the establishment of oral commensal biofilm communities.  相似文献   

15.
Bacteria indigenous to water distribution systems were used to grow multispecies biofilms within continuous-flow slide chambers. Six flow chambers were also inoculated with an Escherichia coli isolate obtained from potable water. The effect of disinfectants on bacterial populations was determined after exposure of established biofilms to 1 ppm of hypochlorous acid (ClOH) for 67 min or 4 ppm of monochloramine (NH2Cl) for 155 min. To test the ability of bacterial populations to initiate biofilm formation in the presence of disinfectants, we assessed the biofilms after 2 weeks of exposure to residual concentrations of 0.2 ppm of ClOH or 4 ppm of NH2Cl. Lastly, to determine the effect of recommended residual concentrations on newly established biofilms, we treated systems with 0.2 ppm of ClOH after 5 days of growth in the absence of disinfectant. Whole-cell in situ hybridizations using fluorescently tagged, 16S rRNA-targeted oligonucleotide probes performed on cryosectioned biofilms permitted the direct observation of metabolically active bacterial populations, including certain phylogenetic groups and species. The results of these studies confirmed the resistance of established bacterial biofilms to treatment with recommended levels of disinfectants. Specifically, Legionella pneumophila, E. coli, and β and δ proteobacteria were identified within biofilms both before and after treatment. Furthermore, although it was undetected using routine monitoring techniques, the observation of rRNA-containing E. coli within biofilms demonstrated not only survival but also metabolic activity of this organism within the model distribution systems. The persistence of diverse bacterial species within disinfectant-treated biofilms suggests that current testing practices underestimate the risk to immunocompromised individuals of contracting waterborne disease.  相似文献   

16.
Cystic fibrosis (CF) patient airways harbour diverse microbial consortia that, in addition to the recognized principal pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa, include other bacteria commonly regarded as commensals. The latter include the oral (viridans) streptococci, which recent evidence indicates play an active role during infection of this environmentally diverse niche. As the interactions between inhabitants of the CF airway can potentially alter disease progression, it is important to identify key cooperators/competitors and environmental influences if therapeutic intervention is to be improved and pulmonary decline arrested. Importantly, we recently showed that virulence of the P. aeruginosa Liverpool Epidemic Strain (LES) could be potentiated by the Anginosus-group of streptococci (AGS). In the present study we explored the relationships between other viridans streptococci (Streptococcus oralis, Streptococcus mitis, Streptococcus gordonii and Streptococcus sanguinis) and the LES and observed that co-culture outcome was dependent upon inoculation sequence and environment. All four streptococcal species were shown to potentiate LES virulence factor production in co-culture biofilms. However, in the case of S. oralis interactions were environmentally determined; in air cooperation within a high cell density co-culture biofilm occurred together with stimulation of LES virulence factor production, while in an atmosphere containing added CO2 this species became a competitor antagonising LES growth through hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) production, significantly altering biofilm population dynamics and appearance. Streptococcus mitis, S. gordonii and S. sanguinis were also capable of H2O2 mediated inhibition of P. aeruginosa growth, but this was only visible when inoculated as a primary coloniser prior to introduction of the LES. Therefore, these observations, which are made in conditions relevant to the biology of CF disease pathogenesis, show that the pathogenic and colonisation potential of P. aeruginosa isolates can be modulated positively and negatively by the presence of oral commensal streptococci.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Biofilms that form on roots, litter and soil particles typically contain multiple bacterial species. Currently, little is known about multispecies biofilm interactions and few studies have been based on environmental isolates. Here, the prevalence of synergistic effects in biofilm formation among seven different soil isolates, cocultured in combinations of four species, was investigated. We observed greater biofilm biomass production in 63% of the four-species culture combinations tested than in biofilm formed by single-species cultures, demonstrating a high prevalence of synergism in multispecies biofilm formation. One four-species consortium, composed of Stenotrophomonas rhizophila, Xanthomonas retroflexus, Microbacterium oxydans and Paenibacillus amylolyticus, exhibited strong synergy in biofilm formation and was selected for further study. Of the four strains, X. retroflexus was the only one capable of forming abundant biofilm in isolation, under the in vitro conditions investigated. In accordance, strain-specific quantitative PCR revealed that X. retroflexus was predominant within the four-species consortium (>97% of total biofilm cell number). Despite low relative abundance of all the remaining strains, all were indispensable for the strong synergistic effect to occur within the four-species biofilm. Moreover, absolute individual strain cell numbers were significantly enhanced when compared with those of single-species biofilms, indicating that all the individual strains benefit from inclusion in the multispecies community. Our results show a high prevalence of synergy in biofilm formation in multispecies consortia isolated from a natural bacterial habitat and suggest that interspecific cooperation occurs.  相似文献   

19.
Microorganisms frequently co‐exist in matrix‐embedded multispecies biofilms. Within biofilms, interspecies interactions influence the spatial organization of member species, which likely play an important role in shaping the development, structure and function of these communities. Here, a reproducible four‐species biofilm, composed of Stenotrophomonas rhizophila, Xanthomonas retroflexus, Microbacterium oxydans and Paenibacillus amylolyticus, was established to study the importance of individual species spatial organization during multispecies biofilm development. We found that the growth of species that are poor biofilm formers, M. oxydans and P. amylolyticus, were highly enhanced when residing in the four‐species biofilm. Interestingly, the presence of the low‐abundant M. oxydans (0.5% of biomass volume) was observed to trigger changes in the composition of the four‐species community. The other three species were crucially needed for the successful inclusion of M. oxydans in the four‐species biofilm, where X. retroflexus was consistently positioned in the top layer of the mature four‐species biofilm. These findings suggest that low abundance key species can significantly impact the spatial organization and hereby stabilize the function and composition of complex microbiomes.  相似文献   

20.
Microbial biofilms are a serious threat to human health. Recent studies have indicated that many clinically relevant biofilms are polymicrobial. In the present study, multispecies biofilms were grown in a reproducible manner in a 96-well microtiter plate. The efficacy of nine commercially available disinfectants against Staphylococcus aureus, Candida albicans, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa in multispecies biofilms was determined and compared. The results showed that the direction and the magnitude of the effect in a multispecies biofilm depend on the strain and the disinfectant used and challenge the common belief that organisms in multispecies biofilms are always less susceptible than in monospecies biofilms.  相似文献   

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