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Biofilm Structure Promotes Coexistence of Phage-Resistant and Phage-Susceptible Bacteria

Encounters among bacteria and their viral predators (bacteriophages) are among the most common ecological interactions on Earth. These encounters are likely to occur with regularity inside surface-bound communities that microbes most often occupy in natural environments. Such communities, termed bio...

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Autores principales: Simmons, Emilia L., Bond, Matthew C., Koskella, Britt, Drescher, Knut, Bucci, Vanni, Nadell, Carey D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7311319/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32576653
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00877-19
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author Simmons, Emilia L.
Bond, Matthew C.
Koskella, Britt
Drescher, Knut
Bucci, Vanni
Nadell, Carey D.
author_facet Simmons, Emilia L.
Bond, Matthew C.
Koskella, Britt
Drescher, Knut
Bucci, Vanni
Nadell, Carey D.
author_sort Simmons, Emilia L.
collection PubMed
description Encounters among bacteria and their viral predators (bacteriophages) are among the most common ecological interactions on Earth. These encounters are likely to occur with regularity inside surface-bound communities that microbes most often occupy in natural environments. Such communities, termed biofilms, are spatially constrained: interactions become limited to near neighbors, diffusion of solutes and particulates can be reduced, and there is pronounced heterogeneity in nutrient access and physiological state. It is appreciated from prior theoretical work that phage-bacteria interactions are fundamentally different in spatially structured contexts, as opposed to well-mixed liquid culture. Spatially structured communities are predicted to promote the protection of susceptible host cells from phage exposure, and thus weaken selection for phage resistance. The details and generality of this prediction in realistic biofilm environments, however, are not known. Here, we explore phage-host interactions using experiments and simulations that are tuned to represent the essential elements of biofilm communities. Our simulations show that in biofilms, phage-resistant cells—as their relative abundance increases—can protect clusters of susceptible cells from phage exposure, promoting the coexistence of susceptible and phage-resistant bacteria under a large array of conditions. We characterize the population dynamics underlying this coexistence, and we show that coexistence is recapitulated in an experimental model of biofilm growth measured with confocal microscopy. Our results provide a clear view into the dynamics of phage resistance in biofilms with single-cell resolution of the underlying cell-virion interactions, linking the predictions of canonical theory to realistic models and in vitro experiments of biofilm growth. IMPORTANCE In the natural environment, bacteria most often live in communities bound to one another by secreted adhesives. These communities, or biofilms, play a central role in biogeochemical cycling, microbiome functioning, wastewater treatment, and disease. Wherever there are bacteria, there are also viruses that attack them, called phages. Interactions between bacteria and phages are likely to occur ubiquitously in biofilms. We show here, using simulations and experiments, that biofilms will in most conditions allow phage-susceptible bacteria to be protected from phage exposure, if they are growing alongside other cells that are phage resistant. This result has implications for the fundamental ecology of phage-bacteria interactions, as well as the development of phage-based antimicrobial therapeutics.
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spelling pubmed-73113192020-06-25 Biofilm Structure Promotes Coexistence of Phage-Resistant and Phage-Susceptible Bacteria Simmons, Emilia L. Bond, Matthew C. Koskella, Britt Drescher, Knut Bucci, Vanni Nadell, Carey D. mSystems Research Article Encounters among bacteria and their viral predators (bacteriophages) are among the most common ecological interactions on Earth. These encounters are likely to occur with regularity inside surface-bound communities that microbes most often occupy in natural environments. Such communities, termed biofilms, are spatially constrained: interactions become limited to near neighbors, diffusion of solutes and particulates can be reduced, and there is pronounced heterogeneity in nutrient access and physiological state. It is appreciated from prior theoretical work that phage-bacteria interactions are fundamentally different in spatially structured contexts, as opposed to well-mixed liquid culture. Spatially structured communities are predicted to promote the protection of susceptible host cells from phage exposure, and thus weaken selection for phage resistance. The details and generality of this prediction in realistic biofilm environments, however, are not known. Here, we explore phage-host interactions using experiments and simulations that are tuned to represent the essential elements of biofilm communities. Our simulations show that in biofilms, phage-resistant cells—as their relative abundance increases—can protect clusters of susceptible cells from phage exposure, promoting the coexistence of susceptible and phage-resistant bacteria under a large array of conditions. We characterize the population dynamics underlying this coexistence, and we show that coexistence is recapitulated in an experimental model of biofilm growth measured with confocal microscopy. Our results provide a clear view into the dynamics of phage resistance in biofilms with single-cell resolution of the underlying cell-virion interactions, linking the predictions of canonical theory to realistic models and in vitro experiments of biofilm growth. IMPORTANCE In the natural environment, bacteria most often live in communities bound to one another by secreted adhesives. These communities, or biofilms, play a central role in biogeochemical cycling, microbiome functioning, wastewater treatment, and disease. Wherever there are bacteria, there are also viruses that attack them, called phages. Interactions between bacteria and phages are likely to occur ubiquitously in biofilms. We show here, using simulations and experiments, that biofilms will in most conditions allow phage-susceptible bacteria to be protected from phage exposure, if they are growing alongside other cells that are phage resistant. This result has implications for the fundamental ecology of phage-bacteria interactions, as well as the development of phage-based antimicrobial therapeutics. American Society for Microbiology 2020-06-23 /pmc/articles/PMC7311319/ /pubmed/32576653 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00877-19 Text en Copyright © 2020 Simmons et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Simmons, Emilia L.
Bond, Matthew C.
Koskella, Britt
Drescher, Knut
Bucci, Vanni
Nadell, Carey D.
Biofilm Structure Promotes Coexistence of Phage-Resistant and Phage-Susceptible Bacteria
title Biofilm Structure Promotes Coexistence of Phage-Resistant and Phage-Susceptible Bacteria
title_full Biofilm Structure Promotes Coexistence of Phage-Resistant and Phage-Susceptible Bacteria
title_fullStr Biofilm Structure Promotes Coexistence of Phage-Resistant and Phage-Susceptible Bacteria
title_full_unstemmed Biofilm Structure Promotes Coexistence of Phage-Resistant and Phage-Susceptible Bacteria
title_short Biofilm Structure Promotes Coexistence of Phage-Resistant and Phage-Susceptible Bacteria
title_sort biofilm structure promotes coexistence of phage-resistant and phage-susceptible bacteria
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7311319/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32576653
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00877-19
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