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Antibiofilm Activity of the Marine Bacterium Pseudoalteromonas sp. Strain 3J6
Authors:Alexandra Dheilly  Emmanuelle Soum-Soutéra  Géraldine L Klein  Alexis Bazire  Chantal Compère  Dominique Haras  Alain Dufour
Institution:Laboratoire de Biotechnologie et Chimie Marines, EA 3884, Université de Bretagne-Sud, UEB, Lorient, France,,1. IFREMER, Service Interfaces et Capteurs, Plouzané, France2.
Abstract:Biofilm formation results in medical threats or economic losses and is therefore a major concern in a variety of domains. In two-species biofilms of marine bacteria grown under dynamic conditions, Pseudoalteromonas sp. strain 3J6 formed mixed biofilms with Bacillus sp. strain 4J6 but was largely predominant over Paracoccus sp. strain 4M6 and Vibrio sp. strain D01. The supernatant of Pseudoalteromonas sp. 3J6 liquid culture (SN3J6) was devoid of antibacterial activity against free-living Paracoccus sp. 4M6 and Vibrio sp. D01 cells, but it impaired their ability to grow as single-species biofilms and led to higher percentages of nonviable cells in 48-h biofilms. Antibiofilm molecules of SN3J6 were able to coat the glass surfaces used to grow biofilms and reduced bacterial attachment about 2-fold, which might partly explain the biofilm formation defect but not the loss of cell viability. SN3J6 had a wide spectrum of activity since it affected all Gram-negative marine strains tested except other Pseudoalteromonas strains. Biofilm biovolumes of the sensitive strains were reduced 3- to 530-fold, and the percentages of nonviable cells were increased 3- to 225-fold. Interestingly, SN3J6 also impaired biofilm formation by three strains belonging to the human-pathogenic species Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Salmonella enterica, and Escherichia coli. Such an antibiofilm activity is original and opens up a variety of applications for Pseudoalteromonas sp. 3J6 and/or its active exoproducts in biofilm prevention strategies.Biofilms are defined as microbial communities of cells that are irreversibly attached to a substratum, to an interface, or to each other and are embedded into a matrix of extracellular polymeric substances that they have produced (8). It is now considered that most (if not all) bacteria are capable of forming biofilms and that this is their predominant bacterial life-style. Biofilm formation is a complex biological phenomenon and has been generally described as a temporal process involving a succession of distinct stages: a reversible and then irreversible attachment of planktonic bacteria onto a surface, the formation of microcolonies either by the clonal growth of attached cells or by the active translocation of cells across the surface, the coalescence of growing microcolonies to form a macrocolony, and cell dispersal. It should, however, be noted that this developmental model still requires further experimental validation, especially concerning the possibility of a hierarchical order of genetic pathways (26). Furthermore, Karatan and Watnick (17) pointed out that there are as many different types of biofilms as there are bacteria and that a single bacterium may even make several different types of biofilms under different environmental conditions. Biofilm formation is associated with the virulence of pathogenic bacteria, and cells included within a biofilm are generally more resistant (up to 1,000-fold) to antibiotics and disinfectants than free-living bacteria (8, 26). Biofilms are therefore a major concern in medicine and in medical environments but also in all domains where their growth constitutes a source of contamination for humans or animals (food industry, cooling towers, and water pipes, etc.) or leads to economical losses (biofouling of boats and immersed structures and material biocorrosion, etc.). The development of antibiofilm strategies is therefore of major interest and currently constitutes an important field of investigation in which environmentally friendly antibiofilm molecules or organisms are highly valuable (5, 7, 9).Marine bacteria belonging to the genus Pseudoalteromonas of the class Gammaproteobacteria are often found in association with marine eukaryotes, and their ability to produce a variety of biological activities has attracted particular attention (2, 11, 13, 15, 28). We previously isolated marine bacteria attached to solid surfaces (glass in most cases) immersed for 3 or 6 h in the Morbihan Gulf or in the Bay of Brest, France (10, 20, 21, 27). Out of the three Pseudoalteromonas strains isolated, we were able to tag strain 3J6 with a green fluorescent protein (GFP)-encoding plasmid. This allowed us to investigate whether Pseudoalteromonas sp. strain 3J6 affected the biofilm growth of other marine bacterial isolates. Here, we report that strain 3J6 predominated in two-species biofilms over Paracoccus sp. strain 4M6 and Vibrio sp. strain D01. Although devoid of antibacterial activity against planktonic cells, Pseudoalteromonas sp. 3J6 exoproducts impaired biofilm formation by Paracoccus sp. 4M6 and Vibrio sp. D01. We characterized the effects of these exoproducts on the latter strains and on other bacteria.
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