Literature DB >> 20378653

Role of bacteriocins in mediating interactions of bacterial isolates taken from cystic fibrosis patients.

Suphan Bakkal1, Sandra M Robinson1, Claudia L Ordonez2, David A Waltz2, Margaret A Riley1.   

Abstract

Pseudomonas aeruginosa (Pa) and Burkholderia cepacia complex (Bcc) lung infections are responsible for much of the mortality in cystic fibrosis (CF). However, little is known about the ecological interactions between these two, often co-infecting, species. This study provides what is believed to be the first report of the intra- and interspecies bacteriocin-like inhibition potential of Pa and Bcc strains recovered from CF patients. A total of 66 strains were screened, and shown to possess bacteriocin-like inhibitory activity (97 % of Pa strains and 68 % of Bcc strains showed inhibitory activity), much of which acted across species boundaries. Further phenotypic and molecular-based assays revealed that the source of this inhibition differs for the two species. In Pa, much of the inhibitory activity is due to the well-known S and RF pyocins. In contrast, Bcc inhibition is due to unknown mechanisms, although RF-like toxins were implicated in some strains. These data suggest that bacteriocin-based inhibition may play a role in governing Pa and Bcc interactions in the CF lung and may, therefore, offer a novel approach to mediating these often fatal infections.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2010        PMID: 20378653      PMCID: PMC3068677          DOI: 10.1099/mic.0.036848-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Microbiology (Reading)        ISSN: 1350-0872            Impact factor:   2.777


INTRODUCTION

Individuals with cystic fibrosis (CF) face a lifelong battle with chronic bacterial lung infections. Pseudomonas aeruginosa (Pa) is the predominant infectious agent in the lungs of adult CF patients and most individuals are infected shortly after birth (Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, 2007). Alginate-producing mucoid variants emerge over the course of several years, and form dense bacterial biofilms in the CF lung. Once established, eradication of these infections is generally not possible (Govan & Deretic, 1996; Hentzer ). In the 1970s, members of the Burkholderia cepacia complex (Bcc) of species were first identified in the airways of CF patients (Govan & Deretic, 1996). Although few in number (∼3 %), the clinical manifestations of these infections can be severe (Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, 2007; Kalish ). Colonization may be asymptomatic, or result in progressive decline in lung function. A smaller number of infections result in ‘cepacia syndrome’, which is a fatal pneumonia that results in death (Jones ; Kalish ; Tablan ). Given that CF patients are initially infected with Pa, Bcc strains must either compete with or act in synergy with established Pa biofilms (Al-Bakri ). How such interactions occur is unknown. In fact, little is known about the process of Bcc invasion and its outcomes. Do the strains from the two species co-exist peacefully? Do Bcc strains out-compete and displace pre-existing Pa strains? Few studies have sought to address how these two bacterial species interact in the CF lung (Al-Bakri ; McKenney ; Weaver & Kolter, 2004). One factor known to mediate bacterial interactions is the production of potent toxins known as bacteriocins (Riley & Gordon, 1999). Unlike traditional antibiotics, many bacteriocins have a relatively narrow killing range. They have been implicated in intraspecific competition brought on by limited nutrients (Riley & Wertz, 2002b). In some cases, however, bacteriocins are also able to kill more broadly, and they have been implicated as a primary mechanism for mediating microbial diversity (Kerr ). Much is already known about pyocins, the bacteriocins produced by Pseudomonas spp. In fact, more than 90 % of all Pa strains examined to date produce one or more of three pyocin types: S, R and F (Fyfe ). S pyocins are high-molecular-mass proteins that resemble the well-known colicins produced by Escherichia coli. They are protease sensitive, and most kill by DNA degradation (Michel-Briand & Baysse, 2002). Four S pyocins (S1, S2, S3 and AP41) have been studied extensively (Duport ; Sano & Kageyama, 1981; Sano , 1993a, b) (Fig. 1a). All S-pyocin operons share the presence of two genes: the larger gene (toxin gene) provides the killing activity, while the smaller (immunity gene) provides immunity against killing by that pyocin. The toxin gene comprises four domains: I produces receptor-binding activity, which enables a pyocin to recognize a specific target; II has an unknown function; III enables translocation of the toxin through the plasma membrane; and IV produces the killing (DNase) activity (Michel-Briand & Baysse, 2002).
Fig. 1.

Genetic organization of exemplar pyocin genes (adapted from Michel-Briand & Baysse, 2002). (a) S3 pyocin: P-box refers to the binding site for PrtN (not shown); the toxin gene is divided into four domains: I–IV. (b) R2F2 pyocin. Arrows indicate the direction of transcription.

The R and F pyocins, which resemble bacteriophage tails, are resistant to nuclease and protease digestion, and they kill by depolarizing the cell membrane. The genes encoding these pyocins are found in a cluster (which is why they are often referred to as RF pyocins), and they are located between trpE (anthranilate synthase component I) and trpG (anthranilate synthase component II) (Nakayama ; Shinomiya ). Fig. 1(b) shows the genetic organization of pyocin R2F2 genes. The open reading frames (PRF3–PRF43) include regulatory, lysis, and R and F pyocin genes. The lysis genes (PRF9, PRF24, PRF25 and PRF26) are similar in sequence to the lysis cassettes of P2 and lambda phages (Nakayama ). There are 16 R and F pyocin genes (PRF10–PRF23 and PRF28–PRF43) (Nakayama ). The encoded proteins show high levels of sequence similarity to tail genes of P2 and lambda phage (Nakayama ). The function of PRF5–PRF8 is unknown. The S, R and F pyocins are controlled by the same ptrN and ptrR regulatory genes (Fig. 1b) (Michel-Briand & Baysse, 2002; Nakayama ). PtrN is a transcriptional activator that is repressed by PtrR (Matsui ). Under DNA damage, RecA protein cleaves the PtrR repressor protein, which leads to expression of ptrN. PtrN binds to the regulatory sequence (P-box), thus inducing transcription of pyocin genes (Matsui ). Stress conditions, such as might be encountered in a CF lung, may induce pyocin production. Microarray analysis of Pa genomes has revealed that pyocin transcription is upregulated by hydrogen peroxide and ciprofloxacin (Brazas & Hancock, 2005; Chang ). Waite & Curtis (2009) investigated the effect of pyocins in mixed-culture biofilms under aerobic and anaerobic conditions, and revealed that sensitivity to pyocin increased under anaerobic conditions. Further, Heo revealed that R pyocins provide a competitive advantage during growth in planktonic conditions. Far less is known about cepaciacins, which are the bacteriocins produced by Burkholderia. Approximately 30 % of Burkholderia cepacia (formerly Pseudomonas cepacia) strains produce cepaciacins (Govan & Harris, 1985). The few characterized cepaciacins resemble R-type pyocins, as they are resistant to trypsin digestion, and appear phage-tail-like when viewed under the electron microscope (Govan & Harris, 1985). Nothing further is known about the abundance, diversity or molecular biology of these toxins. The goal of the present study was to determine whether clinical strains of Pa and Bcc isolated from the CF lung produce bacteriocins, and, if so, whether these play a role in mediating intra- and interspecific bacterial interactions in the CF lung. To this end, a collection of clinical Pa and Bcc strains from CF patients was screened for bacteriocin production and sensitivity. This collection consisted of strains isolated as paired (one strain of Pa and one strain of Bcc isolated from the same lung) or unpaired strains. Phenotypic screens for bacteriocin production, coupled with typing methods to identify individual bacteriocins, revealed a diversity of inhibitory mechanisms. Further, the patterns of within- and between-species inhibition suggested a role for these toxins in mediating bacterial interactions in the CF lung.

METHODS

Bacterial strains.

The bacterial strains used in this study included a total of 66 clinical strains of Pa (38 strains) and Bcc (28 strains) obtained from the Children's Hospital, Boston, MA, USA. The study protocol was approved by the Committee on Human Research at the Children's Hospital, and written informed consent was obtained. The clinical collection can be divided into two groups. The first was composed of 14 Pa and seven Bcc paired isolates procured from seven patients with CF. Each pair consisted of one Pa strain and one Bcc strain isolated from the same CF patient. The second group was composed of 24 Pa and 21 Bcc unpaired isolates, which were isolated from 31 patients. The Bcc strains included four genomovars (1 Burkholderia vietnamiensis, 12 Burkholderia multivorans, 11 Burkholderia dolosa and 4 Burkholderia cenocepacia). The reference strain collection included bacteriocin-producer strains, which are Pa strains known to produce the following pyocins: S1 and R4 (PML28), AP41 and F3 (PAF41), S2, R and F (NIH18), and S2, R2 and F2 (PAO1) (Ito ; Kuroda & Kageyama, 1981; Nakayama ; Sano ; Seo & Galloway, 1990). The reference collection also included indicator strains sensitive to various combinations of pyocins: PML1516d (S1SS2SAP41S), NIH3 (S1SS2SAP41S), NIH3S1R (S1RS2SAP41S), NIH3S2R (S1SS2RAP41S), NIH3AP41R (S1SS2SAP41R), 3295 (AP41S), 3012 (AP41SF3S), 7NSK2 (S1SS3S), 7NSK2-fpvA (S1SS3R), PML14 (S1SR1SR2SR3SR4SR5S), 13s (S1SR1SR2SR3SR4SR5S) and NIH5 (ATCC 25317) (F1SF2SF3S) (de Chial ; Kageyama ; Kuroda & Kageyama, 1981; Sano & Kageyama, 1981; Sano ; Williams ). Four cloned S pyocins (S1, S2, S3 and AP41) were employed in this bacteriocin identification scheme (Duport ; Sano & Kageyama, 1993; Sano ). There is no corresponding set of Bcc reference strains.

Bacteriocin production and sensitivity screen.

The patch assay was used to identify bacteriocin-like inhibition, which involves overnight growth in 10 ml Luria–Bertani (LB) broth at 37 °C, with shaking at 250 r.p.m. A 6 ml volume of LB top agar (0.6 %, w/v), mixed with 3 μl mitomycin C (0.5 μg ml−1; Sigma) and 100 μl indicator cells (108 cells), was plated as a lawn on an LB agar plate (Pugsley & Oudega, 1987). The producer strain (∼106 cells) was spotted on the indicator overlay with a toothpick. Two spots per strain were applied. After overnight incubation at 37 °C, the plates were scored. If a strain produced an inhibition factor, such as a bacteriocin, active against the lawn, a zone of inhibition appeared. The clinical collection was screened in an all-by-all assay, i.e. each strain was used as a potential inhibitor producer and indicator. The all-by-all patch assay was done in duplicate. All positive results were tested a third time. A one-tailed Mann–Whitney U test was used for non-parametric comparison of inhibitory activities in order to identify significant differences in inhibition frequencies (Zar, 1999).

Phenotypic bacteriocin identification.

The clinical collection was screened against the indicator strains using the patch assay. In addition, a cell-free extract of each putative bacteriocin-producing strain was subjected to trypsin digestion, filtration and freezing to distinguish between protease-sensitive and phage-like bacteriocins (Pugsley & Oudega, 1987; Riley ). Cell-free extracts of putative producer strains were digested with trypsin (5 mg ml−1) for 30 min at 25 °C (to inactivate protease-sensitive bacteriocins), frozen at −70 °C (which tends to fracture phage-tail-type bacteriocins), and filtered in a 100 kDa Microcon YM-100 centrifugal filter device (Millipore) using centrifugation at 14 000 r.p.m. for 12 min (which tends to retain phage-tail-like bacteriocins). The treated cell-free extracts were tested on the lawns of pyocin-sensitive reference and clinical strains.

Molecular screening.

Genomic DNA was isolated using a DNeasy Tissue kit (Qiagen), and the Gram-negative protocol was applied to 2×109 cells from an overnight culture. A standard PCR protocol was used to screen genomes for the presence of all previously characterized S-type pyocin genes (encoding S1, S2, S3 and AP41) and their corresponding immunity genes (Duport ; Sano & Kageyama, 1993; Sano ). Multiple primer sets were designed, based on existing pyocin sequences, to amplify different regions of each S pyocin gene and the corresponding immunity genes (see Supplementary Table S1, available with the online version of this paper). Further, primer sets specific to the regulatory region (P-box) of pyocins S1, S2 and AP41 were employed. Primers designed to amplify the RF-type pyocins, targeting PRF10, PRF31 and PRF38 genes, were taken from the literature (Nakayama ). NCBI accession numbers of the sequenced pyocins, primer positions, primer sequences, amplicon sizes and identities are given in Table S1.

RESULTS

Inhibitory activity in Pa and Bcc strains

A phenotypic screen for inhibitory activity and sensitivity was conducted on a collection of 66 clinical strains of Pa (38 strains) and Bcc (28 strains) isolated from CF patients. The collection consisted of strains isolated as pairs, i.e. one Pa strain and one Bcc strain isolated from the same patient (taken from 7 patients, and resulting in 14 pairs; 14 Pa strains paired with 7 Bcc strains), and unpaired strains (24 Pa and 21 Bcc strains). Bacteriocin production and sensitivity was assayed in an all-by-all comparison, i.e. each strain was used as a putative producer and sensitive strain. In this screen, Pa and Bcc strains showed different levels of inhibitory activity. The majority of the Pa strains (97 %) were inhibitory (Table 1). Most (76 %) inhibited both species, resulting in similar levels of intra- versus interspecific inhibition (92 % versus 81 %). Only 3 % of Pa strains showed no inhibitory activity.
Table 1.

Inhibitory activity of Pa and Bcc strains from the CF lung

PI, paired isolates; UPI, unpaired isolates; na, not applicable.

Inhibitory activityNo. of Pa isolates (%)No. of Bcc isolates (%)
PI, n=14UPI, n=24Total, N=38PI, n=7UPI, n=21Total, N=28
No inhibition0 (0)1 (4)1 (3)4 (57)5 (24)9 (32)
Inhibits only Pa1 (7)5 (21)6 (16)0 (0)4 (19)4 (14)
Inhibits only Bcc1 (7)1 (4)2 (5)0 (0)3 (14)3 (11)
Inhibits both Pa and Bcc12 (86)17 (71)29 (76)3 (43)9 (43)12 (43)
Total inhibition14 (100)23 (96)37 (97)3 (43)16 (76)19 (68)
Paired inhibition2 (14)na2 (5)0 (0)na0 (0)
The Bcc strains showed lower levels of overall inhibitory activity (68 %) (Table 1). The one-tailed Mann–Whitney U test confirmed significantly higher levels of total inhibition by Pa versus Bcc strains (P<0.0005). Similar to Pa, most Bcc strains (43 %) inhibited both species, again resulting in similar levels of intra- versus interspecific inhibition (54 % versus 57 %). A much larger fraction of Bcc strains (32 %) displayed no inhibitory activity. The CF strain collection could be further divided into strains isolated as paired strains or unpaired strains. The paired and unpaired Pa strains showed similar levels of total inhibitory activity (Table 1). All paired and most unpaired (96 %) isolates possessed inhibitory activity. Most of the paired strains (86 %) inhibited both species, while the remainder inhibited either Bcc (7 %) or Pa (7 %). Two of the paired Pa strains inhibited their Bcc pair mates. The inhibitory unpaired Pa strains showed similar patterns of inhibitory activity: 71 % inhibited both species, and the remainder inhibited either Bcc (4 %) or Pa (21 %). The paired Bcc strains showed inhibitory activity patterns that were significantly different from their Pa pair mates (Table 1). Only 43 % of paired Bcc isolates possessed inhibitory activity, at significantly lower levels than for paired Pa isolates (0.025Pa strains. Most of the unpaired Bcc strains were inhibitory (76 %), and most of these (43 %) inhibited both species. The remainder inhibited only Bcc (14 %) or only Pa strains (19 %). Inhibition haplotypes were determined for each producer strain. The 37 Pa and 19 Bcc producers displayed 36 and 18 haplotypes, respectively (Fig. 2). Further, all Pa isolates inhibited multiple Pa and Bcc strains; 12 Pa inhibited 1–10 strains (11 inhibition haplotypes), 8 inhibited 11–20 strains (8 inhibition haplotypes), 11 inhibited 21–30 strains (11 inhibition haplotypes), and 3 inhibited 31–40 strains (3 inhibition haplotypes). Three of the paired Pa isolates were able to inhibit most of the strains in the collection (41–50 strains). The Bcc isolates had a more limited inhibitory activity range. The majority (17 strains) inhibited 1–10 strains (16 inhibition haplotypes). Two Bcc strains were more broadly inhibitory, acting against 13 or 24 strains.
Fig. 2.

Inhibition haplotypes of clinical Pa and Bcc strains.

Bacteriocins of clinical Pa and Bcc strains are a source of inhibitory activity

A series of phenotypic assays were employed to assess whether the observed inhibitory activities were due to bacteriocin or bacteriophage production. Cell-free extracts of each producer strain were subjected to filtration (to retain phage-like bacteriocins), protease digestion (to digest protein moieties) and freezing (to fracture phage-like bacteriocins). These assays revealed that 13 % of the Pa strains produced substances that appeared to be protease-sensitive bacteriocins, 11 % produced phage-like bacteriocins, and 63 % produced both (Fig. 3). Finally, 11 % of the Pa strains could not be characterized because of loss of inhibitory activity in the cell-free extract.
Fig. 3.

Inhibition types produced by clinical Pa and Bcc strains.

Surprisingly, all of the Bcc producer strains lost inhibitory activity in their cell-free extracts. This result was further explored by concentrating the extracts 20-fold. One strain (4 %) showed phage-like bacteriocin activity (Fig. 3), none showed only protease-sensitive bacteriocin activity, and 11 % showed both types of activity. One Bcc strain (4 %) produced phage plaques, indicating that the inhibitory activity was due to lytic activity of a bacteriophage. Finally, 50 % could not be characterized because of complete loss of inhibitory activity, even after 20-fold concentration of the extract (Fig. 3).

Clinical strains have the potential to produce multiple bacteriocins

A set of Pa reference strains was employed to identify the source of some or all of the inhibition identified above. These strains are either producers of, or are sensitive to, specific S, R and F pyocins (de Chial ; Ito ; Kageyama ; Kuroda & Kageyama, 1981; Nakayama ; Sano ; Seo & Galloway, 1990; Williams ). To permit an even finer degree of bacteriocin identification, cloned pyocins (S1, S2, S3 and AP41) (Duport ; Sano & Kageyama, 1981; Sano ) were employed as references. There are no corresponding reference strains for Bcc bacteriocins. All strains were assayed for bacteriocin-like inhibitory activity against the Pa reference collection. The bacteriocin phenotypes predicted from these inhibition haplotypes are given in Table 2. Among the 37 Pa producer strains, 76 % inhibited one or more of the reference strains. Strains predicted to possess the most bacteriocins (Pa I: S1, S2, S3, AP41, R2, R4, F2, F3; and Pa II: S1, S2, AP41, R2, R4, F2, F3) were the most common phenotypes encountered in the clinical Pa strains. These two phenotypes inhibited an average of 31 and 23 strains, respectively. Pa II strains, possessing all but the S3 phenotype (PaIIS3−), showed a 42 % decrease in Bcc inhibition in comparison with Pa I. The Pa III (S1, R2, R4, F2) phenotype was found in only one strain; however, it inhibited the greatest number of clinical strains, an average of 44 strains. Pa strains with the Pa IV (S1, R2, R4, F2, F3) and Pa V (S1, S3, AP41, R2, R4, F2, F3) phenotypes inhibited the least number of clinical strains, an average of 6.5 and 9, respectively. Strains with the Pa VI (S1, S2, AP41) phenotype inhibited a mean of 17 clinical strains. Nine Pa producer strains (Pa VII) did not inhibit any of the reference strains, and had the lowest level of inhibition, with an average of 2.4 clinical strains inhibited. Among the 19 Bcc producer strains, only three (16 %) inhibited any of the Pa reference strains. These three strains possessed the Bcc I (S1, S2, AP41, F3), Bcc II (F3) and Bcc III (R2, F2) phenotypes (Table 2). Sixteen Bcc producer strains (Bcc IV) did not inhibit any of the reference strains, and they inhibited an average of 5.8 clinical strains.
Table 2.

Bacteriocin phenotypes of clinical Pa and Bcc strains

Producer speciesPhenotype designationBacteriocin phenotype*No. of strainsMean no. of Pa strains inhibitedMean no. of Bcc strains inhibitedTotal no. of strains inhibited
PaPa IS1, S2, S3, AP41, R2, R4, F2, F310191231
Pa IIS1, S2, AP41, R2, R4, F2, F31216723
Pa IIIS1, R2, R4, F21182644
Pa IVS1, R2, R4, F2, F325.516.5
Pa VS1, S3, AP41, R2, R4, F2, F31639
Pa VIS1, S2, AP4128.58.517
Pa VII91.80.62.4
BccBcc IS1, S2, AP41, F316410
Bcc IIF31426
Bcc IIIR2, F21123
Bcc IV162.835.8

*S-type pyocins: S1, S2, S3 and AP41; RF-type pyocins: R2, R4, F2 and F3.

Clinical strains show sensitivity to multiple bacteriocins

The clinical strains were exposed to cloned S pyocins (Duport ; Sano & Kageyama, 1981; Sano ), and 89 % were sensitive (Table 3). Sixty-two per cent of these strains were sensitive to a single pyocin, and 38 % were sensitive to multiple pyocins. Finally, none of the Bcc strains were sensitive to the cloned S pyocins (Table 3).
Table 3.

S-pyocin sensitivity of clinical Pa and Bcc strains

Cloned S pyocins were used for these assays. None of the 28 Bcc strains were sensitive to the cloned S pyocins.

Pyocin-sensitivity phenotype*No. of sensitive Pa strains (n=38)
S13
S20
S313
AP415
S1, S26
S1, S30
S1, AP411
S2, S30
S2, AP410
S3, AP413
S1, S2, AP411
S1, S3, AP412
S2, S3, AP410
S1, S2, S3, AP410
Total sensitivity34 (89 %)

*Phenotypes are according to sensitivity to S-pyocin producing clones; e.g. S1: only S1 sensitivity; S1, S2: S1 and S2 sensitivity.

Source of the intra- and interspecific inhibitory activity of clinical strains

Based on inhibition haplotypes, 28 Pa strains were predicted to produce combinations of S- and RF-type pyocins, which kill within and between species (Fig. 4). Two strains inhibited intraspecifically with S pyocins, 24 with RF-type pyocins, and 25 with S and/or RF pyocins. Twenty-five strains acted interspecifically, all with RF-type pyocins. Finally, 14 produced novel bacteriocins that acted intraspecifically (50 %) or interspecifically (50 %).
Fig. 4.

Source of the intra- and interspecific inhibitory activity of clinical Pa and Bcc strains.

In contrast, the majority of Bcc strains produced novel bacteriocin-like activity (Fig. 4). Three strains produced RF-like factors, and 12 produced novel bacteriocins, all of which acted intraspecifically. Further, three produced RF-like pyocins, one produced S- and/or RF-like pyocins, and the remainder (13) produced novel inhibitors that inhibited interspecifically (Fig. 4).

Molecular screening: clinical Pa strains possess multiple pyocin genes

PCR primers specific to S-type (S1, S2, S3 and AP41) (Duport ; Sano & Kageyama, 1981; Sano ) and RF-type (PRF10, PRF31 and PRF38) pyocin genes were employed to screen for the presence of known pyocin-encoding genes (Supplementary Table S1). All Pa strains were amplification positive for one or more of the pyocin genes (Fig. 5). Ninety-five per cent of the strains possessed one or more S-pyocin genes: 71 % amplified from the S1 gene, 71 % from the S2 gene, 42 % from the S3 gene, and 63 % from the AP41 gene. A further 16 % amplified from the pyocin AP41 immunity gene, but not the corresponding toxin gene. Ninety-five per cent of the strains were amplification positive for one or more RF-pyocin genes; 68 % for PRF10, 45 % for PRF31, and 24 % for PRF38 (Fig. 5). Finally, none of the Bcc strains were amplification positive for any of the pyocin genes (data not shown).
Fig. 5.

Pyocin gene distribution in the genomes of clinical Pa strains.

DISCUSSION

Individuals with CF face a lifelong battle with chronic bacterial lung infections (Govan & Deretic, 1996). Pa is the most prevalent species in the CF lung, and is associated with high mortality (Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, 2007; Emerson ). CF patients are first colonized with non-mucoid Pa in childhood, which is replaced by mucoid variants in adulthood (Gibson ). Mucoid Pa form biofilms that are virtually impossible to eradicate, even with aggressive antibiotic therapy (Hentzer ). Secondary bacterial infections, such as with B. cepacia, although less common, are of particular concern because they are often associated with faster decline in lung function, and may result in cepacia syndrome, which is a rapidly progressing and fatal pneumonia (Huang ; Lambiase ). What is remarkable about these secondary infections is that they require a strain that is able to compete with, and perhaps even displace, the established Pseudomonas strain (Lambiase ; Ledson , 2002; McManus ). Further, the time interval between exposure and invasion may be as short as days to weeks (Ledson ; Tablan ; Whiteford ). This ability of Bcc strains to compete with, or even displace, the resident Pa strains stands in sharp contrast with our seeming inability to significantly impact long-standing Pseudomonas lung infections with even the most aggressive use of broad-spectrum antibiotics. Bacteriocins, narrow-spectrum antimicrobials, are recognized as one of the most common mechanisms by which bacteria mediate population- and community-level interactions (Kerr ; Riley & Gordon, 1999; Riley & Wertz, 2002b). It is already well known that Pa is one of the most prolific bacteriocin producers. Indeed, studies indicate that nearly all clinical, and only slightly fewer environmental (∼70 %) Pa strains produce typable pyocins (Bouhaddioui ; Farmer & Herman, 1969; Jones ; Zabransky & Day, 1969). Typing of a much smaller number of B. cepacia (previously known as P. cepacia) strains from clinical sources has revealed far fewer producers (30 %) of putative bacteriocin-like toxins (labelled cepaciacins) (Govan & Harris, 1985). What little we know about cepaciacins suggests that some may be similar to the phage-tail-like R pyocins (Govan & Harris, 1985). In an attempt to understand how Pa and Bcc strains interact in the CF lung, isolates of both species were surveyed for the production of bacteriocins. Not surprisingly, both species were found to be prolific producers of bacteriocin-like toxins, with 97 % of Pa strains and 68 % of Bcc strains capable of inhibition (Table 1). For Pa, most of the inhibitory activity detected (76 %) was due to S and RF pyocins (Table 2). In contrast, for Bcc, most of the inhibition could not be characterized (Table 2), and only a small fraction (16 %) was attributable to bacteriocin-like proteins (Table 2). More surprisingly, the levels of between-species inhibition were high: 81 % of the Pa producer strains and 57 % of the Bcc producers inhibited the other species (Table 1). Previous studies of Gram-negative bacteriocins have described bacteriocins as narrow-spectrum toxins, referring to the observation that they are active against members of the same species, and generally display restricted levels of inhibition outside of the producing species (Riley & Wertz, 2002a, b). For example, a sample of 122 closely related Klebsiella species possess only 20 % interspecific inhibitory activity (Riley ). The high levels of interspecific inhibition detected for Pa and Bcc may reflect the competitive interactions that occur between these species in the CF lung. Prior studies have suggested that these two species actively inhibit each other's growth. McKenney revealed that the addition of cell-free Pa exo-products to the growth medium used to cultivate Bcc enhances the production of siderophores, lipases and proteases. Further, Weaver & Kolter (2004) examined the effect of cell-free extracts of Bcc on Pa gene expression, and revealed that most of the upregulated genes of Pa are normally induced under iron-limited conditions. The authors concluded that iron-limited conditions might be created in these pairwise growth conditions due to the iron chelator ornibactin produced by Bcc. Indeed, iron siderophores and S pyocins (S2, S3) share the same receptors (type I and II ferripyoverdines, respectively) (Denayer ). Thus, S pyocins are better absorbed by sensitive strains under iron-limited conditions (Ohkawa ). Given these facts, Bcc colonization in the CF lung may induce intraspecific Pa inhibitory activity. Clearly, the effect of iron on the interspecific inhibitory activity of pyocins and cepaciacins warrants further investigation. For these purposes, identification of cepaciacins and the corresponding cell surface receptors is required. The majority of Pa interspecific inhibitory activity was due to RF-type pyocins (Fig. 4). In fact, R pyocins inhibit a variety of Gram-negative bacteria (Blackwell ; Filiatrault ). This study provides what is thought to be the first substantial report of the potential role of RF pyocins in inhibition of clinical Bcc strains. The remainder of the Pa interspecific inhibitory activity was due to novel virulence factors. The majority of Bcc interspecific inhibitory activity was due to novel factors (Fig. 4), which requires further investigation. Another intriguing observation reported here is that most isolates of Pa from the CF lung produced multiple bacteriocins (Table 2, Fig. 5). In fact, the most frequently encountered bacteriocin types (Pa I–II) included essentially all characterized S and RF pyocins. The observation of such high levels of Pa bacteriocin diversity is good news for those interested in the potential use of bacteriocins as narrow-spectrum antimicrobials. Although the bacteriocin-like production patterns were complex, they offered a wide range of inhibition specificities. Given the lack of effective antibiotic therapies for adult patients with CF, it is intriguing that the strains tested here were inhibited by a diversity of Pa and Bcc bacteriocins (real and putative). Bacteriocins may be an effective alternative for mediating some of these long-standing infections. One requirement would be the production of bacteriocin-sensitivity profiles to permit identification of the appropriate therapeutic bacteriocins. Of course, such treatment will select for bacteriocin resistance (e.g. protease sensitivity, LPS receptor modification) (Loutet ). However, given the plethora of potential bacteriocins, cocktails of toxins could be created that would result in far lower rates of resistance evolution (M. A. Riley, unpublished observations). Bacteriocins are now frequently being considered for such therapeutic use (Gillor ). For example, they are employed as antibiotics for treatment of mastitis in dairy cows (Diez-Gonzalez, 2007), and to inhibit growth of pathogenic E. coli in newborn piglets and foals (Gillor ). The most striking difference between the inhibitory patterns of the Pa and Bcc strains involved their breadth of activity. Almost all Pa isolates were able to inhibit a wide range of Pa and Bcc strains (Fig. 2). In contrast, Bcc strains, on average, inhibited a much more limited number of strains. Further, the Bcc inhibitory substances appeared to be phenotypically unique. For example, standard bacteriocin assays are highly successful when applied to most species of Gram-negative bacteria (Pugsley & Oudega, 1987; Riley ), yet these methods were far less effective when applied to Bcc strains. Most intriguing was the complete loss of all inhibitory activity in Bcc cell-free extracts. Even with 20-fold concentrations, it was not possible to recover inhibitory activity, which had been clearly and repeatedly observed on plate-based screens. In fact, the most successful protocols for obtaining Bcc inhibition involved concomitant growth of both the producer and sensitive strains on a solid surface. Perhaps inhibition production requires severely restricted resources and/or high levels of competition. An alternative explanation could be the presence of unstable phage particles in lysates from producer strains (Summer ). Although we were unable to propagate bacteriophage activity, one Bcc strain was clearly shown to inhibit via phage (Fig. 3). Recent studies on the bacteriophages of Bcc have revealed that bacteriophages are able to inhibit different Bcc genomovars. However, these phages have a relatively limited ability to inhibit Pa strains (Langley ; Seed & Dennis, 2005). Clearly, this intriguing loss of inhibitory activity for the majority of Bcc producers requires further investigation. Pa strains are usually the persistent resident bacterial species in the adult CF lung. A recent study revealed a clear example of how R pyocins may play a role in mediating intraspecific competition and succession of Pa strains (Heo ). Further, pyocin production has been shown to impact intraspecific interactions in mixed biofilms (Waite & Curtis, 2009). It is rare for a Bcc strain to be able to invade these established populations. In the relatively infrequent cases of co-existence (i.e. the paired strains in this study), the Pa and Bcc strains are usually unable to inhibit each other. Only two Pa strains (via RF pyocins) and none of the Bcc strains were able to inhibit their pair mates (Table 1, Fig. 4). This observation may simply reflect the outcome of prior competition: if one or the other was able to inhibit the invader or resident strain, they would not be found to coexist. Clearly most unpaired Pa and Bcc strains were able to inhibit each other (75 % versus 62 %, respectively), even while the pair mates could not (Table 1). Future efforts will focus on two significant features of bacteriocin biology revealed by this study. First, it is surprising that there have been no molecular investigations of cepaciacins. Given the importance of Bcc in human disease, the presence of these potent toxins should have generated prior interest. In contrast, numerous studies have focused on the characterization of pyocins. Preliminary studies designed to provide a molecular characterization of cepaciacins identified here caution us that this may not be a simple exercise. To date, our efforts have not resulted in a single cloned cepaciacin, or even a bacteriocin-like inhibitory function, from these Bcc strains. Second, the suggestion that bacteriocin-like inhibition may play a role in mediating strain dynamics in the CF lung serves as inspiration for future studies designed to characterize the potential of these narrow-spectrum antimicrobials to serve as future CF therapeutics. Clearly, such toxins are able to mediate interspecific interactions of Pa and Bcc. Whether we can employ these toxins for our own purposes in a clinical setting remains to be seen.
  53 in total

Review 1.  Genetically engineered bacteriocins and their potential as the next generation of antimicrobials.

Authors:  Osnat Gillor; Lisa M Nigro; Margaret A Riley
Journal:  Curr Pharm Des       Date:  2005       Impact factor: 3.116

2.  Comparative study of F-type pyocins of Pseudomonas aeruginosa.

Authors:  K Kuroda; M Kageyama
Journal:  J Biochem       Date:  1981-06       Impact factor: 3.387

Review 3.  The pyocins of Pseudomonas aeruginosa.

Authors:  Yvon Michel-Briand; Christine Baysse
Journal:  Biochimie       Date:  2002 May-Jun       Impact factor: 4.079

Review 4.  Bacteriocin diversity: ecological and evolutionary perspectives.

Authors:  Margaret A Riley; John E Wertz
Journal:  Biochimie       Date:  2002 May-Jun       Impact factor: 4.079

5.  Genetic analysis of a pyocin-resistant lipooligosaccharide (LOS) mutant of Haemophilus ducreyi: restoration of full-length LOS restores pyocin sensitivity.

Authors:  M J Filiatrault; R S Munson; A A Campagnari
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  2001-10       Impact factor: 3.490

6.  Alginate overproduction affects Pseudomonas aeruginosa biofilm structure and function.

Authors:  M Hentzer; G M Teitzel; G J Balzer; A Heydorn; S Molin; M Givskov; M R Parsek
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  2001-09       Impact factor: 3.490

7.  Pyocine typing of clinical strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa.

Authors:  R J Zabransky; F E Day
Journal:  Appl Microbiol       Date:  1969-02

8.  Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1 pyocin production affects population dynamics within mixed-culture biofilms.

Authors:  Richard D Waite; Michael A Curtis
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  2008-12-05       Impact factor: 3.490

9.  Pseudomonas cepacia colonization in patients with cystic fibrosis: risk factors and clinical outcome.

Authors:  O C Tablan; T L Chorba; D V Schidlow; J W White; K A Hardy; P H Gilligan; W M Morgan; L A Carson; W J Martone; J M Jason
Journal:  J Pediatr       Date:  1985-09       Impact factor: 4.406

10.  Genetic determinant of pyocin R2 in Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO. I. Localization of the pyocin R2 gene cluster between the trpCD and trpE genes.

Authors:  T Shinomiya; S Shiga; M Kageyama
Journal:  Mol Gen Genet       Date:  1983
View more
  32 in total

Review 1.  Within-host competitive interactions as a mechanism for the maintenance of parasite diversity.

Authors:  Farrah Bashey
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2015-08-19       Impact factor: 6.237

2.  Bacteriocin-mediated competition in cystic fibrosis lung infections.

Authors:  Melanie Ghoul; Stuart A West; Helle Krogh Johansen; Søren Molin; Odile B Harrison; Martin C J Maiden; Lars Jelsbak; John B Bruce; Ashleigh S Griffin
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2015-09-07       Impact factor: 5.349

3.  Interference Competition Among Household Strains of Pseudomonas.

Authors:  Michael T France; Susanna K Remold
Journal:  Microb Ecol       Date:  2015-08-16       Impact factor: 4.552

4.  Localization of Burkholderia cepacia complex bacteria in cystic fibrosis lungs and interactions with Pseudomonas aeruginosa in hypoxic mucus.

Authors:  Ute Schwab; Lubna H Abdullah; Olivia S Perlmutt; Daniel Albert; C William Davis; Roland R Arnold; James R Yankaskas; Peter Gilligan; Heiner Neubauer; Scott H Randell; Richard C Boucher
Journal:  Infect Immun       Date:  2014-08-25       Impact factor: 3.441

Review 5.  Mechanisms and Targeted Therapies for Pseudomonas aeruginosa Lung Infection.

Authors:  Colleen S Curran; Thomas Bolig; Parizad Torabi-Parizi
Journal:  Am J Respir Crit Care Med       Date:  2018-03-15       Impact factor: 21.405

6.  Biological cost of pyocin production during the SOS response in Pseudomonas aeruginosa.

Authors:  Jon Penterman; Pradeep K Singh; Graham C Walker
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  2014-07-14       Impact factor: 3.490

7.  Characterization of bacterial communities in venous insufficiency wounds by use of conventional culture and molecular diagnostic methods.

Authors:  Marie S Tuttle; Eliot Mostow; Pranab Mukherjee; Fen Z Hu; Rachael Melton-Kreft; Garth D Ehrlich; Scot E Dowd; Mahmoud A Ghannoum
Journal:  J Clin Microbiol       Date:  2011-08-31       Impact factor: 5.948

8.  Predominant pathogen competition and core microbiota divergence in chronic airway infection.

Authors:  Geraint B Rogers; Christopher J van der Gast; David J Serisier
Journal:  ISME J       Date:  2014-07-18       Impact factor: 10.302

9.  Microbial Interactions in the Cystic Fibrosis Airway.

Authors:  Ann M Granchelli; Frederick R Adler; Ruth H Keogh; Christiana Kartsonaki; David R Cox; Theodore G Liou
Journal:  J Clin Microbiol       Date:  2018-07-26       Impact factor: 5.948

10.  PrtR homeostasis contributes to Pseudomonas aeruginosa pathogenesis and resistance against ciprofloxacin.

Authors:  Ziyu Sun; Jing Shi; Chang Liu; Yongxin Jin; Kewei Li; Ronghao Chen; Shouguang Jin; Weihui Wu
Journal:  Infect Immun       Date:  2014-02-03       Impact factor: 3.441

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.