Abstract

Adhesion of bacteria to mucus may favor their persistence within the gut and their beneficial effects to the host. Interactions between pig gastric mucin (PGM) and a natural isolate of Lactococcus lactis (TIL448) were measured at the single-cell scale and under static conditions, using atomic force microscopy (AFM). In parallel, these interactions were monitored at the bacterial population level and under shear flow. AFM experiments with a L. lactis cell-probe and a PGM-coated surface revealed a high proportion of specific adhesive events (60%) and a low level of non-adhesive ones (2%). The strain muco-adhesive properties were confirmed by the weak detachment of bacteria from the PGM-coated surface under shear flow. In AFM, rupture events were detected at short (100−200 nm) and long distances (up to 600−800 nm). AFM measurements on pili and mucus-binding protein defective mutants demonstrated the comparable role played by these two surface proteinaceous components in adhesion to PGM under static conditions. Under shear flow, a more important contribution of the mucus-binding protein than the pili one was observed. Both methods differ by the way of probing the adhesion force, i.e. negative force contact vs. sedimentation and normal-to-substratum retraction vs. tangential detachment conditions, using AFM and flow chamber, respectively. AFM blocking assays with free PGM or O-glycan fractions purified from PGM demonstrated that neutral oligosaccharides played a major role in adhesion of L. lactis TIL448 to PGM. This study dissects L. lactis muco-adhesive phenotype, in relation with the nature of the bacterial surface determinants.

Highlights

  • The digestive epithelium is covered with a protective mucus layer, regarded as a visco-elastic and permeable hydrogel

  • Using atomic force microscopy (AFM) for probing the adhesive properties of L. lactis TIL448 to pig gastric mucin (PGM)

  • A lacto-probe consisting of bacterial cells immobilized on the AFM tip was prepared with L. lactis TIL448 and examined by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) (Figure 1A)

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Summary

Introduction

The digestive epithelium is covered with a protective mucus layer, regarded as a visco-elastic and permeable hydrogel This layer serves as an ecological niche for commensal and probiotic bacteria, and plays a role in the defense against enteric bacterial infections by expelling pathogens from the mucosal surface [1]. Mucins are large glycoproteins with a serine and threonine-rich protein backbone, linked to a wide variety of O-linked oligosaccharide side chains arranged in a bottle-brush configuration [2]. Such O-glycans are nutritive sources for bacteria and/or potential ligands for bacterial adhesins [3], probably contributing in this way to the selection of the species-specific microbiota [4]. The presence of pili structures and related mucoadhesion properties were reported in Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG [15]

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