Abstract

Fluorescent reporters are an important tool for monitoring dynamics of bacterial populations at the single cell and community level. While there are a large range of reporter constructs available–particularly for common model organisms like E. coli–fewer options exist for other species, including E. faecalis, a gram-positive opportunistic pathogen. To expand the potential toolkit available for E. faecalis, we exchanged the original fluorescent reporter in a previously developed plasmid (pBSU101) with one of eight fluorescent reporters and confirmed that all constructs exhibited detectable fluorescence in single E. faecalis cells and mixed biofilm communities. To identify promising constructs for bulk-level experiments, we then measured the fluorescence spectra from E. faecalis populations in microwell plate (liquid) cultures during different phases of aerobic growth. Cultures showed density- and reporter-specific variations in fluorescent signal, though spectral signatures of all reporters become clear in late-exponential and stationary-phase populations. Based on these results, we identified six pairs of reporters that can be combined with simple spectral unmixing to accurately estimate population composition in 2-strain mixtures at or near stationary phase. This approach offers a simple and scalable method for selection and competition experiments in simple two-species populations under aerobic growth conditions. Finally, we incorporated codon-optimized variants of blue (BFP) and red (RFP) reporters and show that they lead to increased fluorescence in exponentially growing cells. As a whole, the results inform the scope of application of different reporters and identify both single reporters and reporter pairs that are promising for fluorescence-based assays at bulk and single-cell levels in E. faecalis.

Highlights

  • Enterococcus faecalis is an opportunistic bacterial pathogen that is commonly found in the mammalian gut microbiome [1] and has been implicated in a range of infections, including bacteremia, endocarditis, and wound infections [2,3,4,5,6,7,8]

  • For E. faecalis populations grown under aerobic conditions in microwell plate cultures, we find that fluorescence signal in low density populations (OD600

  • We identified six pairs of reporters that can be combined with simple spectral unmixing to accurately estimate population composition in 2-strain mixtures at or near stationary phase

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Summary

Introduction

Enterococcus faecalis is an opportunistic bacterial pathogen that is commonly found in the mammalian gut microbiome [1] and has been implicated in a range of (often drug-resistant) infections, including bacteremia, endocarditis, and wound infections [2,3,4,5,6,7,8]. E. faecalis communities are characterized by a confluence of intercellular interactions, including communication via two-component signaling [9,10,11], pheromone-induced quorum sensing [12, 13], chromosomal transfer [14], extracellular electronic transfer [15], fratricide [16, 17], and phage-. Fluorescent reporter plasmids for single-cell and bulk-level composition assays in E. feacalis decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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