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1.
Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) adheres to epithelial cells and forms microcolonies in localized areas. Bundle-forming pili (BFP) are necessary for autoaggregation and the formation of microcolonies. In this study, we show that BFP, expressed by EPEC on epithelial cells, disappeared with the expansion of the microcolony. Bacterial dispersal and the release of BFP from the EPEC aggregates were induced by contact with host cellular membrane extract. In addition, BFP-expressing EPEC adhered directly to cell surfaces, in preference to attaching to pre-formed microcolonies on the cells. These results suggested that BFP mediate the initial attachment of EPEC through direct interaction with the host cell rather than through the recruitment of unattached bacteria to microcolonies on the cell.  相似文献   

2.
The formation of biofilms is an important survival strategy allowing rhizobia to live on soil particles and plant roots. Within the microcolonies of the biofilm developed by Rhizobium leguminosarum, rhizobial cells interact tightly through lateral and polar connections, forming organized and compact cell aggregates. These microcolonies are embedded in a biofilm matrix, whose main component is the acidic exopolysaccharide (EPS). Our work shows that the O-chain core region of the R. leguminosarum lipopolysaccharide (LPS) (which stretches out of the cell surface) strongly influences bacterial adhesive properties and cell-cell cohesion. Mutants defective in the O chain or O-chain core moiety developed premature microcolonies in which lateral bacterial contacts were greatly reduced. Furthermore, cell-cell interactions within the microcolonies of the LPS mutants were mediated mostly through their poles, resulting in a biofilm with an altered three-dimensional structure and increased thickness. In addition, on the root epidermis and on root hairs, O-antigen core-defective strains showed altered biofilm patterns with the typical microcolony compaction impaired. Taken together, these results indicate that the surface-exposed moiety of the LPS is crucial for proper cell-to-cell interactions and for the formation of robust biofilms on different surfaces.  相似文献   

3.
The medicinal leech, Hirudo verbana, is one of the simplest naturally occurring models for digestive-tract symbioses, where only two bacterial species, Aeromonas veronii bv. sobria (γ-Proteobacteria) and a Rikenella-like bacterium (Bacteroidetes), colonize the crop, the largest compartment of the leech digestive tract. In this study, we investigated spatial and temporal changes of the localization and microcolony structure of the native symbionts in the crop, after ingestion of a sterile blood meal, by fluorescence in situ hybridization. The population dynamics differed between the two symbiotic bacteria. A. veronii was detected mainly as individual cells inside the intraluminal fluid (ILF) during 14 days after feeding (daf) unless it was found in association with Rikenella microcolonies. The Rikenella-like bacteria were observed not only inside the ILF but also in association with the luminal surface of the crop epithelium. The sizes of Rikenella microcolonies changed dynamically through the 14-day period. From 3 daf onward, mixed microcolonies containing both species were frequently observed, with cells of both species tightly associating with each other. The sizes of the mixed microcolonies were consistently larger than the size of either single-species microcolony, suggesting a synergistic interaction of the symbionts. Lectin staining with succinylated wheat germ agglutinin revealed that the planktonic microcolonies present in the ILF were embedded in a polysaccharide matrix containing N-acetylglucosamine. The simplicity, symbiont-symbiont interaction, and mixed microcolonies of this naturally occurring, digestive-tract symbiosis lay the foundation for understanding the more complex communities residing in most animals.  相似文献   

4.
The medicinal leech, Hirudo verbana, is one of the simplest naturally occurring models for digestive-tract symbioses, where only two bacterial species, Aeromonas veronii bv. sobria (gamma-Proteobacteria) and a Rikenella-like bacterium (Bacteroidetes), colonize the crop, the largest compartment of the leech digestive tract. In this study, we investigated spatial and temporal changes of the localization and microcolony structure of the native symbionts in the crop, after ingestion of a sterile blood meal, by fluorescence in situ hybridization. The population dynamics differed between the two symbiotic bacteria. A. veronii was detected mainly as individual cells inside the intraluminal fluid (ILF) during 14 days after feeding (daf) unless it was found in association with Rikenella microcolonies. The Rikenella-like bacteria were observed not only inside the ILF but also in association with the luminal surface of the crop epithelium. The sizes of Rikenella microcolonies changed dynamically through the 14-day period. From 3 daf onward, mixed microcolonies containing both species were frequently observed, with cells of both species tightly associating with each other. The sizes of the mixed microcolonies were consistently larger than the size of either single-species microcolony, suggesting a synergistic interaction of the symbionts. Lectin staining with succinylated wheat germ agglutinin revealed that the planktonic microcolonies present in the ILF were embedded in a polysaccharide matrix containing N-acetylglucosamine. The simplicity, symbiont-symbiont interaction, and mixed microcolonies of this naturally occurring, digestive-tract symbiosis lay the foundation for understanding the more complex communities residing in most animals.  相似文献   

5.
Neisseria meningitidis is a Gram‐negative bacterium that asymptomatically colonises the nasopharynx of humans. For an unknown reason, Nmeningitidis can cross the nasopharyngeal barrier and invade the bloodstream where it becomes one of the most harmful extracellular bacterial pathogen. This infectious cycle involves the colonisation of two different environments. (a) In the nasopharynx, Nmeningitidis grow on the top of mucus‐producing epithelial cells surrounded by a complex microbiota. To survive and grow in this challenging environment, the meningococcus expresses specific virulence factors such as polymorphic toxins and MDAΦ. (b) Meningococci have the ability to survive in the extra cellular fluids including blood and cerebrospinal fluid. The interaction of Nmeningitidis with human endothelial cells leads to the formation of typical microcolonies that extend overtime and promote vascular injury, disseminated intravascular coagulation, and acute inflammation. In this review, we will focus on the interplay between Nmeningitidis and these two different niches at the cellular and molecular level and discuss the use of inhibitors of piliation as a potent therapeutic approach.  相似文献   

6.
The high degree of organization in mature bacterial colonies suggests specific interactions between the cells during colony development. We have used time-lapse video microscopy to find evidence for cell-cell interactions. In its initial stages, Escherichia coli K-12 colony morphogenesis displayed control of the geometry of cell growth and involved intimate side-by-side associations. When microcolonies developed from isolated single bacteria, a directed process of elongation and division resulted in the appearance of a symmetrical four-cell array. When growth began with separate but nearby bacteria, the daughters of different cells elongated towards each other and also lined up side by side. Interactions between microcolonies containing several hundred or more bacteria were visible several hours later. Control of cell morphogenesis at later stages of microcolony development was strain specific. These results show that E. coli K-12 cells respond to each other and adjust their cellular morphogenesis to form multicellular groups as they proliferate on agar.  相似文献   

7.
The retractile type IV pilus participates in a number of fundamental bacterial processes, including motility, DNA transformation, fruiting body formation and attachment to host cells. Retraction of the N. gonorrhoeae type IV pilus requires a functional pilT. Retraction generates substantial force on its substrate (> 100 pN per retraction event), and it has been speculated that epithelial cells sense and respond to these forces during infection. We provide evidence that piliated, Opa non-expressing Neisseria gonorrhoeae activates the stress-responsive PI-3 kinase/Akt (PKB) pathway in human epithelial cells, and activation is enhanced by a functional pilT. PI-3 kinase inhibitors wortmannin and LY294002 reduce cell entry by 81% and 50%, respectively, illustrating the importance of this cascade in bacterial invasion. PI-3 kinase and its direct downstream effectors [PI(3,4,5)P3] and Akt are concentrated in the cell cortex beneath adherent bacteria, particularly at the periphery of the bacterial microcolonies. Furthermore, [PI(3,4,5)P3] is translocated to the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane. Finally, we show that [PI(3,4,5)P3] stimulates microcolony formation and upregulates pilT expression in vitro. We conclude that N. gonorrhoeae activation of PI-3 kinase triggers the host cell to produce a lipid second messenger that influences bacterial behaviour.  相似文献   

8.
The skull, spine, meninges, and cellular barriers at the blood–brain and the blood–cerebrospinal fluid interfaces well protect the brain and meningeal spaces against microbial invasion. However, once in the bloodstream, a range of pathogenic bacteria is able to reach the brain and cause meningitis. Despite advances in antibacterial therapy, bacterial meningitis remains one of the most important infectious diseases worldwide. The most common causative bacteria in children and adults are Streptococcus pneumoniae and Neisseria meningitidis associated with high morbidity and mortality, while among neonates, most cases of bacterial meningitis are due to group B Streptococcus and Escherichia coli. Here we summarise our current knowledge on the strategies used by these bacterial pathogens to survive in the bloodstream, to colonise the brain vasculature and to cross the blood–brain barrier.  相似文献   

9.
The bacterial population in barley field soil was estimated by determining the numbers of (i) cells reducing the artificial electron acceptor 5-cyano-2,3-ditolyl tetrazolium chloride (CTC) to CTC-formazan (respiratory activity), (ii) cells dividing a limited number of times (microcolony formation) on nutrient-poor media, (iii) cells dividing many times (colony formation) on nutrient-poor agar media, and (iv) cells stained with acridine orange (total counts). The CTC reduction assay was used for the first time for populations of indigenous soil bacteria and was further developed for use in this environment. The number of viable cells was highest when estimated by the number of microcolonies developing during 2 months of incubation on filters placed on the surface of nutrient-poor media. The number of bacteria reducing CTC to formazan was slightly lower than the number of bacteria forming microcolonies. Traditional plate counts of CFU (culturable cells) yielded the lowest estimate of viable cell numbers. The microcolony assay gave an estimate of both (i) cells forming true microcolonies (in which growth ceases after a few cell divisions) representing viable but nonculturable cells and (ii) cells forming larger microcolonies (in which growth continues) representing viable, culturable cells. The microcolony assay, allowing single-cell observations, thus seemed to be best suited for estimation of viable cell numbers in soil. The effect on viable and culturable cell numbers of a temperature increase from 4 to 17°C for 5 days was investigated in combination with drying or wetting of the soil. Drying or wetting prior to the temperature increase, rather than the temperature increase per se, affected both the viable and culturable numbers of bacteria; both numbers were reduced in predried soil, while they increased slightly in the prewetted soil.  相似文献   

10.
The brain and meningeal spaces are protected from bacterial invasion by the blood–brain barrier, formed by specialized endothelial cells and tight intercellular junctional complexes. However, once in the bloodstream, Neisseria meningitidis crosses this barrier in about 60% of the cases. This highlights the particular efficacy with which N. meningitidis targets the brain vascular cell wall. The first step of central nervous system invasion is the direct interaction between bacteria and endothelial cells. This step is mediated by the type IV pili, which induce a remodelling of the endothelial monolayer, leading to the opening of the intercellular space. In this review, strategies used by the bacteria to survive in the bloodstream, to colonize the brain vasculature and to cross the blood–brain barrier will be discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Natural populations of bacteria assoiciated with the slime on submerged surfaces in a mountain stream were examined by phase-contrast and electron microscopy. The slime contained large numbers of bacteria which were predominantly gram-negative as determined by their cell wall structure. Examination of the in situ distribution of cells revealed that they were enmeshed in an extensive fibrous matrix whose component fibrils were stained with ruthenium red. The arrangement of slime fibrils immediately around individual bacterial cells suggested that this material was produced by these bacteria. This slime facilitated microcolony development and also anchored the bacteria to a particular surface. It is proposed that these slime-enmeshed microcolonies constitute functional communities within which most sessile bacteria live.  相似文献   

12.
Integrative and conjugative elements (ICE) are in some ways parasitic mobile DNA that propagate vertically through replication with the bacterial host chromosome but at low frequencies can excise and invade new recipient cells through conjugation and reintegration (horizontal propagation). The factors that contribute to successful horizontal propagation are not very well understood. Here, we study the influence of host cell life history on the initiation of transfer of a model ICE named ICEclc in bacteria of the genus Pseudomonas. We use time-lapse microscopy of growing and stationary-phase microcolonies of ICEclc bearing cells in combination with physiological staining and gene reporter analysis in stationary-phase suspended cells. We provide evidence that cell age and cell lineage are unlikely to play a role in the decision to initiate the ICEclc transfer program. In contrast, cells activating ICEclc show more often increased levels of reactive oxygen species and membrane damage than nonactivating cells, suggesting that some form of biochemical damage may make cells more prone to ICEclc induction. Finally, we find that ICEclc active cells appear spatially at random in a microcolony, which may have been a selective advantage for maximizing ICEclc horizontal transmission to new recipient species.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Helicobacter pylori (Hp) injects the CagA effector protein into host epithelial cells and induces growth factor-like signaling, perturbs cell-cell junctions, and alters host cell polarity. This enables Hp to grow as microcolonies adhered to the host cell surface even in conditions that do not support growth of free-swimming bacteria. We hypothesized that CagA alters host cell physiology to allow Hp to obtain specific nutrients from or across the epithelial barrier. Using a polarized epithelium model system, we find that isogenic ΔcagA mutants are defective in cell surface microcolony formation, but exogenous addition of iron to the apical medium partially rescues this defect, suggesting that one of CagA's effects on host cells is to facilitate iron acquisition from the host. Hp adhered to the apical epithelial surface increase basolateral uptake of transferrin and induce its transcytosis in a CagA-dependent manner. Both CagA and VacA contribute to the perturbation of transferrin recycling, since VacA is involved in apical mislocalization of the transferrin receptor to sites of bacterial attachment. To determine if the transferrin recycling pathway is involved in Hp colonization of the cell surface, we silenced transferrin receptor expression during infection. This resulted in a reduced ability of Hp to colonize the polarized epithelium. To test whether CagA is important in promoting iron acquisition in vivo, we compared colonization of Hp in iron-replete vs. iron-deficient Mongolian gerbils. While wild type Hp and ΔcagA mutants colonized iron-replete gerbils at similar levels, ΔcagA mutants are markedly impaired in colonizing iron-deficient gerbils. Our study indicates that CagA and VacA act in concert to usurp the polarized process of host cell iron uptake, allowing Hp to use the cell surface as a replicative niche.  相似文献   

15.
The survival of bacteria in nature is greatly enhanced by their ability to grow within surface-associated communities called biofilms. Commonly, biofilms generate proliferations of bacterial cells, called microcolonies, which are highly recalcitrant, 3-dimensional foci of bacterial growth. Microcolony growth is initiated by only a subpopulation of bacteria within biofilms, but processes responsible for this differentiation remain poorly understood. Under conditions of crowding and intense competition between bacteria within biofilms, microevolutionary processes such as mutation selection may be important for growth; however their influence on microcolony-based biofilm growth and architecture have not previously been explored. To study mutation in-situ within biofilms, we transformed Pseudomonas aeruginosa cells with a green fluorescent protein gene containing a +1 frameshift mutation. Transformed P. aeruginosa cells were non-fluorescent until a mutation causing reversion to the wildtype sequence occurs. Fluorescence-inducing mutations were observed in microcolony structures, but not in other biofilm cells, or in planktonic cultures of P. aeruginosa cells. Thus microcolonies may represent important foci for mutation and evolution within biofilms. We calculated that microcolony-specific increases in mutation frequency were at least 100-fold compared with planktonically grown cultures. We also observed that mutator phenotypes can enhance microcolony-based growth of P. aeruginosa cells. For P. aeruginosa strains defective in DNA fidelity and error repair, we found that microcolony initiation and growth was enhanced with increased mutation frequency of the organism. We suggest that microcolony-based growth can involve mutation and subsequent selection of mutants better adapted to grow on surfaces within crowded-cell environments. This model for biofilm growth is analogous to mutation selection that occurs during neoplastic progression and tumor development, and may help to explain why structural and genetic heterogeneity are characteristic features of bacterial biofilm populations.  相似文献   

16.
BFP, a plasmid-encoded type IV bundle-forming pilus produced by enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC), has recently been shown to be associated with the aggregation of bacteria and dispersal of bacteria from bacterial microcolonies. In standard 3 h HEp-2 cell assays, EPEC adhere in localized microcolonies; after 6 h, bacterial microcolonies are no longer present, indicating that bacterial aggregation and dispersal occurs in vitro during EPEC adhesion to cultured epithelial cells. To examine the role of BFP in EPEC aggregation and dispersal, we examined HEp-2 cell adhesion of strain E2348/69 and defined E2348/69 mutants by immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy. BFP was expressed initially as approximately 40 nm diameter pilus bundles that promoted bacteria-bacteria interaction and microcolony formation. BFP subsequently underwent a striking alteration in structural organization with the formation of much longer and thicker ( approximately 100 nm diameter) pilus bundles, which frequently aggregated laterally to form even thicker bundles often arranged in a loose three-dimensional network; EPEC dispersal from bacterial microcolonies was associated with this transformation of BFP from thin to thick bundles. Bacterial dispersal and transformation of BFP from thin to thick bundles did not occur with a bfpF mutant of strain E2348/69. It is concluded that BFP promotes both the formation and the dispersal of EPEC microcolonies, that the dispersal phase requires BfpF and that dispersal is associated with dramatic alterations in the structure of BFP bundles.  相似文献   

17.
Migration of associative bacteria Azospirillum brasilense in semisolid media is performed mainly by swarming (Swa+ phenotype), which depends on the flagellar functioning and intercellular contacts. Non-swarming mutants of A. brasilense Sp245 lacking a polar flagellum migrate in semisolid media with microcolony formation using a unrevealed mechanism (Gri+ phenotype). The study of wheat root colonization dynamics demonstrated that A. brasilense Sp245 Gri+ mutants exhibited lower capacity for wheat root adsorption. However, after “anchoring” has occurred, both A. brasilense Sp245 and its Swa-Gri+ mutants colonized the growing roots with virtually the same efficiency. All strains under study formed microcolonies on the surface of roots, stimulated root branching, and exhibited changes in the composition of protein antigens exposed on the bacterial cell surface. Indirect evidence was obtained for enhanced production of genus-specific protein antigens in the process of A. brasilense Sp245 adaptation to growth on plant roots.  相似文献   

18.
Neisseria meningitidis is a bacterium responsible for severe sepsis and meningitis. Following type IV pilus‐mediated adhesion to endothelial cells, bacteria proliferating on the cellular surface trigger a potent cellular response that enhances the ability of adhering bacteria to resist the mechanical forces generated by the blood flow. This response is characterized by the formation of numerous 100 nm wide membrane protrusions morphologically related to filopodia. Here, a high‐resolution quantitative live‐cell fluorescence microscopy procedure was designed and used to study this process. A farnesylated plasma membrane marker was first detected only a few seconds after bacterial contact, rapidly followed by actin cytoskeleton reorganization and bulk cytoplasm accumulation. The bacterial type IV pili‐associated minor pilin PilV is necessary for the initiation of this cascade. Plasma membrane composition is a key factor as cholesterol depletion with methyl‐β‐cyclodextrin completely blocks the initiation of the cellular response. In contrast membrane deformation does not require the actin cytoskeleton. Strikingly, plasma membrane remodelling undermicrocolonies is also independent of common intracellular signalling pathways as cellular ATP depletion is not inhibitory. This study shows that bacteria‐induced plasma membrane reorganization is a rapid event driven by a direct cross‐talk between type IV pili and the plasma membrane rather than by the activation of an intracellular signalling pathway that would lead to actin remodelling.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract Kanamycin-resistant Pseudomonas fluorescens DF57-3 cells (Tn5 modified) inoculated in soil microcosms rapidly lost their culturability, as defined by visible colony formation on Kings B agar supplemented with kanamycin. Thus, after 40 days only 0.02–0.35% of the initial inoculum was culturable. A microcolony epifluorescence technique was developed to determine the viable, but non-culturable subpopulation. A suspension of bacteria from the soil was prepared in salt solution after a sonication procedure and a sample was filtered onto a 0.2 μm Nuclepore filter. The filter was then placed for 3–4 days on the surface of Kings B agar before staining with acridine orange for epifluorescence microscopy. By staining and washing the filters carefully, disruption of microcolonies could be avoided. A majority of the microcolonies resulted from 2–3 cell divisions during the first 2 days of the incubation period, after which the cell divisions stopped. These microcolonies were taken to represent a population of viable, but non-culturable cells and comprised about 20% of the initial inoculum. A similar recovery was obtained when the filters were incubated on the surface of citrate minimal medium or soil extract medium. A few microcolonies showed continued growth on the filters, however, and their number corresponded well with that of visible macrocolonies. Observation by microscopy of a few (2–3) cell divisions (microcolony epifluorescence technique) is proposed for determination of subpopulations of viable, but non-culturable bacteria in soil.  相似文献   

20.
When fresh whole leaves of six different species of forage legumes were suspended in an artificial rumen medium and inoculated with rumen bacteria, bacterial adhesion and proliferation were noted at the stomata, and penetration of the stomate by these bacteria was documented by electron microscopy. The invading bacteria adhered to surfaces within the intercellular space of the leaf and produced very extensive exopolysaccharide-enclosed microcolonies. After some of the legume leaf cell walls were disorganized and ruptured by bacterial digestion, these cells (notably, parenchyma and epidermal cells) were invaded by bacteria, with subsequent formation of intracellular microcolonies. However, other cells were neither ruptured nor colonized (notably, stomata guard cells and vascular tissue). At all stages of the digestion of intact legume leaves, the rumen bacteria grew in microcolonies composed of cells of single or mixed morphological types, and a particular ecological niche was often completely and consistently occupied by a very large microcolony of cells of single or mixed morphological types.  相似文献   

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