Abstract

It is well appreciated that oxygen- and other nutrient-limiting gradients characterize microenvironments within chronic infections that foster bacterial tolerance to treatment and the immune response. However, determining how bacteria respond to these microenvironments has been limited by a lack of tools to study bacterial functions at the relevant spatial scales in situ Here, we report the application of the hybridization chain reaction (HCR) v3.0 to provide analog mRNA relative quantitation of Pseudomonas aeruginosa single cells as a step toward this end. To assess the potential for this method to be applied to bacterial populations, we visualized the expression of genes needed for the production of alginate (algD) and the dissimilatory nitrate reductase (narG) at single-cell resolution within laboratory-grown aggregates. After validating new HCR probes, we quantified algD and narG expression across microenvironmental gradients within both single aggregates and aggregate populations using the agar block biofilm assay (ABBA). For mucoid and nonmucoid ABBA populations, narG was expressed in hypoxic and anoxic regions, while alginate expression was restricted to the hypoxic zone (∼40 to 200 μM O2). Within individual aggregates, surface-adjacent cells expressed alginate genes at higher levels than interior cells, revealing that alginate expression is not constitutive in mucoid P. aeruginosa but instead varies with oxygen availability. These results establish HCR v3.0 as a versatile and robust tool to resolve subtle differences in gene expression at spatial scales relevant to microbial assemblages. This advance has the potential to enable quantitative studies of microbial gene expression in diverse contexts, including pathogen activities during infections.IMPORTANCE A goal for microbial ecophysiological research is to reveal microbial activities in natural environments, including sediments, soils, or infected human tissues. Here, we report the application of the hybridization chain reaction (HCR) v3.0 to quantitatively measure microbial gene expression in situ at single-cell resolution in bacterial aggregates. Using quantitative image analysis of thousands of Pseudomonas aeruginosa cells, we validated new P. aeruginosa HCR probes. Within in vitroP. aeruginosa aggregates, we found that bacteria just below the aggregate surface are the primary cells expressing genes that protect the population against antibiotics and the immune system. This observation suggests that therapies targeting bacteria growing with small amounts of oxygen may be most effective against these hard-to-treat infections. More generally, this proof-of-concept study demonstrates that HCR v3.0 has the potential to identify microbial activities in situ at small spatial scales in diverse contexts.

Highlights

  • IMPORTANCE A goal for microbial ecophysiological research is to reveal microbial activities in natural environments, including sediments, soils, or infected human tissues

  • We applied the third generation of the hybridization chain reaction (HCR v3.0) to quantitatively measure gene expression in P. aeruginosa in an in vitro aggregate model system

  • Our findings suggest that HCR v3.0 could prove to be a useful tool for analyzing in situ bacterial gene expression in virtually any species in any context

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Summary

Introduction

IMPORTANCE A goal for microbial ecophysiological research is to reveal microbial activities in natural environments, including sediments, soils, or infected human tissues. We report the application of the hybridization chain reaction (HCR) v3.0 to quantitatively measure microbial gene expression in situ at single-cell resolution in bacterial aggregates. Within in vitro P. aeruginosa aggregates, we found that bacteria just below the aggregate surface are the primary cells expressing genes that protect the population against antibiotics and the immune system This observation suggests that therapies targeting bacteria growing with small amounts of oxygen may be most effective against these hard-totreat infections. Quantifying single-cell fluorescence for the P. aeruginosa probe set, intensities were an order of magnitude lower for P. fluorescens (the most closely related of the three off-target strains) and 2 orders of magnitude lower for Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus (Fig. 1D), demonstrating high selectivity for the intended bacteria.

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