Davies Sarah K, Fearn Sarah, Allsopp Luke P, Harrison Freya, Ware Ecaterina, Diggle Stephen P, Filloux Alain, McPhail David S, Bundy Jacob G
Department of Surgery and Cancer, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.
Department of Materials, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.
mSphere. 2017 Jul 19;2(4). doi: 10.1128/mSphere.00211-17. eCollection 2017 Jul-Aug.
Bacterial biofilms are groups of bacteria that exist within a self-produced extracellular matrix, adhering to each other and usually to a surface. They grow on medical equipment and inserts such as catheters and are responsible for many persistent infections throughout the body, as they can have high resistance to many antimicrobials. is an opportunistic pathogen that can cause both acute and chronic infections and is used as a model for research into biofilms. Direct biochemical methods of imaging of molecules in bacterial biofilms are of high value in gaining a better understanding of the fundamental biology of biofilms and biochemical gradients within them. Time of flight-secondary-ion mass spectrometry (TOF-SIMS) is one approach, which combines relatively high spatial resolution and sensitivity and can perform depth profiling analysis. It has been used to analyze bacterial biofilms but has not yet been used to study the distribution of antimicrobials (including antibiotics and the antimicrobial metal gallium) within biofilms. Here we compared two methods of imaging of the interior structure of in biological samples using TOF-SIMS, looking at both antimicrobials and endogenous biochemicals: cryosectioning of tissue samples and depth profiling to give pseudo-three-dimensional (pseudo-3D) images. The sample types included both simple biofilms grown on glass slides and bacteria growing in tissues in an pig lung model. The two techniques for the 3D imaging of biofilms are potentially valuable complementary tools for analyzing bacterial infection. Modern analytical techniques are becoming increasingly important in the life sciences; imaging mass spectrometry offers the opportunity to gain unprecedented amounts of information on the distribution of chemicals in samples-both xenobiotics and endogenous compounds. In particular, simultaneous imaging of antibiotics (and other antimicrobial compounds) and bacterium-derived metabolites in complex biological samples could be very important in the future for helping to understand how sample matrices impact the survival of bacteria under antibiotic challenge. We have shown that an imaging mass spectrometric technique, TOF-SIMS, will be potentially extremely valuable for this kind of research in the future.
细菌生物膜是存在于自身产生的细胞外基质中的细菌群体,它们相互粘附,通常还粘附在一个表面上。它们生长在医疗设备和诸如导管之类的植入物上,并导致全身许多持续性感染,因为它们对许多抗菌药物具有高度抗性。是一种机会致病菌,可引起急性和慢性感染,并被用作生物膜研究的模型。对细菌生物膜中的分子进行直接生化成像方法对于更好地理解生物膜的基础生物学及其内部的生化梯度具有很高的价值。飞行时间二次离子质谱(TOF-SIMS)是一种方法,它结合了相对较高的空间分辨率和灵敏度,并且可以进行深度剖析分析。它已被用于分析细菌生物膜,但尚未用于研究抗菌药物(包括抗生素和抗菌金属镓)在生物膜内的分布。在这里,我们使用TOF-SIMS比较了两种对生物样品中内部结构进行成像的方法,观察抗菌药物和内源性生化物质:组织样品的冷冻切片和深度剖析以给出伪三维(伪3D)图像。样品类型包括在载玻片上生长的简单生物膜以及在猪肺模型组织中生长的细菌。这两种生物膜3D成像技术是分析细菌感染的潜在有价值的互补工具。现代分析技术在生命科学中变得越来越重要;成像质谱提供了获取有关样品中化学物质(包括外源性物质和内源性化合物)分布的前所未有的大量信息的机会。特别是,在复杂生物样品中同时对抗生素(和其他抗菌化合物)和细菌衍生的代谢物进行成像在未来对于帮助理解样品基质如何影响抗生素挑战下细菌的存活可能非常重要。我们已经表明,一种成像质谱技术TOF-SIMS在未来对于这类研究可能极具价值。