Center for Biofilm Engineering
Abstract:
"Biofilm Formation in Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough is
Dependent Upon Protein Filaments"
07-019
Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough is a Gram-negative
sulfate-reducing bacterium (SRB), and the physiology of SRBs can impact many
anaerobic environments including radionuclide waste sites, oil reservoirs and
metal pipelines. In an attempt to understand D. vulgaris as a population
that can adhere to surfaces, D. vulgaris cultures were grown in a defined
medium and analysed for carbohydrate production, motility and biofilm formation.
Desulfovibrio vulgaris wild-type cells had increasing amounts of
carbohydrate into stationary phase and approximately half of the carbohydrate
remained internal. In comparison, a mutant that lacked the 200 kb megaplasmid,
strain DeltaMP, produced less carbohydrate and the majority of carbohydrate
remained internal of the cell proper. To assess the possibility of carbohydrate
re-allocation, biofilm formation was investigated. Wild-type cells produced
approximately threefold more biofilm on glass slides compared with DeltaMP;
however, wild-type biofilm did not contain significant levels of
exopolysaccharide. In addition, stains specific for extracellular carbohydrate
did not reveal polysaccharide material within the biofilm. Desulfovibrio
vulgaris wild-type biofilms contained long filaments as observed with
scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and the biofilm-deficient DeltaMP strain was
also deficient in motility. Biofilms grown directly on silica oxide transmission
electron microscopy (TEM) grids did not contain significant levels of an
exopolysaccharide matrix when viewed with TEM and SEM, and samples stained with
ammonium molybdate also showed long filaments that resembled flagella. Biofilms
subjected to protease treatments were degraded, and different proteases that
were added at the time of inoculation inhibited biofilm formation. The data
indicated that D. vulgaris did not produce an extensive exopolysaccharide
matrix, used protein filaments to form biofilm between cells and silica oxide
surfaces, and the filaments appeared to be flagella. It is likely that D.
vulgaris used flagella for more than a means of locomotion to a surface, but
also used flagella, or modified flagella, to establish and/or maintain biofilm
structure.
Clark ME, Edelmann RE, Duley ML, Wall JD Fields MW, "Biofilm
Formation in Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough is Dependent Upon
Protein Filaments," Environ Microbiol 2007; 9(11):2844-2854
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