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J. Bacteriol. doi:10.1128/JB.00107-07
Copyright (c) 2007, American Society for Microbiology and/or the Listed Authors/Institutions. All Rights Reserved.

Spatial Patterns of DNA Replication, Protein Synthesis and Oxygen Concentration within Bacterial Biofilms Reveal Diverse Physiological States

SURIANI ABDUL RANI, BETSEY PITTS, HALUK BEYENAL, RAAJA ANGATHEVAR VELUCHAMY, ZBIGNIEW LEWANDOWSKI, WILLIAM M. DAVISON, KELLI BUCKINGHAM-MEYER, and PHILIP S. STEWART*

Center for Biofilm Engineering and Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Department of Civil Engineering, Montana State University - Bozeman, Bozeman, Montana 59717-3980

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. Email: phil_s{at}erc.montana.edu.


   Abstract

It has long been suspected that microbial biofilms harbor cells in a variety of activity states, but there have been few direct experimental visualizations of this physiological heterogeneity. Spatial patterns of DNA replication and protein synthetic activity were imaged and quantified in staphylococcal biofilms using immunofluorescent detection of pulse-labeled DNA and also an inducible green fluorescent protein (GFP) construct. Stratified patterns of DNA synthetic and protein synthetic activity were observed in all three biofilm systems to which the techniques were applied. In a colony biofilm system, the dimension of the zone of anabolism at the air interface ranged from 16 to 38 microns, and corresponded with the depth of oxygen penetration measured with a microelectrode. A second zone of activity was observed along the nutrient interface of the biofilm. Much of the biofilm was anabolically inactive. Since dead cells constituted only 10% of the biofilm population, most of the inactive cells in the biofilm were still viable. Collectively these results suggest that staphylococcal biofilms contain cells in at least four distinct states: growing aerobically, growing fermentatively, dead, and dormant. The variety of activity states represented in a biofilm may contribute to the special ecology and tolerance to antimicrobial agents of biofilms.




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