| Literature DB >> 26978068 |
Llinos G Harris1, Susan Murray1, Ben Pascoe1,2, James Bray3, Guillaume Meric1, Leonardos Mageiros1, Thomas S Wilkinson1, Rose Jeeves1, Holger Rohde4, Stefan Schwarz5, Herminia de Lencastre6,7, Maria Miragaia6,8, Joana Rolo6,8, Rory Bowden9, Keith A Jolley3, Martin C J Maiden3, Dietrich Mack1,10, Samuel K Sheppard1,2.
Abstract
Bacterial species comprise related genotypes that can display divergent phenotypes with important clinical implications. Staphylococcus epidermidis is a common cause of nosocomial infections and, critical to its pathogenesis, is its ability to adhere and form biofilms on surfaces, thereby moderating the effect of the host's immune response and antibiotics. Commensal S. epidermidis populations are thought to differ from those associated with disease in factors involved in adhesion and biofilm accumulation. We quantified the differences in biofilm formation in 98 S. epidermidis isolates from various sources, and investigated population structure based on ribosomal multilocus typing (rMLST) and the presence/absence of genes involved in adhesion and biofilm formation. All isolates were able to adhere and form biofilms in in vitro growth assays and confocal microscopy allowed classification into 5 biofilm morphotypes based on their thickness, biovolume and roughness. Phylogenetic reconstruction grouped isolates into three separate clades, with the isolates in the main disease associated clade displaying diversity in morphotype. Of the biofilm morphology characteristics, only biofilm thickness had a significant association with clade distribution. The distribution of some known adhesion-associated genes (aap and sesE) among isolates showed a significant association with the species clonal frame. These data challenge the assumption that biofilm-associated genes, such as those on the ica operon, are genetic markers for less invasive S. epidermidis isolates, and suggest that phenotypic characteristics, such as adhesion and biofilm formation, are not fixed by clonal descent but are influenced by the presence of various genes that are mobile among lineages.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26978068 PMCID: PMC4792440 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0151240
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
List of the S. epidermidis isolates used in the study.
| Isolate source | No. isolates | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clinical | Prosthetic joint infections | 38 | 18 |
| Catheter infections | 26 | 19 | |
| Other infections | 6 | 6 | |
| Commensal | Nasal mucosa | 20 | This study |
| Skin surface | 20 | This study | |
| Animal | 7 | 21 | |
Definitions of the biofilm structure patterns described in this study.
| Biofilm structure pattern | Thickness (μm) | Biovolume (μm3 per μm2) | Ra (μm) |
|---|---|---|---|
| dense thick uneven | > 10 | > 10 | 0.04–0.20 |
| dense thick smooth | > 10 | > 10 | < 0.1 |
| patchy thin smooth | < 10 | < 10 | < 0.1 |
| patchy thin rough | < 10 | < 10 | < 0.2 |
| patchy thin uneven | < 10 | < 10 | 0.04–0.20 |
Fig 1Population structure of 117 S. epidermidis isolates constructed from 53 rMLST genes and implemented in CLONALFRAME, with the 3 clades highlighted.
The scale (0.1) represents the number of substitutions per site. Isolates are coloured according to source: PJI (blue); catheter (green); undefined infection (orange); healthy nasal and skin (red); animal (turquoise).
Fig 2Confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) biofilm images from different isolates and agglomerative hierarchical clustering (AHC) dendrogram labelled with biofilm morphotypes.
(A) Example of CLSM images comprising orthogonal view of Z-stacks (left panel), 3D image of the Z-stacks (top right panel), and 3D cross-section of Z-stacks (bottom right panel). Scale of in μm. (B) Each set of images corresponds to a biofilm structure group defined according to CLSM measurements (average thickness and roughness coefficient) (i) dense thick uneven; (ii) patchy thin smooth; (iii) patchy thin uneven; (iv) patchy thin rough; and (v) dense thick smooth. The AHC dendrogram is a multivariate cluster analysis examining the relationship between the biovolume, thickness and Ra measurements for the biofilms formed by each S. epidermidis isolate. The x-axis represents the dissimilarity score of merged clusters.
Fig 3rMLST CLONALFRAME genealogies of clade A, showing COMSTAT results: A) Biovolume: black circle >10 μm3 per μm2; B) Thickness, black circle >10 μm; C) Roughness coefficient (Ra), black circle >0.10 μm; and D) Morphotypes, patchy thin rough (black circle), dense thick smooth (dark grey circle), patchy thin uneven (grey circle), patchy thin smooth (light grey circle), dense thick uneven (pale grey circle). The scale bar (0.1) indicates the genetic distance in coalescent units and represents the number of substitutions per site. Dashed line in image A at 0.3 coalescent units was used to characterise 19 lineages.
Fig 4Graphs showing A) the presence and absence of the previously described adhesion and biofilm associated genes (9–16, 33) in clade A isolates, present (blue), absent (red); and B) percentage genes present in the isolates based on the 5 biofilm morphotypes.
Fig 5rMLST CLONALFRAME genealogies of Clade A showing the presence of specific genes in the isolates: (A) icaADBC, (B) aap, (C) embp, (D) bhp, (E) sdrF, (F) sesC, (G) sesE, (H) sesG, (I) sesH/ sesI. atlE, aae, ebpS and fbe/sdrG were present in all isolates. The scale bar (0.1) indicates the genetic distance in coalescent units.