Role of protein acetylation, formation and dispersal of biofilms, and their impact on insects

Bacterial biofilms form on liquid/air and liquid/solid surfaces and consist of cells combined with an extracellular matrix such as exopolysaccharides, extracellular DNA, and glycoproteins. Bacteria have up to a 1000-fold increase of antibiotic resistance in biofilms compared to planktonic cells. Fur...

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Main Author: Ma, Qun
Other Authors: Wood, Thomas K.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2011-05-9304
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-ETD-TAMU-2011-05-93042013-01-08T10:43:26ZRole of protein acetylation, formation and dispersal of biofilms, and their impact on insectsMa, QunBiofilmOmpABdcAdispersalProteus mirabilisacetylationBacterial biofilms form on liquid/air and liquid/solid surfaces and consist of cells combined with an extracellular matrix such as exopolysaccharides, extracellular DNA, and glycoproteins. Bacteria have up to a 1000-fold increase of antibiotic resistance in biofilms compared to planktonic cells. Furthermore, biofilm cells show better tolerance to adverse environmental conditions such as nutrition limitations, temperature changes, pH changes, and non-optimal osmotic conditions. In Escherichia coli, the outer membrane protein OmpA increased biofilm formation on polystyrene, polypropylene, and polyvinyl chloride surfaces while it decreased biofilm formation on glass surfaces. This surface-dependent phenotype was because OmpA inhibits cellulose production by inducing the CpxRA two-component signal transduction pathway, and cellulose inhibits biofilm formation on plastic due to its hydrophilic nature. We discovered, and then engineered, BdcA (formerly YjgI), for biofilm dispersal. We found that in E. coli, BdcA increases motility and extracellular DNA production while it decreases exopolysaccharide production, cell length, and aggregation. We reasoned that the 3, 5-cyclic diguanylic acid (c-di-GMP) levels increase upon deleting bdcA, and showed that BdcA binds c-di-GMP in vitro. In addition, we used protein engineering to evolve BdcA for greater c-di-GMP binding and found that the single amino acid change E50Q causes nearly complete biofilm dispersal. We isolated Proteus mirabilis from the blowfly Lucilia sericata, which swarmed significantly. By motility screening and complementation with putative interkingdom signal molecules that have been shown to attract flies, we found lactic acid, phenol, NaOH, KOH, putrescine, and ammonia restore the swarming motility of seven different swarming deficient mutants. These mutants and putative signal molecules will be further tested for fly attraction and oviposition. Acetylation of lysine residues is conserved in all three kingdoms although its role in bacteria is not clear. We demonstrated that acetylation enables E. coli to withstand environmental stresses. Specifically, the bacteria became more resistant to heat and oxidative stress. Furthermore, we showed that the increase in oxidative stress resistance is due to the induction of catalase gene katG. Hence we demonstrate for the first time a specific physiological role for acetylation in prokaryotes.Wood, Thomas K.2012-07-16T15:56:59Z2012-07-16T20:16:45Z2012-07-16T15:56:59Z2012-07-16T20:16:45Z2011-052012-07-16May 2011thesistextapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2011-05-9304en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Biofilm
OmpA
BdcA
dispersal
Proteus mirabilis
acetylation
spellingShingle Biofilm
OmpA
BdcA
dispersal
Proteus mirabilis
acetylation
Ma, Qun
Role of protein acetylation, formation and dispersal of biofilms, and their impact on insects
description Bacterial biofilms form on liquid/air and liquid/solid surfaces and consist of cells combined with an extracellular matrix such as exopolysaccharides, extracellular DNA, and glycoproteins. Bacteria have up to a 1000-fold increase of antibiotic resistance in biofilms compared to planktonic cells. Furthermore, biofilm cells show better tolerance to adverse environmental conditions such as nutrition limitations, temperature changes, pH changes, and non-optimal osmotic conditions. In Escherichia coli, the outer membrane protein OmpA increased biofilm formation on polystyrene, polypropylene, and polyvinyl chloride surfaces while it decreased biofilm formation on glass surfaces. This surface-dependent phenotype was because OmpA inhibits cellulose production by inducing the CpxRA two-component signal transduction pathway, and cellulose inhibits biofilm formation on plastic due to its hydrophilic nature. We discovered, and then engineered, BdcA (formerly YjgI), for biofilm dispersal. We found that in E. coli, BdcA increases motility and extracellular DNA production while it decreases exopolysaccharide production, cell length, and aggregation. We reasoned that the 3, 5-cyclic diguanylic acid (c-di-GMP) levels increase upon deleting bdcA, and showed that BdcA binds c-di-GMP in vitro. In addition, we used protein engineering to evolve BdcA for greater c-di-GMP binding and found that the single amino acid change E50Q causes nearly complete biofilm dispersal. We isolated Proteus mirabilis from the blowfly Lucilia sericata, which swarmed significantly. By motility screening and complementation with putative interkingdom signal molecules that have been shown to attract flies, we found lactic acid, phenol, NaOH, KOH, putrescine, and ammonia restore the swarming motility of seven different swarming deficient mutants. These mutants and putative signal molecules will be further tested for fly attraction and oviposition. Acetylation of lysine residues is conserved in all three kingdoms although its role in bacteria is not clear. We demonstrated that acetylation enables E. coli to withstand environmental stresses. Specifically, the bacteria became more resistant to heat and oxidative stress. Furthermore, we showed that the increase in oxidative stress resistance is due to the induction of catalase gene katG. Hence we demonstrate for the first time a specific physiological role for acetylation in prokaryotes.
author2 Wood, Thomas K.
author_facet Wood, Thomas K.
Ma, Qun
author Ma, Qun
author_sort Ma, Qun
title Role of protein acetylation, formation and dispersal of biofilms, and their impact on insects
title_short Role of protein acetylation, formation and dispersal of biofilms, and their impact on insects
title_full Role of protein acetylation, formation and dispersal of biofilms, and their impact on insects
title_fullStr Role of protein acetylation, formation and dispersal of biofilms, and their impact on insects
title_full_unstemmed Role of protein acetylation, formation and dispersal of biofilms, and their impact on insects
title_sort role of protein acetylation, formation and dispersal of biofilms, and their impact on insects
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2011-05-9304
work_keys_str_mv AT maqun roleofproteinacetylationformationanddispersalofbiofilmsandtheirimpactoninsects
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