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Surface-Shaving Proteomics of Mycobacterium marinum Identifies Biofilm Subtype-Specific Changes Affecting Virulence, Tolerance, and Persistence

The complex cell wall and biofilm matrix (ECM) act as key barriers to antibiotics in mycobacteria. Here, the ECM and envelope proteins of Mycobacterium marinum ATCC 927, a nontuberculous mycobacterial model, were monitored over 3 months by label-free proteomics and compared with cell surface protein...

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Autores principales: Savijoki, Kirsi, Myllymäki, Henna, Luukinen, Hanna, Paulamäki, Lauri, Vanha-aho, Leena-Maija, Svorjova, Aleksandra, Miettinen, Ilkka, Fallarero, Adyary, Ihalainen, Teemu O., Yli-Kauhaluoma, Jari, Nyman, Tuula A., Parikka, Mataleena
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8269238/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34156290
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00500-21
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author Savijoki, Kirsi
Myllymäki, Henna
Luukinen, Hanna
Paulamäki, Lauri
Vanha-aho, Leena-Maija
Svorjova, Aleksandra
Miettinen, Ilkka
Fallarero, Adyary
Ihalainen, Teemu O.
Yli-Kauhaluoma, Jari
Nyman, Tuula A.
Parikka, Mataleena
author_facet Savijoki, Kirsi
Myllymäki, Henna
Luukinen, Hanna
Paulamäki, Lauri
Vanha-aho, Leena-Maija
Svorjova, Aleksandra
Miettinen, Ilkka
Fallarero, Adyary
Ihalainen, Teemu O.
Yli-Kauhaluoma, Jari
Nyman, Tuula A.
Parikka, Mataleena
author_sort Savijoki, Kirsi
collection PubMed
description The complex cell wall and biofilm matrix (ECM) act as key barriers to antibiotics in mycobacteria. Here, the ECM and envelope proteins of Mycobacterium marinum ATCC 927, a nontuberculous mycobacterial model, were monitored over 3 months by label-free proteomics and compared with cell surface proteins on planktonic cells to uncover pathways leading to virulence, tolerance, and persistence. We show that ATCC 927 forms pellicle-type and submerged-type biofilms (PBFs and SBFs, respectively) after 2 weeks and 2 days of growth, respectively, and that the increased CelA1 synthesis in this strain prevents biofilm formation and leads to reduced rifampicin tolerance. The proteomic data suggest that specific changes in mycolic acid synthesis (cord factor), Esx1 secretion, and cell wall adhesins explain the appearance of PBFs as ribbon-like cords and SBFs as lichen-like structures. A subpopulation of cells resisting 64× MIC rifampicin (persisters) was detected in both biofilm subtypes and already in 1-week-old SBFs. The key forces boosting their development could include subtype-dependent changes in asymmetric cell division, cell wall biogenesis, tricarboxylic acid/glyoxylate cycle activities, and energy/redox/iron metabolisms. The effect of various ambient oxygen tensions on each cell type and nonclassical protein secretion are likely factors explaining the majority of the subtype-specific changes. The proteomic findings also imply that Esx1-type protein secretion is more efficient in planktonic (PL) and PBF cells, while SBF may prefer both the Esx5 and nonclassical pathways to control virulence and prolonged viability/persistence. In conclusion, this study reports the first proteomic insight into aging mycobacterial biofilm ECMs and indicates biofilm subtype-dependent mechanisms conferring increased adaptive potential and virulence of nontuberculous mycobacteria. IMPORTANCE Mycobacteria are naturally resilient, and mycobacterial infections are notoriously difficult to treat with antibiotics, with biofilm formation being the main factor complicating the successful treatment of tuberculosis (TB). The present study shows that nontuberculous Mycobacterium marinum ATCC 927 forms submerged- and pellicle-type biofilms with lichen- and ribbon-like structures, respectively, as well as persister cells under the same conditions. We show that both biofilm subtypes differ in terms of virulence-, tolerance-, and persistence-conferring activities, highlighting the fact that both subtypes should be targeted to maximize the power of antimycobacterial treatment therapies.
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spelling pubmed-82692382021-08-02 Surface-Shaving Proteomics of Mycobacterium marinum Identifies Biofilm Subtype-Specific Changes Affecting Virulence, Tolerance, and Persistence Savijoki, Kirsi Myllymäki, Henna Luukinen, Hanna Paulamäki, Lauri Vanha-aho, Leena-Maija Svorjova, Aleksandra Miettinen, Ilkka Fallarero, Adyary Ihalainen, Teemu O. Yli-Kauhaluoma, Jari Nyman, Tuula A. Parikka, Mataleena mSystems Research Article The complex cell wall and biofilm matrix (ECM) act as key barriers to antibiotics in mycobacteria. Here, the ECM and envelope proteins of Mycobacterium marinum ATCC 927, a nontuberculous mycobacterial model, were monitored over 3 months by label-free proteomics and compared with cell surface proteins on planktonic cells to uncover pathways leading to virulence, tolerance, and persistence. We show that ATCC 927 forms pellicle-type and submerged-type biofilms (PBFs and SBFs, respectively) after 2 weeks and 2 days of growth, respectively, and that the increased CelA1 synthesis in this strain prevents biofilm formation and leads to reduced rifampicin tolerance. The proteomic data suggest that specific changes in mycolic acid synthesis (cord factor), Esx1 secretion, and cell wall adhesins explain the appearance of PBFs as ribbon-like cords and SBFs as lichen-like structures. A subpopulation of cells resisting 64× MIC rifampicin (persisters) was detected in both biofilm subtypes and already in 1-week-old SBFs. The key forces boosting their development could include subtype-dependent changes in asymmetric cell division, cell wall biogenesis, tricarboxylic acid/glyoxylate cycle activities, and energy/redox/iron metabolisms. The effect of various ambient oxygen tensions on each cell type and nonclassical protein secretion are likely factors explaining the majority of the subtype-specific changes. The proteomic findings also imply that Esx1-type protein secretion is more efficient in planktonic (PL) and PBF cells, while SBF may prefer both the Esx5 and nonclassical pathways to control virulence and prolonged viability/persistence. In conclusion, this study reports the first proteomic insight into aging mycobacterial biofilm ECMs and indicates biofilm subtype-dependent mechanisms conferring increased adaptive potential and virulence of nontuberculous mycobacteria. IMPORTANCE Mycobacteria are naturally resilient, and mycobacterial infections are notoriously difficult to treat with antibiotics, with biofilm formation being the main factor complicating the successful treatment of tuberculosis (TB). The present study shows that nontuberculous Mycobacterium marinum ATCC 927 forms submerged- and pellicle-type biofilms with lichen- and ribbon-like structures, respectively, as well as persister cells under the same conditions. We show that both biofilm subtypes differ in terms of virulence-, tolerance-, and persistence-conferring activities, highlighting the fact that both subtypes should be targeted to maximize the power of antimycobacterial treatment therapies. American Society for Microbiology 2021-06-22 /pmc/articles/PMC8269238/ /pubmed/34156290 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00500-21 Text en Copyright © 2021 Savijoki 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
Savijoki, Kirsi
Myllymäki, Henna
Luukinen, Hanna
Paulamäki, Lauri
Vanha-aho, Leena-Maija
Svorjova, Aleksandra
Miettinen, Ilkka
Fallarero, Adyary
Ihalainen, Teemu O.
Yli-Kauhaluoma, Jari
Nyman, Tuula A.
Parikka, Mataleena
Surface-Shaving Proteomics of Mycobacterium marinum Identifies Biofilm Subtype-Specific Changes Affecting Virulence, Tolerance, and Persistence
title Surface-Shaving Proteomics of Mycobacterium marinum Identifies Biofilm Subtype-Specific Changes Affecting Virulence, Tolerance, and Persistence
title_full Surface-Shaving Proteomics of Mycobacterium marinum Identifies Biofilm Subtype-Specific Changes Affecting Virulence, Tolerance, and Persistence
title_fullStr Surface-Shaving Proteomics of Mycobacterium marinum Identifies Biofilm Subtype-Specific Changes Affecting Virulence, Tolerance, and Persistence
title_full_unstemmed Surface-Shaving Proteomics of Mycobacterium marinum Identifies Biofilm Subtype-Specific Changes Affecting Virulence, Tolerance, and Persistence
title_short Surface-Shaving Proteomics of Mycobacterium marinum Identifies Biofilm Subtype-Specific Changes Affecting Virulence, Tolerance, and Persistence
title_sort surface-shaving proteomics of mycobacterium marinum identifies biofilm subtype-specific changes affecting virulence, tolerance, and persistence
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8269238/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34156290
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSystems.00500-21
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