Abstract

Escherichia coli is one of the most prevalent microorganisms forming biofilms on indwelling medical devices, as well as a representative model to study the biology and ecology of biofilms. Here, we report that a small plasmid gene, kil, enhances biofilm formation of E. coli. The kil gene is widely conserved among naturally occurring colicinogenic plasmids such as ColE1 plasmid, and is also present in some plasmid derivatives used as cloning vectors. First, we found that overexpression of the kil gene product dramatically increased biofilm mass enriched with extracellular DNA in the outer membrane-compromised strain RN102, a deep rough LPS mutant E. coli K-12 derivative. We also found that the kil-enhanced biofilm formation was further promoted by addition of physiologically relevant concentrations of Mg2+, not only in the case of RN102, but also with the parental strain BW25113, which retains intact core-oligosaccharide LPS. Biofilm formation by kil-expressing BW25113 strain (BW25113 kil+) was significantly inhibited by protease but not DNase I. In addition, a large amount of proteinous materials were released from the BW25113 kil+ cells. These materials contained soluble cytoplasmic and periplasmic proteins, and insoluble membrane vesicles (MVs). The kil-induced MVs were composed of not only outer membrane/periplasmic proteins, but also inner membrane/cytoplasmic proteins, indicating that MVs from both of the outer and inner membranes could be released into the extracellular milieu. Subcellular fractionation analysis revealed that the Kil proteins translocated to both the outer and inner membranes in whole cells of BW25113 kil+. Furthermore, the BW25113 kil+ showed not only reduced viability in the stationary growth phase, but also increased susceptibility to killing by predator bacteria, Vibrio cholerae expressing the type VI secretion system, despite no obvious change in morphology and physiology of the bacterial membrane under regular culture conditions. Taken together, our findings suggest that there is risk of increasing biofilm formation and spreading of numerous MVs releasing various cellular components due to kil gene expression. From another point of view, our findings could also offer efficient MV production strategies using a conditional kil vector in biotechnological applications.

Highlights

  • Biofilms are communities of microorganisms that attach to each other and onto biotic and abiotic surfaces

  • The pNTR-SD has been commonly used as a parental plasmid of a complete set of mobile plasmid clones of intact open reading frames (ORFs) representing all the genes of E. coli K12 (Saka et al, 2005)

  • We found that the kil gene in plasmid pNTR-SD was responsible for an increase in biofilm formation by E. coli

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Summary

Introduction

Biofilms are communities of microorganisms that attach to each other and onto biotic and abiotic surfaces. Medical device-associated infections triggered by biofilm formation are an emerging problem owing to their resistance to antibiotics, biocides, and host immunity. Several surface-located bacterial appendages of E. coli, such as flagella, antigen 43 (Ag43), curli fibers, type I fimbriae, and conjugation pili, are shown to be involved in the biofilm formation (Pratt and Kolter, 1998; Vidal et al, 1998; Danese et al, 2000; Ghigo, 2001; Sherlock et al, 2006). The ubiquity of membrane vesicles (MVs), spherical nanoscale proteoliposomes released from biofilm-associated bacteria, has been confirmed by observations of biofilms from a variety of natural and laboratory settings; MVs are considered common biofilm constituents (Schooling and Beveridge, 2006). MVs play a wide array of roles in pathogenesis and immune modulation in many bacteria, and are offering the applicability of MVs in uses as vaccine antigens (Nakao et al, 2016; Schorey and Harding, 2016) as well as for drug delivery as carriers (Jain and Pillai, 2017; Kim et al, 2017)

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