生物膜
菌毛
火山盐蕨
木桩
生物
分拣酶
菌毛蛋白
微生物学
群体感应
突变体
细菌
细胞生物学
质粒
生物物理学
古细菌
大肠杆菌
生物化学
遗传学
DNA
基因
细菌蛋白
作者
Pascal D. Odermatt,Phillip Nußbaum,Sourabh Monnappa,Lorenzo Talà,Zhengqun Li,Shamphavi Sivabalasarma,Sonja‐Verena Albers,Alexandre Persat
出处
期刊:Current Biology
[Elsevier]
日期:2023-07-19
卷期号:33 (15): 3265-3271.e4
被引量:5
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.cub.2023.06.055
摘要
Multicellular communities of contiguous cells attached to solid surfaces called biofilms represent a common microbial strategy to improve resilience in adverse environments.1,2,3 While bacterial biofilms have been under intense investigation, whether archaeal biofilms follow similar assembly rules remains unknown.4,5Haloferax volcanii is an extremely halophilic euryarchaeon that commonly colonizes salt crust surfaces. H. volcanii produces long and thin appendages called type IV pili (T4Ps). These play a role in surface attachment and biofilm formation in both archaea and bacteria. In this study, we employed biophysical experiments to identify the function of T4Ps in H. volcanii biofilm morphogenesis. H. volcanii expresses not one but six types of major pilin subunits that are predicted to compose T4Ps. Non-invasive imaging of T4Ps in live cells using interferometric scattering (iSCAT) microscopy reveals that piliation varies across mutants expressing single major pilin isoforms. T4Ps are necessary to secure attachment of single cells to surfaces, and the adhesive strength of pilin mutants correlates with their level of piliation. In flow, H. volcanii forms clonal biofilms that extend in three dimensions. Notably, the expression of PilA2, a single pilin isoform, is sufficient to maintain levels of piliation, surface attachment, and biofilm formation that are indistinguishable from the wild type. Furthermore, we discovered that fluid flow stabilizes biofilm integrity; as in the absence of flow, biofilms tend to lose cohesion and disperse in a density-dependent manner. Overall, our results demonstrate that T4P-surface and possibly T4P-T4P interactions promote biofilm formation and integrity and that flow is a key factor regulating archaeal biofilm formation.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI