| Literature DB >> 30675369 |
Yingying Cheng1, Joey Kuok Hoong Yam1, Zhao Cai1, Yichen Ding1, Lian-Hui Zhang2, Yinyue Deng3, Liang Yang1,4,5.
Abstract
Pseudomonas aeruginosa tends to be among the dominant species in multi-species bacterial consortia in diverse environments. To understand P. aeruginosa's physiology and interactions with co-existing bacterial species in different conditions, we established physiologically reproducible 18 species communities, and found that P. aeruginosa dominated in mixed-species biofilm communities but not in planktonic communities. P. aeruginosa's H1 type VI secretion system was highly induced in mixed-species biofilm consortia, compared with its monospecies biofilm, which was further demonstrated to play a key role in P. aeruginosa's enhanced fitness over other bacterial species. In addition, the type IV pili and Psl exopolysaccharide were required for P. aeruginosa to compete with other bacterial species in the biofilm community. Our study showed that the physiology of P. aeruginosa is strongly affected by interspecies interactions, and both biofilm determinants and type VI secretion system contribute to higher P. aeruginosa's fitness over other species in complex biofilm communities.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30675369 PMCID: PMC6334633 DOI: 10.1038/s41522-018-0076-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Biofilms Microbiomes ISSN: 2055-5008 Impact factor: 7.290
Fig. 1Metatranscriptomics comparison between mixed-species planktonic community and biofilm community modes. a Functional classification by SEED. The comparison was based on read counts with a minimum quality score cutoff of 50 and a top percentage of 25. Different colours corresponding to different functions are ranked in the right column. b Clustering by PCoA based on SEED classification using Bray–Curtis dissimilarity
nCounter® 16S rRNA array feasibility detection
| Reads percentage (%) | RNA percentage (%) | Fold (normalisation factor) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | II | III | I | II | III | ||
|
| 3.13 | 6.52 | 1.09 | 1.95 | 3.71 | 1.92 | 1.31 ± 0.65 |
|
| 0.18 | 0.07 | 0.06 | 0.11 | 0.10 | 0.10 | 1.00 ± 0.61 |
|
| 3.88 | 0.54 | 1.01 | 1.93 | 1.76 | 9.55 | 0.81 ± 1.04 |
|
| 16.94 | 3.43 | 3.05 | 21.48 | 9.77 | 10.60 | 0.48 ± 0.27 |
|
| 7.56 | 6.36 | 0.10 | 11.45 | 20.84 | - | 0.48 ± 0.25 |
|
| 2.10 | 2.50 | 0.97 | 1.88 | 6.83 | 3.71 | 0.58 ± 0.47 |
|
| 0.87 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 0.41 | - | - | 2.10 ± - |
|
| 6.90 | 0.29 | 0.11 | 40.48 | - | - | 0.17 ± - |
|
| 0.01 | 0.02 | 0.03 | - | - | - | - |
|
| 23.28 | 47.95 | 72.63 | 6.53 | 29.69 | 57.95 | 2.14 ± 1.24 |
|
| 0.44 | 0.92 | 1.46 | - | - | - | - |
|
| 2.22 | 4.98 | 6.13 | - | - | - | - |
|
| 0.01 | 0.01 | 0.01 | - | - | - | - |
|
| 0.28 | 0.35 | 0.24 | 1.24 | 2.25 | 2.44 | 0.16 ± 0.06 |
|
| 13.24 | 5.18 | 2.09 | 3.73 | 3.40 | 1.84 | 2.07 ± 1.30 |
|
| 0.47 | 0.01 | 0.00 | 0.59 | - | - | 0.79 ± - |
|
| 2.67 | 10.34 | 0.91 | 0.58 | 4.25 | 0.58 | 2.86 ± 1.54 |
|
| 15.82 | 10.52 | 10.10 | 7.65 | 17.40 | 11.32 | 1.19 ± 0.78 |
Three different training groups were named 'I', 'II' and 'III' in this table. Numbers indicate the ratio of one species in the mixed group with unit %. 'Reads percentage' is nCounter® 16 S rRNA array analysis result; 'RNA percentage' shows proportion of single species total RNA in mixture. 'Fold' calculated from average values of ratio in Reads percentage to it in RNA percentage. Dash in RNA percentage indicates no RNA was mixed into the random mixture sample, i.e., some average fold values and standard deviations could not been calculated, also labelled with a dash
Fig. 2Normalised population dynamics of each species in the mixed-species microbial communities. The inocula is the mixture of all species mixed at equal OD600 amounts at the starting point for both planktonic and biofilm incubation. Grey bars indicate the proportion of each species in the 24-hour planktonic microbial community. The black bars show the population dynamics of each species in the 5-day biofilm microbial community. Dots show three biological replicates for standard deviation
Fig. 3Proportions of P. aeruginosa in the mixed-species microbial communities. a Circular dots indicate three biological replicates of P. aeruginosa normalised proportions in both the planktonic and biofilm communities as measured by NanoString nCounter® 16 S rRNA array; the square dots show three biological replicates of P. aeruginosa proportions in mixed-species microbial communities as calculated by fluorescence-based proportion test. The lines show the average values and standard deviation. Comparison was performed by t test with p < 0.05. b Confocal images of the resuspended 24 h-incubated mixed-species planktonic microbial community containing GFP-tagged P. aeruginosa. c Confocal images of the resuspended 5-day mixed-species biofilm community containing GFP-tagged P. aeruginosa. Green cells show the GFP-tagged P. aeruginosa, red cells show all of other cells stained with Syto62. Scale bar represents 10 µm
Fig. 4Transcriptomic comparison of P. aeruginosa between monospecies biofilm cells and the mixed-species biofilm community. a A heat map representing P. aeruginosa genes expression level up- or downregulated more than twofold in the mixed-species biofilm compared with the monospecies biofilm. The Z score shows the standardisation of each gene expression level between the two different groups. Detailed information on this regulation is listed in Supplementary Table 3. b A principal component analysis (PCA) shows that the expression profiles of P. aeruginosa between the monospecies biofilm and in the mixed-species biofilm are different. Each dot indicates one biological replicate with different colours representing the sample source
Some of the P. aeruginosa regulated genes in mixed-species biofilm community
| Locus tag | Gene name | Fold change | Product | Pathway | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PA0070 |
| 2.66 | 1.20E-09 | TagQ1 | H1-T6SS |
| PA0074 |
| 2.06 | 1.77E-04 | Serine/threonine protein kinase PpkA | H1-T6SS |
| PA0077 |
| 2.43 | 2.68E-07 | IcmF1 | H1-T6SS |
| PA0079 |
| 2.06 | 4.11E-04 | TssK1 | H1-T6SS |
| PA0082 |
| 2.27 | 5.28E-04 | TssA1 | H1-T6SS |
| PA0083 |
| 5.34 | 1.81E-23 | TssB1 | H1-T6SS |
| PA0084 |
| 5.24 | 1.51E-31 | TssC1 | H1-T6SS |
| PA0085 |
| 4.82 | 1.20E-52 | Hcp1 | H1-T6SS |
| PA0086 |
| 2.43 | 4.84E-04 | TagJ1 | H1-T6SS |
| PA0088 |
| 2.85 | 6.79E-07 | TssF1 | H1-T6SS |
| PA0089 |
| 2.62 | 8.73E-04 | TssG1 | H1-T6SS |
| PA0090 |
| 4.96 | 1.52E-21 | ClpV1 | H1-T6SS |
| PA0091 |
| 3.53 | 1.57E-12 | VgrG1 | H1-T6SS |
| PA0092 |
| 2.4 | 8.41E-04 | Tsi6 | H1-T6SS |
| PA0097 | PA0097 | 2.48 | 7.21E-05 | Hypothetical protein | |
| PA0099 | PA0099 | 3.61 | 2.72E-15 | Type VI effector protein | |
| PA0100 | PA0100 | 2.86 | 8.24E-15 | Hypothetical protein | |
| PA0260 |
| 2.62 | 2.67E-17 | Tle3 | H2-T6SS |
| PA0261 | PA0261 | 2.34 | 2.26E-05 | Hypothetical protein | |
| PA0263 |
| 4.23 | 1.31E-18 | Secreted protein Hcp | |
| PA1509 |
| 2.12 | 1.83E-07 | Immunity protein TplEi | |
| PA1510 |
| 2.8 | 1.54E-12 | Type 6 PGAP1-like effector, TplE | H2-T6SS |
| PA1512 |
| 3.52 | 1.95E-14 | Secreted protein Hcp | |
| PA1657 |
| 3.06 | 7.18E-18 | TssB2 | H2-T6SS |
| PA1658 |
| 2.65 | 1.06E-16 | TssC2 | H2-T6SS |
| PA1659 |
| 2.18 | 8.21E-05 | TssE2 | H2-T6SS |
| PA1661 |
| 2.35 | 1.57E-06 | TssH2 | H2-T6SS |
| PA1662 |
| 2.36 | 1.79E-10 | clpV2 | H2-T6SS |
| PA1663 |
| 2.61 | 5.56E-08 | Sfa2 | H2-T6SS |
| PA1665 |
| 2.74 | 3.11E-09 | Fha2 | H2-T6SS |
| PA1666 |
| 3.3 | 2.74E-11 | Lip2 | H2-T6SS |
| PA1667 |
| 2.8 | 5.26E-08 | TssJ2 | H2-T6SS |
| PA1668 |
| 2.27 | 1.18E-05 | DotU2 | H2-T6SS |
| PA1669 |
| 3.21 | 1.74E-14 | IcmF2 | H2-T6SS |
| PA1844 |
| 2.86 | 1.62E-03 | Tse1 | H1-T6SS |
| PA1845 |
| 2.81 | 4.93E-04 | Tsi1 | H1-T6SS |
| PA2365 |
| 3.78 | 6.97E-22 | TssB3 | H3-T6SS |
| PA2366 |
| 3.75 | 1.81E-37 | TssC3 | H3-T6SS |
| PA2367 |
| 3.08 | 1.35E-18 | Hcp3 | H3-T6SS |
| PA2369 |
| 2 | 1.03E-04 | TssG3 | H3-T6SS |
| PA2371 |
| 2.11 | 1.07E-08 | ClpV3 | H3-T6SS |
| PA3294 |
| 2.17 | 1.02E-03 | VgrG4a | H2-T6SS |
| PA3484 |
| 2.54 | 6.03E-04 | Tse3 | H1-T6SS |
| PA3479 |
| −2.35 | 4.99E-07 | Rhamnosyltransferase chain A | Quorum sensing |
| PA3478 |
| −2.17 | 8.81E-07 | Rhamnosyltransferase chain B | Quorum sensing |
| PA1871 |
| −2.42 | 1.64E-08 | LasA protease precursor | Quorum sensing |
| PA3724 |
| −2.72 | 3.03E-12 | Elastase LasB | Quorum sensing |
| PA1432 |
| 2.43 | 1.13E-14 | Autoinducer synthesis protein LasI | Quorum sensing |
| PA2587 |
| −2.09 | 3.42E-05 | Probable FAD-dependent monooxygenase | Quorum sensing |
| PA1078 |
| 2.08 | 1.14E-05 | Flagellar basal-body rod protein FlgC | Flagella assembly |
| PA1079 |
| 2.26 | 2.60E-10 | Flagellar basal-body rod modification protein FlgD | Flagella assembly |
| PA3059 |
| 2.44 | 2.40E-03 | PelF | Extracellular polysaccharide biosynthesis |
| PA3058 |
| 2.82 | 1.84E-03 | PelG | Extracellular polysaccharide biosynthesis |
Fig. 5P. aeruginosa population dynamics in the mixed-species biofilm community affected by H1-T6SS and biofilm formation determinants. Each column shows the population dynamics of GFP-tagged P. aeruginosa parental strain PAO1 and the knockout mutants in the mixed-species microbial planktonic (black) and biofilm (grey) communities at different heights with the standard deviation of three biological replicates (dots). The asterisk indicates statistical significance by t test with p < 0.05