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Journal of Bacteriology, April 2008, p. 2700-2708, Vol. 190, No. 8
0021-9193/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.01620-07
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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Departments of Laboratory Medicine (Clinical Microbiology),1 Medicine (Infectious Diseases),2 Section of Microbial Pathogenesis, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 065203
Received 4 October 2007/ Accepted 13 November 2007
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Swarming motility generally requires the production of surface wetting material (10). In P. aeruginosa, mono- and di-rhamnolipids, as well as their precursor 3-(3-hydroxyalkanoyloxy)alkanoic acid (HAA), are secreted during swarming (3, 7, 43). HAA and rhamnolipids are synthesized by three enzymes (RhlA, RhlB, and RhlC) that are under control of the N-butyryl homoserine lactone-activated quorum-sensing regulator RhlR. Although HAA is required for P. aeruginosa swarming under many conditions (3, 43), a recent report showed that a rhlAB mutant, which cannot synthesize HAA, still swarms on FAB plates in the presence of succinate or glutamate (38).
The identification of regulatory proteins that control swarming motility in response to environmental cues remains an area of active research. One regulator that has been implicated in swarming motility is the GacS/GacA two-component system. Mutation of the response regulator GacA results in increased swarming motility in P. aeruginosa (31). Spontaneous loss-of-function mutations that map to gacA and gacS have also been described in Pseudomonas fluorescens, where they result in hypermotile bacteria that outcompete the wild type during competitive root colonization assays (24).
GacS and GacA are also implicated in the regulation of biofilm formation, along with two hybrid sensor kinase-response regulators named RetS and LadS (9, 45).
retS bacteria exhibit a hyperbiofilm phenotype, while
ladS,
gacS, or
gacA mutants are defective in biofilm formation (9, 31). It is not known how signals from these three sensor kinases are integrated during bacterial signaling; however, the current model suggests that activity of GacS/GacA and LadS leads to increased levels of the small RNAs RsmZ and RsmY, while activity of RetS results in decreased levels of these small RNAs. RsmZ and RsmY, in turn, are hypothesized to sequester the posttranscriptional regulator RsmA (12). Low levels of free RsmA lead to the expression of genes associated with biofilm formation, including the pel and psl exopolysaccharide synthesis operons.
P. aeruginosa swarming motility and biofilm formation are also regulated by pathways that use cyclic-di-GMP (c-di-GMP) as a second messenger. Two recent papers described a cyclic-di-GMP phosphodiesterase, BifA, and a diguanylate cyclase, SadC, that inversely regulate biofilm formation and swarming motility of P. aeruginosa PA14 by modulating c-di-GMP levels (18, 26). BifA and SadC likely exert some of their effects by altering exopolysaccharide synthesis; indeed, c-di-GMP binding to one of the pel-encoded enzymes, PelD, is required for exopolysaccharide synthesis (19). However, as O'Toole and colleagues demonstrated, additional c-di-GMP-regulated targets also influence swarming motility.
We have observed a novel surface behavior of P. aeruginosa PAO1 that allows bacteria to spread on semisolid surfaces in the absence of both flagella and TFP. This behavior is consistent with the description of "sliding motility" presented by Jorgen Henrichsen in his seminal 1972 review of bacterial surface translocation (11). In this work we demonstrate that sliding motility responds to many of the same regulatory proteins and environmental cues as swarming motility. These include the GacA/GacS and RetS two-component system proteins and the c-di-GMP modulators BifA and SadC.
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TABLE 1. Strains and plasmids
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pilA strain was constructed by allelic exchange. Upstream (PCR amplified with pilA N1 and pilA N2) and downstream (PCR amplified with pilA C1 and pilA C2) (Table 2) regions flanking the pilA gene were cloned in tandem in pEX18 Gmr to make pEX18-
pilA; this plasmid was then mobilized into PAO1 by mating. Exconjugants were initially selected on VBM-gentamicin and then plated to VBM-sucrose (5%) to select for loss of vector backbone sequences, as previously described (6, 36). Candidates were screened by PCR. The
fliC::Tcr and
fliC::Tcr
pilA mutants were made as previously described (6). An unmarked
fliC
pilA strain was constructed by mating
fliC::Tcr
pilA with E. coli S17.1 carrying pEX18-
fliC and selecting for the loss of Tcr. Again, all strains were screened for gene deletion by PCR; in each case, the correct genotype was confirmed by Southern blot analysis. For complementation of
pilA, PCR primers pilA N1 and pilA C2 were used to amplify the full-length pilA gene from PAO1 along with its promoter. This product was cloned into the mini-CTX2 plasmid and integrated into the chromosomal attB site (1). |
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TABLE 2. Primers
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trp1 his3 ura3 leu2:0LexAop-LEU2), and transformants were selected on Ura- dropout medium (Q-Biogene, Irvine, CA) as previously described (37). The pMQ30-
rlhA plasmid was purified from yeast, transformed into electrocompetent E. coli XL-1 Blue, and verified by analytic restriction digests. The pMQ30-
rlhA vector was subsequently mobilized into PAO1 by mating, and candidate
rhlA mutants were selected, screened, and confirmed as described above. Full-length rhlA and gacA genes were amplified with a 1:1 ratio of Pfu Turbo and Taq polymerases using primer pairs rhlA expN with rhlA expC and gacA expN with gacA expC, respectively (Table 2). The PCR products were cloned into pUCP-KS, placing them under control of the constitutively active lac promoter in P. aeruginosa. All constructs were verified by sequencing to confirm that no errors were introduced during PCR amplification and then transformed into electrocompetent PAO1 (4).
Motility assays. Swarming motility was assayed as previously described on 0.5% M8 plates supplemented with 0.2% glucose and 0.05% glutamate (28) or 0.5% plates with FAB medium supplemented with 12 mM of either glutamate, succinate, or glucose (38). Motility was also measured on 0.5% agar PPGAS plates prepared as described above. Single colonies were plated overnight at 30°C and then placed at room temperature for an additional 24 h. Twitching motility was determined by subsurface stab assays through 1.5% LB agar plates. The twitching zone size at the plastic-agar interface was visualized by Coomassie blue staining after overnight incubation at 37°C. Swimming motility was assayed by point inoculation of 0.3% LB agar plates; zone sizes were measured after overnight incubation at 30°C. Motility assays were carried out on three to five replicates and repeated at least three times. The images presented are representative with regard to both the extent of spreading and morphology of motile colonies.
Construction of pMOD-2-<Gmr> and transposon mutagenesis.
A 2.3-kb fragment containing the xylE aacC1 cassette was generated by EcoRI digestion of pX1918G and subcloned into the unique EcoRI site of pMOD-2-<MCS> (Epicentre Biotechnologies, Madison, WI) to generate pMOD-2-<Gmr>. The EZ-Tn5<Gmr> transposon was prepared by digesting pMOD-2-<Gmr> with PshA. A 200-ng aliquot of transposon DNA was incubated with EZ-Tn5 transposase (Epicentre Biotechnologies) in the presence of glycerol to form transposon complexes according to the manufacturer's protocols. Electrocompetent
fliC::Tcr
pilA was prepared and electroporated with one-eighth of the transposon mixture and then incubated for 2 h at 37°C in LB and plated onto LB-gentamicin plates overnight (4). The next day single colonies were picked to 150- by 15-mm 0.5% M8 swarming plates. The parent strain was included on each plate as a positive control. Colonies that displayed altered dispersion were then plated to LB-gentamicin plates for further evaluation.
Inverse PCR was done to map the location of the transposons found to alter bacterial spreading. Chromosomal DNA was prepared using the Wizard kit (Promega, Madison, WI). A 1.5-µg aliquot of chromosomal DNA was digested with either MspI or HinpI for 4 h at 37°C. The enzymes were heat inactivated at 65°C for 25 min. Ten µl of digested chromosomal DNA was ligated with 1 µl T4 ligase (New England BioLabs, Beverly, MA) overnight in a total volume of 400 µl at 4°C. The DNA was precipitated with sodium acetate and ethanol, washed with 70% ethanol, and air dried, and the pellet was resuspended in 100 µl Tris-EDTA buffer. Five µl of this material was used as template in PCRs (total volume, 25 µl). Sequences flanking the transposon ends were amplified with Taq polymerase (94°C for 5 min, 35 cycles of 94°C for 30 s, 60°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 45 s, and then 72°C for 10 min), and PCR products were sequenced using primers Tn for1, Tn for2, Tn rev1, and Tn rev 2 (Table 2).
Rhamnolipid and drop collapse assays. Rhamnolipid was measured via the orcinol method as previously described (20). Filtered supernatants prepared from M8 plus casein or PPGAS cultures grown with aeration at 30°C for 36 to 48 h were used for this assay (n = 3). To confirm that the supernatants contained biologically active surfactant, drop collapse assays were also performed on PPGAS filtered supernatants (above) or on filtered supernatants prepared from LB overnight cultures for fliC pilA rhlA and fliC pilA rhlA pRhlA. Filtered supernatant was serially diluted with sterile water, and 30-µl drops were placed on the lid of a Corning 96-well dish, allowing drop collapse activity to be visualized as described elsewhere (3). Each assay was repeated a minimum of three times.
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FIG. 1. PAO1 motility in strains lacking type IV pili and/or flagella. A) Flagellum-dependent swimming motility on 0.3% LB agar plates. B) TFP-dependent twitching motility at the plastic-1.5% LB agar interface. C) Motility on 0.5% M8 agar plates supplemented with 0.05% glutamate and 0.2% glucose. D) Restoration of pilin expression inhibits motility of fliC pilA bacteria. wt, wild type.
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FIG. 2. Motility organelles are not present on sliding fliC pilA bacteria. TEM of fliC pilA bacteria (A) and isogenic wild-type (wt) bacteria (B) harvested directly from swarming plates and stained with 1.5% uranyl acetate. Bar, 2 µm.
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Rhamnolipids facilitate motility in the absence of TFP and flagella. Motility on swarming plates usually appears to be dependent on the production of rhamnolipid surface wetting agents. We tested whether motility of fliC pilA on swarming plates also required rhamnolipid production. An unmarked in-frame deletion of rhlA, which encodes the protein required for synthesis of the rhamnolipid precursor HAA, was constructed in the fliC pilA background and tested for motility and surfactant production. As seen in Fig. 3B, the triple mutant showed no drop collapse activity; this could be complemented by expressing RhlA from a plasmid. The fliC pilA rhlA strain showed decreased surface spreading compared to its isogenic parent, fliC pilA; motility could be restored, however, by plasmid-encoded RhlA (Fig. 3A and Table 3). These data demonstrate that motility of fliC pilA bacteria on swarming plates is enhanced by HAA and/or rhamnolipid production. This enhancement of flagellum-independent spreading by increased expression of surface wetting agents (i.e., rhamnolipids) is characteristic of sliding motility (11).
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FIG. 3. rhlA positively influences sliding motility. (A) Dispersion of fliC pilA and fliC pilA rhlA bacteria was compared on 0.5% agar M8 plates after overnight incubation at 30°C. The extent of spread is dependent upon RhlA expression. (B) Undiluted supernatants prepared from overnight LB cultures of fliC pilA rhlA and the complemented strain fliC pilA rhlA pRhlA were assayed for drop collapse activity.
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TABLE 3. Colony sizes on swarming plates
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FIG. 4. GacA and RetS influence sliding motility. (A) Transposon insertion mutants of fliC pilA were screened on 0.5% M8 swarming plates for changes in motility. Mutants exhibiting both diminished (a) and increased (b) spreading were obtained; the parental fliC pilA strain was included on each plate as a control (c). Note the appearance of tendril formation in the strain marked b. (B) Sliding motility of fliC pilA gacA and fliC pilA retS mutants was assayed on 0.5% M8 plates after overnight incubation at 30°C. (C) fliC pilA gacA bacteria grown on swarming plates were harvested from the end of a tendril and visualized by TEM. No bacteria had recognizable surface structures; a representative image is shown. (D) Expression of GacA from a plasmid complements the fliC pilA gacA phenotype on 0.5% M8 plates supplemented with carbenicillin (200 µg/ml). Note that tendril formation is eliminated when GacA is reintroduced. The isogenic control strains all carry the empty vector pUCP-KS. wt, wild type.
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fliC pilA retS PAO1 produces rhamnolipid and exhibits drop-collapse activity. As demonstrated above, HAA and/or rhamnolipid production enhances sliding motility of fliC pilA. GacA and GacS activities positively regulate rhamnolipid production (12); however, the effect of retS mutations on rhamnolipid production has not been described. We tested whether gacA or retS mutants showed differences in rhamnolipid production in any of several media, including PPGAS and M8 media supplemented with casein. Extraction and quantification of rhamnolipids using the orincol method demonstrated that all strains showed equivalent rhamnolipid production (data not shown).
The orcinol assay measures rhamnose and does not detect the presence of the rhamnolipid precursor HAA, which also affects swarming motility. HAA was therefore measured indirectly by carrying out drop collapse assays on the same bacterial culture supernatants. Equal amounts of surfactant were present in the supernatants of all strains tested (data not shown), arguing that changes in total HAA and/or rhamnolipid production are unlikely to account for differences in sliding motility observed between fliC pilA, fliC pilA gacA, and fliC pilA retS.
Sliding motility of fliC pilA gacA responds to changes in available carbon and nitrogen sources. P. aeruginosa swarming motility varies with the carbon and glucose sources provided in the swarming plate (17, 38). To determine whether sliding motilities of fliC pilA and fliC pilA gacA showed a similar nutritional dependence, we examined the extent and pattern of dispersion on 0.5% PPGAS plates and on 0.5% FAB plates supplemented with either 12 mM succinate or glutamate. The plates were incubated overnight at 30°C and then placed at room temperature and examined 48 to 72 h later. As seen in Fig. S2 of the supplemental material, both wild-type PAO1 and fliC pilA showed different extents of swarming and sliding, respectively, depending on available carbon and nitrogen sources. fliC pilA gacA spread to a similar extent under all conditions but exhibited distinct morphological patterns on each medium (see Fig. S2 in the supplemental material). We could not induce motility of fliC pilA retS on any swarming medium that we tested; likewise, fliC pilA rhlA bacteria failed to spread on 0.5% FAB plates with glutamate or succinate (see Fig. S2 in the supplemental material).
Overexpression of SadC and BifA alters dispersal of fliC pilA on swarming plates. The diguanylate cyclase SadC and the c-di-GMP phosphodiesterase BifA have recently been shown to regulate swarming motility and biofilm formation in PA14. Overexpression of SadC represses swarming motility (26), while overexpression of BifA increases swarming zone size (18). We tested whether overexpression of these proteins in the fliC pilA background would similarly affect sliding motility. As seen in Fig. 5, SadC expression inhibited sliding, while overexpression of BifA resulted in both increased sliding and the appearance of tendril formation. These results argue that sliding motility, like swarming, is regulated by c-di-GMP levels.
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FIG. 5. BifA and SadC reciprocally regulate sliding motility. Dispersion of fliC pilA bacteria expressing BifA or SadC under control of the inducible PBAD promoter was assayed on 0.5% M8 agar plates supplemented with 0.2% glucose and 0.05% glutamate plates that contained gentamicin and arabinose (0.5%). Plates were incubated overnight at 30°C and then left at room temperature for an additional 48 h. The control strain carries the empty vector pMQ80.
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Although we were initially quite surprised to observe surface spread by fliC pilA bacteria on swarming plates, the behavior of the single and double mutants is consistent with the notion that bacterial translocation of any sort is restricted by cohesive forces and facilitated by both propulsive forces and those that reduce friction between bacterium and substrate. In wild-type PAO1, TFP mediate interactions between bacteria that appear to antagonize the flagellum-dependent movement of bacteria away from each other. Thus, the disappearance in a pilA mutant of the tight tendrils that characterize a wild-type swarming colony is a manifestation of a net decrease in cell-cell interactions. Likewise, the increased motility of a double fliC pilA mutant compared to its fliC counterpart is facilitated by a decrease in the cell-cell interactions that restrict spreading of the piliated fliC strain. The importance of pilin-mediated cell-cell interactions is underscored by comparing the phenotypes of fliC pilA gacA with the same strain now complemented for pilin expression: tendril formation and spreading are strongly repressed in the piliated strain.
The absence of TFP and flagella is not sufficient for sliding motility. A pilA mutant constructed in the aflagellate PA103 background does not spread on swarming plates (data not shown), suggesting that sliding motility requires more than the absence of surface pili. This work provides evidence that rhamnolipids, which are not produced by PA103 (data not shown), are one of the factors that positively regulate sliding motility of fliC pilA bacteria. Nonetheless, a quantitative defect in total rhamnolipid production does not account for the failure of the fliC pilA retS cells to spread. Our assays, however, cannot rule out that changes in the relative amounts of HAA and mono- and di-rhamnolipids produced by the retS and gacA transposon insertion mutants underlie the different patterns and degrees of motility that they exhibit.
Many of the regulators that influence swarming motility also appear to affect production of exopolysaccharide (EPS), at either the transcriptional or posttranscriptional level (9, 18, 26). In agreement with published results, mutation of retS and overexpression of SadC in the fliC pilA background increased Congo Red staining of colonies, consistent with increased EPS production (data not shown). Thus, the increased cohesive forces provided by increased EPS production may inhibit both swarming and sliding motility. However, it is not clear that diminished or absent EPS production alone is sufficient to promote either swarming or sliding motility. Thus, while mutations in the EPS synthetic locus, pel, result in increased swarming of wild-type PA14, the same mutation introduced into a nonswarming
bifA mutant does not rescue swarming motility (18). These observations are consistent with the hypothesis that additional factors that promote swarming or sliding are also under the control of these regulators.
The surface translocation of P. aeruginosa in the absence of recognized motility organelles likely reflects the spread of dividing organisms in an environment where dispersive factors, such as surfactant production, outweigh the cohesive force usually provided by pili. This "spreading by expansion," termed sliding motility by Henrichsen (11), has been recently described in mycobacteria (23) and nonflagellated Bacillus subtilis (8). Acetylated glycopeptidolipids function as surface-active compounds required for spreading of mycobacteria (33, 34), while mutations in a surfactin synthetic locus abolish sliding motility of B. subtilis (15, 16). Nonetheless, we cannot rule out the existence of an as-yet-unrecognized form of motility independent of pili and flagella, as has been described for other organisms, such as Myxococcus xanthus (27, 41), Flavobacterium johnsoniae (2, 21), and Mycoplasma mobile (29). Our ongoing screen of transposon mutants that abolish sliding motility has not yet identified genes encoding novel surface structures or homologs of motility genes found in these other organisms. Continuing identification of transposon insertions that either abolish or enhance sliding motility will provide additional information regarding regulators not only of this unusual surface behavior but also of swarming motility.
This work was supported by the Winchester Fund (Yale New Haven Hospital) and NIH training grant T32 AI07210 postdoctoral fellowship to T.S.M. and grants from the NIH (R01 AI054920), the Catherine and Patrick Weldon Donaghue Medical Research Foundation, and the Burroughs Wellcome Fund to B.K.
Published ahead of print on 7 December 2007. ![]()
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://jb.asm.org/. ![]()
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