Department of Surgery, Texas Tech University Health Sciences, Lubbock, TX, United States.
Department of Physics, Center for Nonlinear Dynamics, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin TX, United States.
Front Cell Infect Microbiol. 2022 Apr 7;12:835754. doi: 10.3389/fcimb.2022.835754. eCollection 2022.
Biofilms are the cause of most chronic bacterial infections. Living within the biofilm matrix, which is made of extracellular substances, including polysaccharides, proteins, eDNA, lipids and other molecules, provides microorganisms protection from antimicrobials and the host immune response. Exopolysaccharides are major structural components of bacterial biofilms and are thought to be vital to numerous aspects of biofilm formation and persistence, including adherence to surfaces, coherence with other biofilm-associated cells, mechanical stability, protection against desiccation, binding of enzymes, and nutrient acquisition and storage, as well as protection against antimicrobials, host immune cells and molecules, and environmental stressors. However, the contribution of specific exopolysaccharide types to the pathogenesis of biofilm infection is not well understood. In this study we examined whether the absence of the two main exopolysaccharides produced by the biofilm former would affect wound infection in a mouse model. Using mutants that do not produce the exopolysaccharides Pel and/or Psl we observed that the severity of wound infections was not grossly affected; both the bacterial load in the wounds and the wound closure rates were unchanged. However, the size and spatial distribution of biofilm aggregates in the wound tissue were significantly different when Pel and Psl were not produced, and the ability of the mutants to survive antibiotic treatment was also impaired. Taken together, our data suggest that while the production of Pel and Psl do not appear to affect pathogenesis in mouse wound infections, they may have an important implication for bacterial persistence
生物膜是大多数慢性细菌感染的原因。生活在生物膜基质内,该基质由细胞外物质组成,包括多糖、蛋白质、eDNA、脂质和其他分子,为微生物提供了对抗生素和宿主免疫反应的保护。胞外多糖是细菌生物膜的主要结构成分,被认为对生物膜形成和持续存在的许多方面至关重要,包括与表面的黏附、与其他生物膜相关细胞的凝聚、机械稳定性、防止干燥、结合酶以及获取和储存营养物质,以及对抗生素、宿主免疫细胞和分子以及环境胁迫的保护。然而,特定胞外多糖类型对生物膜感染发病机制的贡献尚不清楚。在这项研究中,我们研究了生物膜形成者中两种主要胞外多糖缺失是否会影响小鼠模型中的伤口感染。使用不产生 Pel 和/或 Psl 两种主要胞外多糖的 突变体,我们观察到伤口感染的严重程度没有明显受到影响;伤口中的细菌负荷和伤口闭合率都没有改变。然而,当不产生 Pel 和 Psl 时,伤口组织中生物膜聚集体的大小和空间分布有显著差异,并且突变体对抗生素治疗的存活能力也受到损害。总之,我们的数据表明,虽然 Pel 和 Psl 的产生似乎不会影响 在小鼠伤口感染中的发病机制,但它们可能对细菌的持续存在具有重要意义。