Center for Biofilm Engineering
Thesis Abstract:
"Spatial Patterns of DNA Replication, Protein Synthesis, and Oxygen
Concentration within Bacterial Biofilms Reveal Active and Inactive Regions"
Biofilms harbor both active and inactive cells and it is
a challenge to characterize the spatial and population heterogeneity of
specific activities within a biofilm. Spatial patterns of DNA replication
and protein synthetic activity were imaged by techniques developed using
staphylococcal systems. The first technique measures DNA synthetic activity
by pulse-labeling with the thymidine analog 5-bromo-2-deoxyuridine (BrdU)
followed by immunofluorescent detection of brominated DNA. The second
technique makes use of an inducible green fluorescent protein construct that
can be used to detect the capacity for de novo protein synthesis. These
techniques were applied to biofilms grown in three different reactor
systems. In all cases, measurements revealed that even in simple
single-species biofilms, complex spatial distributions of anabolic activity
occur. In a colony biofilm system, two distinct regions of DNA synthetic
activity were observed, one close to the nutrient interface and another
adjacent to the air interface. A similar pattern was measured by GFP
induction. The dimensions of DNA synthetic activity ranged from 25 to 31
µm and the average protein synthetic activity
ranged from 36 to 38 µm at the air interface. When
pure oxygen was introduced, a wider zone of active DNA replication (45
µm) and GFP synthesis (59 µm)
was measured at the gas interface. Oxygen penetration calculated (26
µm) corresponds with the zones of respiratory activity (19 to 38
µm), DNA synthetic activity, and protein synthetic
activity measured at the air interface. The dimensions of DNA synthetic
activity and protein synthesis activity at the nutrient interface ranged
from 13 µm to 19 µm. The
addition of glucose to the media increased the zone of protein synthesis at
the nutrient interface to 33 µm. Stratified
patterns of activity were also observed in biofilms developed in two
continuous flow reactors. While biofilms harbor regions of active anabolism,
the techniques also demonstrate that these biofilms contain regions of
complete inactivity. Such inactive zones may contribute to the special
ecology of biofilms and tolerance to antimicrobial agents. The techniques,
particularly BrdU labeling, are generic and may find application to many
microbial biofilm systems.
Spatial Patterns of DNA Replication, Protein Synthesis, and Oxygen
Concentration within Bacterial Biofilms Reveal Active and Inactive Regions,
Thesis Defense by Suriani Abdul Rani, M.S. Candidate in Chemical and
Biological Engineering, Montana State University, May 2006.
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