Department of BioSciences, Rice University , Houston, Texas, USA.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2023 Sep 28;89(9):e0076423. doi: 10.1128/aem.00764-23. Epub 2023 Sep 8.
The application of microfluidic techniques in experimental and environmental studies is a rapidly emerging field. Water-in-oil microdroplets can serve readily as controllable micro-vessels for studies that require spatial structure. In many applications, it is useful to monitor cell growth without breaking or disrupting the microdroplets. To this end, optical reporters based on color, fluorescence, or luminescence have been developed. However, optical reporters suffer from limitations when used in microdroplets such as inaccurate readings due to strong background interference or limited sensitivity during early growth stages. In addition, optical detection is typically not amenable to filamentous or biofilm-producing organisms that have significant nonlinear changes in opacity and light scattering during growth. To overcome such limitations, we show that volatile methyl halide gases produced by reporter cells expressing a methyl halide transferase (MHT) can serve as an alternative nonoptical detection approach suitable for microdroplets. In this study, an MHT-labeled reporter strain was constructed and characterized. Protocols were established for the encapsulation and incubation of in microdroplets. We observed the complete life cycle for including the vegetative expansion of mycelia, mycelial fragmentation, and late-stage sporulation. Methyl bromide (MeBr) production was detected by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) from gas reporters incubated in either liquid suspension or microdroplets and used to quantitatively estimate bacterial density. Overall, using MeBr production as a means of quantifying bacterial growth provided a 100- to 1,000-fold increase in sensitivity over optical or fluorescence measurements of a comparable reporter strain expressing fluorescent proteins. IMPORTANCE Quantitative measurement of bacterial growth in microdroplets is desirable but challenging. Current optical reporter systems suffer from limitations when applied to filamentous or biofilm-producing organisms. In this study, we demonstrate that volatile methyl halide gas production can serve as a quantitative nonoptical growth assay for filamentous bacteria encapsulated in microdroplets. We constructed an gas reporter strain and observed a complete life cycle for encapsulated in microdroplets, establishing microdroplets as an alternative growth environment for spp. that can provide spatial structure. We detected MeBr production from both liquid suspension and microdroplets with a 100- to 1,000-fold increase in signal-to-noise ratio compared to optical assays. Importantly, we could reliably detect bacteria with densities down to 10 CFU/mL. The combination of quantitative gas reporting and microdroplet systems provides a valuable approach to studying fastidious organisms that require spatial structure such as those found typically in soils.
微流控技术在实验和环境研究中的应用是一个迅速发展的领域。油包水乳状液滴可以很容易地作为需要空间结构的可控微容器。在许多应用中,在不破坏微滴的情况下监测细胞生长是很有用的。为此,已经开发了基于颜色、荧光或发光的光学报告器。然而,光学报告器在微滴中使用时存在局限性,例如由于强背景干扰或早期生长阶段灵敏度有限,导致读数不准确。此外,光学检测通常不适用于丝状或生物膜形成的生物体,这些生物体在生长过程中透光率和光散射有显著的非线性变化。为了克服这些限制,我们表明表达卤代甲烷转移酶(MHT)的报告细胞产生的挥发性卤代甲烷气体可以作为一种替代的非光学检测方法,适用于微滴。在这项研究中,构建并表征了一个 MHT 标记的报告菌株。建立了在微滴中封装和孵育 的方案。我们观察到了包括菌丝体的营养扩张、菌丝体的碎片化和后期孢子形成的 的完整生命周期。通过气相色谱-质谱联用(GC-MS)从液体悬浮液或微滴中孵育的 气体报告器中检测到甲基溴(MeBr)的产生,并用于定量估计细菌密度。总的来说,使用 MeBr 产生来量化细菌生长提供了比光学或荧光测量类似表达荧光蛋白的报告菌株高 100 到 1000 倍的灵敏度。重要性 微滴中细菌生长的定量测量是理想的,但具有挑战性。目前的光学报告系统在应用于丝状或生物膜形成的生物体时存在局限性。在这项研究中,我们证明挥发性卤代甲烷气体的产生可以作为丝状细菌在微滴中封装的定量非光学生长测定。我们构建了一个 气体报告菌株,并观察到了在微滴中封装的 完整生命周期,为 spp. 建立了微滴作为替代生长环境,提供了空间结构。我们从液体悬浮液和微滴中都检测到了 MeBr 的产生,与光学测定相比,信号与噪声比提高了 100 到 1000 倍。重要的是,我们可以可靠地检测到密度低至 10 CFU/mL 的细菌。定量气体报告和微滴系统的结合为研究需要空间结构的苛刻生物体提供了一种有价值的方法,这些生物体通常存在于土壤中。