Summary
Almost one‐third of crop yields are lost every year due to microbial alterations and diseases. The main control strategy to limit these losses is the use of an array of chemicals active ...against spoilage and unwanted pathogenic microorganisms. Their massive use has led to extensive environmental pollution, human poisoning and a variety of diseases. An emerging alternative to this chemical approach is the use of microbial biocontrol agents. Biopesticides have been used with success in several fields, but a better understanding of their mode of action is necessary to better control their activity and increase their use. Very few studies have considered that biofilms are the preferred mode of life of microorganisms in the target agricultural biotopes. Increasing evidence shows that the spatial organization of microbial communities on crop surfaces may drive important bioprotection mechanisms. The aim of this review is to summarize the evidence of biofilm formation by biocontrol agents on crops and discuss how this surface‐associated mode of life may influence their biology and interactions with other microorganisms and the host and, finally, their overall beneficial activity.
The aim of this review is to summarize the evidence of biofilm formation by biocontrol agents on crops and discuss how this surface‐associated mode of life may influence their biology and interactions with other microorganisms and the host, and finally, their overall beneficial activity.
Assessing gene expression noise in order to obtain mechanistic insights requires accurate quantification of gene expression on many individual cells over a large dynamic range. We used a unique ...method based on 2-photon fluorescence fluctuation microscopy to measure directly, at the single cell level and with single-molecule sensitivity, the absolute concentration of fluorescent proteins produced from the two Bacillus subtilis promoters that control the switch between glycolysis and gluconeogenesis. We quantified cell-to-cell variations in GFP concentrations in reporter strains grown on glucose or malate, including very weakly transcribed genes under strong catabolite repression. Results revealed strong transcriptional bursting, particularly for the glycolytic promoter. Noise pattern parameters of the two antagonistic promoters controlling the nutrient switch were differentially affected on glycolytic and gluconeogenic carbon sources, discriminating between the different mechanisms that control their activity. Our stochastic model for the transcription events reproduced the observed noise patterns and identified the critical parameters responsible for the differences in expression profiles of the promoters. The model also resolved apparent contradictions between in vitro operator affinity and in vivo repressor activity at these promoters. Finally, our results demonstrate that negative feedback is not noise-reducing in the case of strong transcriptional bursting.
In their natural habitat, microorganisms are typically confronted with nutritional limitations that restrict growth and force them to persevere in a stationary phase. Despite the importance of this ...phase, little is known about the metabolic state(s) that sustains it. Here, we investigate metabolically active but non-growing Bacillus subtilis during nitrogen starvation. In the absence of biomass formation as the major NADPH sink, the intracellular flux distribution in these resting B. subtilis reveals a large apparent catabolic NADPH overproduction of 5.0 +/- 0.6 mmol.g(-1).h(-1) that was partly caused by high pentose phosphate pathway fluxes. Combining transcriptome analysis, stationary C-13-flux analysis in metabolic deletion mutants, H-2-labeling experiments, and kinetic flux profiling, we demonstrate that about half of the catabolic excess NADPH is oxidized by two transhydrogenation cycles, i.e. isoenzyme pairs of dehydrogenases with different cofactor specificities that operate in reverse directions. These transhydrogenation cycles were constituted by the combined activities of the glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenases GapA/GapB and the malic enzymes MalS/YtsJ. At least an additional 6% of the overproduced NADPH is reoxidized by continuous cycling between ana-and catabolism of glutamate. Furthermore, in vitro enzyme data show that a not yet identified transhydrogenase could potentially reoxidize similar to 20% of the overproduced NADPH. Overall, we demonstrate the interplay between several metabolic mechanisms that concertedly enable network-wide NADPH homeostasis under conditions of high catabolic NADPH production in the absence of cell growth in B. subtilis.
In most habitats, microbial life is organized in biofilms, three-dimensional edifices sustained by extracellular polymeric substances that enable bacteria to resist harsh and changing environments. ...Under multispecies conditions, bacteria can benefit from the polymers produced by other species ("public goods"), thus improving their survival under toxic conditions. A recent study showed that a Bacillus subtilis hospital isolate (NDmed) was able to protect Staphylococcus aureus from biocide action in multispecies biofilms. In this work, we identified ypqP, a gene whose product is required in NDmed for thick-biofilm formation on submerged surfaces and for resistance to two biocides widely used in hospitals. NDmed and S. aureus formed mixed biofilms, and both their spatial arrangement and pathogen protection were mediated by YpqP. Functional ypqP is present in other natural B. subtilis biofilm-forming isolates. However, the gene is disrupted by the SPβ prophage in the weak submerged-biofilm-forming strains NCIB3610 and 168, which are both less resistant than NDmed to the biocides tested. Furthermore, in a 168 laboratory strain cured of the SPβ prophage, the reestablishment of a functional ypqP gene led to increased thickness and resistance to biocides of the associated biofilms. We therefore propose that YpqP is a new and important determinant of B. subtilis surface biofilm architecture, protection against exposure to toxic compounds, and social behavior in bacterial communities.
The development of a biofilm constitutes a survival strategy by providing bacteria a protective environment safe from stresses such as microbicide action and can thus lead to important health-care ...problems. In this study, biofilm resistance of a Bacillus subtilis strain (called hereafter ND(medical)) recently isolated from endoscope washer-disinfectors to peracetic acid was investigated and its ability to protect the pathogen Staphylococcus aureus in mixed biofilms was evaluated. Biocide action within Bacillus subtilis biofilms was visualised in real time using a non-invasive 4D confocal imaging method. The resistance of single species and mixed biofilms to peracetic acid was quantified using standard plate counting methods and their architecture was explored using confocal imaging and electronic microscopy. The results showed that the ND(medical) strain demonstrates the ability to make very large amount of biofilm together with hyper-resistance to the concentration of PAA used in many formulations (3500 ppm). Evidences strongly suggest that the enhanced resistance of the ND(medical) strain was related to the specific three-dimensional structure of the biofilm and the large amount of the extracellular matrix produced which can hinder the penetration of peracetic acid. When grown in mixed biofilm with Staphylococcus aureus, the ND(medical) strain demonstrated the ability to protect the pathogen from PAA action, thus enabling its persistence in the environment. This work points out the ability of bacteria to adapt to an extremely hostile environment, and the necessity of considering multi-organism ecosystems instead of single species model to decipher the mechanisms of biofilm resistance to antimicrobials agents.
Celotno besedilo
Dostopno za:
DOBA, IZUM, KILJ, NUK, PILJ, PNG, SAZU, SIK, UILJ, UKNU, UL, UM, UPUK
Surface-associated multicellular assemblage is an important bacterial trait to withstand harsh environmental conditions.
is one of the most studied Gram-positive bacteria, serving as a model for the ...study of genetic pathways involved in the different steps of 3D biofilm formation.
biofilm studies have mainly focused on pellicle formation at the air-liquid interface or complex macrocolonies formed on nutritive agar. However, only few studies focus on the genetic features of
submerged biofilm formation and their link with other multicellular models at the air interface. NDmed, an undomesticated
strain isolated from a hospital, has demonstrated the ability to produce highly structured immersed biofilms when compared to strains classically used for studying
biofilms. In this contribution, we have conducted a multi-culturing comparison (between macrocolony, swarming, pellicle, and submerged biofilm) of
multicellular communities using the NDmed strain and mutated derivatives for genes shown to be required for motility and biofilm formation in pellicle and macrocolony models. For the 15 mutated NDmed strains studied, all showed an altered phenotype for at least one of the different culture laboratory assays. Mutation of genes involved in matrix production (i.e.,
,
,
,
) caused a negative impact on all biofilm phenotypes but favored swarming motility on semi-solid surfaces. Mutation of
, a gene coding for an amphiphilic protein, affected the stability of the pellicle at the air-liquid interface with no impact on the submerged biofilm model. Moreover, mutation of
an autolysin gene required for cell separation, had a greater effect on the submerged biofilm model than that formed at aerial level, opposite to the observation for
mutant. In addition,
NDmed with
mutation formed wrinkled macrocolony, less than that formed by the wild type, but was unable to form neither thick pellicle nor structured submerged biofilm. The results are discussed in terms of the relevancy to determine whether genes involved in colony and pellicle formation also govern submerged biofilm formation, by regarding the specificities in each model.
Bacillus subtilis is a widely used bacterial model to decipher biofilm formation, genetic determinants and their regulation. For several years, studies were conducted on colonies or pellicles formed ...at the interface with air, but more recent works showed that non-domesticated strains were able to form thick and structured biofilms on submerged surfaces. Taking advantage of time-lapse confocal laser scanning microscopy, we monitored bacterial colonization on the surface and observed an unexpected biphasic submerged biofilm development. Cells adhering to the surface firstly form elongated chains before being suddenly fragmented and released as free motile cells in the medium. This switching coincided with an oxygen depletion in the well which preceded the formation of the pellicle at the liquid-air interface. Residual bacteria still associated with the solid surface at the bottom of the well started to express matrix genes under anaerobic metabolism to build the typical biofilm protruding structures.
Abstract
Bacillus subtilis
can form various types of spatially organised communities on surfaces, such as colonies, pellicles and submerged biofilms. These communities share similarities and ...differences, and phenotypic heterogeneity has been reported for each type of community. Here, we studied spatial transcriptional heterogeneity across the three types of surface-associated communities. Using RNA-seq analysis of different regions or populations for each community type, we identified genes that are specifically expressed within each selected population. We constructed fluorescent transcriptional fusions for 17 of these genes, and observed their expression in submerged biofilms using time-lapse confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM). We found mosaic expression patterns for some genes; in particular, we observed spatially segregated cells displaying opposite regulation of carbon metabolism genes (
gapA
and
gapB
), indicative of distinct glycolytic or gluconeogenic regimes coexisting in the same biofilm region. Overall, our study provides a direct comparison of spatial transcriptional heterogeneity, at different scales, for the three main models of
B. subtilis
surface-associated communities.
Summary
In Bacillus subtilis, the NADPH‐dependent glyceraldehyde‐3‐phosphate dehydrogenase (GapB) and the phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PckA) enzymes are necessary for efficient gluconeogenesis ...from Krebs cycle intermediates. gapB and pckA transcription is repressed in the presence of glucose but not via CcpA, the major transcriptional regulator for catabolite repression in B. subtilis. A B. subtilis mini‐Tn10 transposant library was screened for clones affected in catabolite repression of gapB. Inactivation of a previously unknown gene, yqzB (renamed ccpN for control catabolite protein of gluconeogenic genes), was found to relieve not only gapB but also pckA transcription from catabolite repression. Purified CcpN specifically bound to the gapB and pckA promoters. ccpN is co‐transcribed constitutively with another unknown gene, yqfL. A yqfL deletion lowers the level of gapB and pckA transcription threefold under both glycolytic and gluconeogenic conditions and a ccpN deletion is epistatic over a yqfL deletion. YqfL is thus a positive regulator of the expression of gapB and pckA, the effect of which is not influenced by the metabolic regime of the cell but appears to be mediated by CcpN. ccpN has homologues in many Firmicutes, but not all, while yqfL homologues are widely distributed in Eubacteria and also present in some plants. In all analysed bacterial genomes, ccpN and yqfL are physically linked together or to putative gluconeogenic genes. CcpN thus orchestrates a novel CcpA‐independent mechanism for catabolite repression of gluconeogenic genes highly conserved in Firmicutes and appears as a functional analogue of FruR in Enterobacteria. The physiological significance of the regulation mediated via the three B. subtilis global transcription regulators, CcpA, CggR and CcpN, is discussed.