Centre to Impact AMR, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, Australia.
Infection Program, Biomedicine Discovery Institute and Department of Microbiology, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, Australia.
Nat Rev Microbiol. 2023 Aug;21(8):502-518. doi: 10.1038/s41579-023-00862-w. Epub 2023 Feb 24.
Recent studies applying advanced imaging techniques are changing the way we understand bacterial cell surfaces, bringing new knowledge on everything from single-cell heterogeneity in bacterial populations to their drug sensitivity and mechanisms of antimicrobial resistance. In both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, the outermost surface of the bacterial cell is being imaged at nanoscale; as a result, topographical maps of bacterial cell surfaces can be constructed, revealing distinct zones and specific features that might uniquely identify each cell in a population. Functionally defined assembly precincts for protein insertion into the membrane have been mapped at nanoscale, and equivalent lipid-assembly precincts are suggested from discrete lipopolysaccharide patches. As we review here, particularly for Gram-negative bacteria, the applications of various modalities of nanoscale imaging are reawakening our curiosity about what is conceptually a 3D cell surface landscape: what it looks like, how it is made and how it provides resilience to respond to environmental impacts.
最近应用先进成像技术的研究正在改变我们对细菌细胞表面的理解方式,为我们带来了从细菌种群中单细胞异质性到其药物敏感性和抗微生物耐药机制等各个方面的新知识。在革兰氏阳性菌和革兰氏阴性菌中,细菌细胞的最外层表面都在纳米尺度上成像;因此,可以构建细菌细胞表面的地形图谱,揭示独特的区域和特定特征,这些特征可能可以唯一识别群体中的每个细胞。在纳米尺度上已经对蛋白质插入膜的功能定义的组装区进行了映射,并且从离散的脂多糖斑块中提出了等效的脂质组装区。正如我们在这里回顾的那样,特别是对于革兰氏阴性菌,各种纳米成像模式的应用正在重新激发我们对概念上的 3D 细胞表面景观的好奇心:它是什么样子的,它是如何形成的,以及它如何提供抵御环境影响的弹性。