| Literature DB >> 33859234 |
Heema K N Vyas1,2, Jason D McArthur2, Martina L Sanderson-Smith3,4.
Abstract
Group A Streptococcus (GAS) causes 700 million infections and accounts for half a million deaths per year. Biofilm formation has been implicated in both pharyngeal and dermal GAS infections. In vitro, plate-based assays have shown that several GAS M-types form biofilms, and multiple GAS virulence factors have been linked to biofilm formation. Although the contributions of these plate-based studies have been valuable, most have failed to mimic the host environment, with many studies utilising abiotic surfaces. GAS is a human specific pathogen, and colonisation and subsequent biofilm formation is likely facilitated by distinct interactions with host tissue surfaces. As such, a host cell-GAS model has been optimised to support and grow GAS biofilms of a variety of GAS M-types. Improvements and adjustments to the crystal violet biofilm biomass assay have also been tailored to reproducibly detect delicate GAS biofilms. We propose 72 h as an optimal growth period for yielding detectable biofilm biomass. GAS biofilms formed are robust and durable, and can be reproducibly assessed via staining/washing intensive assays such as crystal violet with the aid of methanol fixation prior to staining. Lastly, SEM imaging of GAS biofilms formed by this model revealed GAS cocci chains arranged into three-dimensional aggregated structures with EPS matrix material. Taken together, we outline an efficacious GAS biofilm pharyngeal cell model that can support long-term GAS biofilm formation, with biofilms formed closely resembling those seen in vivo.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33859234 PMCID: PMC8050266 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-87377-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Examples of in vitro plate-based models used for the study of GAS biofilm formation.
| Growth substratum | Time | Media conditions | Inoculuma | Purpose of the study | Refs | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Polystyrene | Up to 96 h | C medium, 23 °C | 0.1:10 | Biofilm forming abilities of WT GAS compared to mutants (capsule, | [ | |
| Polystyrene | 24 h | THY − 0.2% yeast supplemented with 0.5% glucose, 37 °C | 1:100 | Microcolony-dependent and -independent biofilm formation, with a focus on the role of GAS capsule | [ | |
| Glass and cellular form of fibronectin (cFn) coated glass | 1 or 24 h | Brain heart infusion (BHI) and THY + 0.2% yeast, 37 °C | Exponential phase GAS | Streptococcal collagen-like protein-1 (Scl1) binding wound associated cFn (with extra domain A) involvement in biofilm formation | [ | |
| Human: fibronectin, fibrinogen, laminin, collagen coated, or uncoated polystyrene | 12 to 120 h | Luria Broth, THY − 0.5% yeast, BHI, or chemically defined medium, 37 °C | 1 × 104 CFU/ml | Effect of coating with human matrix components in potentiating biofilm formation | [ | |
| Investigating quorum sensing signaling peptide SilC in mediating biofilm density and structure | ||||||
| Polylysine coated glass coverslips | 72 h | C medium, 37 °C | 1:10 | Pilli involvement in mature biofilm formation | [ | |
| Pharyngeal: Detroit 562 monolayers | 2 h | THY, 37 °C | 0.6 OD600nm | Pilli involvement in initial adhesion and its role in microcolony development | ||
| Pharyngeal: Detroit 562 monolayers | 72 h | THY, 34 °C | 1:20 | Assessing the role of pharyngeal cell surface glycans in GAS biofilm formation in the context of GAS pharyngitis | [ | |
| Skin: SCC13 monolayers cells | 48 h | THY − 0.5% yeast, 34 °C | 2 × 104 CFU/0.5 mL | Biofilms examined for colonisation, virulence, and genetic diversity | [ |
aInoculums listed as ratios (bacteria: bacterial media), growth phase, or optical density.
GAS strains utilised in this study, their emm-types, and clinical source.
| M-type | Strain | Clinical source | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| M1 | 5448 | Invasive infection: necrotising fasciitis and toxic shock | [ |
| M12 | PRS-8 | Superficial infection: persistent pharyngeal pus/sinusitis | [ |
| M3 | 90254 | Invasive infection | [ |
| M98 | NS88.2 | Invasive infection: blood (bacteraemia) | [ |
| M108 | NS50.1 | Superficial infection: wound | [ |
Figure 1Schematic outlining the process of Detroit 562 pharyngeal cell monolayer formation. Schematic shows collagen coating, seeding with Detroit 562 pharyngeal cells, and finally an example well containing a 3.7% PFA fixed ~ 95% confluent monolayer of Detroit 562 pharyngeal cells. Example monolayer image taken at ×10 objective in an Incucyte® S3 Live-Cell Analysis System.
Figure 2Detroit 562 monolayer development was monitored at both 28 (a,b) and 48 h (c,d). Coating with collagen I (a,c) facilitated Detroit 562 monolayer formation comparatively greater than uncoated wells (b,d). Images were taken at ×10 objective at the Incucyte and representative of 3 biological replicates with 1 technical replicate each. Each well was initially seeded with 2 × 105 Detroit 562 cells/mL.
Figure 3M1 and M12 GAS were assessed for the ability to form biofilm on plastic and Detroit 562 pharyngeal cell monolayers. 48 h biofilms were formed and biofilm biomass ascertained via crystal violet staining. Monolayers with THY (no GAS biofilm) served as media sterility controls and background staining controls, with absorbance values (supplementary data Table 1) subtracted from those of biofilm samples. Data represents mean ± SEM, ** (P ≤ 0.01) and **** (P ≤ 0.0001); n = 3 biological replicates, with 3 technical replicates each.
Figure 4Methanol fixation improves M1 and M12 GAS biofilm biomass detection. 48 h GAS biofilms were formed from planktonic GAS that had initially adhered to the Detroit 562 pharyngeal cell monolayer after 2 h incubation. Biofilm biomass was ascertained via crystal violet staining. Monolayers with THY (no GAS biofilm) served as media sterility controls and background staining controls, with absorbance values subtracted from those of biofilm samples. Data represents mean ± SEM, * (P ≤ 0.05) and ** (P ≤ 0.01); n = 3 biological replicates, with 3 technical replicates each.
Figure 572 h is an optimal period for GAS biofilm formation. M1 and M12 were assessed for GAS biofilm formation at 72 and 96 h. 72 h yielded significantly more biofilm than 96 h. Biofilm biomass was determined via crystal violet staining. Monolayers with THY (no GAS biofilm) served as media sterility controls and background staining controls, with absorbance values subtracted from those of biofilm samples. Data represents mean ± SEM, ** (P ≤ 0.01) and *** (P ≤ 0.001); n = 3 biological replicates, with 3 technical replicates each.
Figure 6Assessing the utility of the optimised methodology on additional GAS M types (M3, 98, and 108). Biofilm biomass was determined via crystal violet staining. Monolayers with THY (no GAS biofilm) served as media sterility controls and background staining controls, with absorbance values subtracted from those of biofilm samples. Data represents mean ± SEM, ** (P ≤ 0.01) and *** (P ≤ 0.001); n = 3 biological replicates, with 3 technical replicates each.
Figure 7Representative 72 h M1 (a,b), M12 (c,d), and M3 (e,f) GAS biofilms visualised by scanning electron microscopy at 500 and ×15,000 magnification. GAS biofilms show chained cocci (white arrows) arranged into three dimensional aggregated structures with EPS (black arrows) upon the Detroit 562 monolayers (smaller white arrows). Detroit 562 monolayers (without biofilm) (g,h) were also imaged at 500 and ×5000 magnification. Images represent 3 biological replicates, with 3 technical each.