Center for Biofilm Engineering
Abstract:
"Calcium-Induced Virulence Factors Associated with the Extracellular Matrix
of Mucoid Pseudomonas aeruginosa Biofilms"
05-031 Pseudomonas aeruginosa colonizes the pulmonary tissue of patients
with cystic fibrosis (CF), leading to biofilm-associated infections.
The pulmonary fluid of CF patients usually contains elevated
concentrations of cations and may contain the P. aeruginosa
redox-active pigment pyocyanin, which is known to disrupt calcium
homeostasis of host cells. Since divalent cations are important
bridging ions for bacterial polysaccharides and since they may play
regulatory roles in bacterial gene expression, we investigated the
effect of calcium ions on the extracellular matrix constituents of
P. aeruginosa biofilms. For mucoid strain P. aeruginosa FRD1,
calcium addition (1.0 and 10 mM as CaCl2) resulted in biofilms
that were at least 10-fold thicker than biofilms without added
calcium. Scanning confocal laser microscopy showed increased spacing
between cells for the thick biofilms, and Fourier transform infrared
spectroscopy revealed that the material between cells is primarily
alginate. An algD transcriptional reporter demonstrated that
calcium addition caused an eightfold increase in alg gene
expression in FRD1 biofilms. Calcium addition also resulted in
increased amounts of three extracellular proteases (AprA, LasB, and
PrpL). Immunoblots of the biofilm extracellular material established
that AprA was harbored within the biofilm extracellular matrix. An
aprA deletion mutation and a mutation in gene for a putative
P. aeruginosa calmodulin-like protein did not significantly
affect calcium-induced biofilm structure. Two-dimensional gel
electrophoresis showed increased amounts of phenazine biosynthetic
proteins in FRD1 biofilms and in calcium-amended planktonic cultures.
Spectrochemical analyses showed that the calcium addition causes a
three- to fivefold increase in pyocyanin production. These results
demonstrate that calcium addition affects the structure and
extracellular matrix composition of mucoid P. aeruginosa
biofilms, through increased expression and stability of bacterial
extracellular products. The calcium-induced extracellular matrix of
mucoid P. aeruginosa consists primarily of the virulence
factor alginate and also harbors extracellular proteases and perhaps
pyocyanin, a biomolecule that may further disrupt cellular calcium
levels.
Sarkisova, S., M.A. Patrauchan, D. Berglund, D.E. Nivens, and M.J. Franklin,
"Calcium-Induced Virulence Factors Associated with the Extracellular Matrix of
Mucoid Pseudomonas aeruginosa Biofilms," J. Bacteriol.,
187(13):4327-4337
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