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Phenotypic and genomic assessment of the potential threat of human spaceflight-relevant Staphylococcus capitis isolates under stress conditions

Previous studies have reported that spaceflight specific conditions such as microgravity lead to changes in bacterial physiology and resistance behavior including increased expression of virulence factors, enhanced biofilm formation and decreased susceptibility to antibiotics. To assess if spaceflig...

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Autores principales: Siems, Katharina, Runzheimer, Katharina, Rehm, Anna, Schwengers, Oliver, Heidler von Heilborn, David, Kaser, Liv, Arndt, Franca, Neidhöfer, Claudio, Mengel, Jan Philipp, Parcina, Marijo, Lipski, André, Hain, Torsten, Moeller, Ralf
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9669719/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36406458
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.1007143
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author Siems, Katharina
Runzheimer, Katharina
Rehm, Anna
Schwengers, Oliver
Heidler von Heilborn, David
Kaser, Liv
Arndt, Franca
Neidhöfer, Claudio
Mengel, Jan Philipp
Parcina, Marijo
Lipski, André
Hain, Torsten
Moeller, Ralf
author_facet Siems, Katharina
Runzheimer, Katharina
Rehm, Anna
Schwengers, Oliver
Heidler von Heilborn, David
Kaser, Liv
Arndt, Franca
Neidhöfer, Claudio
Mengel, Jan Philipp
Parcina, Marijo
Lipski, André
Hain, Torsten
Moeller, Ralf
author_sort Siems, Katharina
collection PubMed
description Previous studies have reported that spaceflight specific conditions such as microgravity lead to changes in bacterial physiology and resistance behavior including increased expression of virulence factors, enhanced biofilm formation and decreased susceptibility to antibiotics. To assess if spaceflight induced physiological changes can manifest in human-associated bacteria, we compared three spaceflight relevant Staphylococcus capitis isolates (DSM 111179, ISS; DSM 31028, clean room; DSM 113836; artificial gravity bedrest study) with the type strain (DSM 20326(T)). We tested the three strains regarding growth, colony morphology, metabolism, fatty acid and polar lipid pattern, biofilm formation, susceptibility to antibiotics and survival in different stress conditions such as treatment with hydrogen peroxide, exposure to desiccation, and irradiation with X-rays and UV-C. Moreover, we sequenced, assembled, and analyzed the genomes of all four strains. Potential genetic determinants for phenotypic differences were investigated by comparative genomics. We found that all four strains show similar metabolic patterns and the same susceptibility to antibiotics. All four strains were considered resistant to fosfomycin. Physiological differences were mainly observed compared to the type strain and minor differences among the other three strains. The ISS isolate and the bedrest study isolate exhibit a strong delayed yellow pigmentation, which is absent in the other two strains. Pigments were extracted and analyzed by UV/Vis spectroscopy showing characteristic carotenoid spectra. The ISS isolate showed the highest growth rate as well as weighted average melting temperature (WAMT) of fatty acids (41.8°C) of all strains. The clean room isolate showed strongest biofilm formation and a high tolerance to desiccation. In general, all strains survived desiccation better in absence of oxygen. There were no differences among the strains regarding radiation tolerance. Phenotypic and genomic differences among the strains observed in this study are not inevitably indicating an increased virulence of the spaceflight isolate. However, the increased growth rate, higher WAMT and colony pigmentation of the spaceflight isolate are relevant phenotypes that require further research within the human spaceflight context. We conclude that combining genetic analysis with classical microbiological methods allows the detailed assessment of the potential threat of bacteria in highly regulated and extreme environments such as spaceflight environments.
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spelling pubmed-96697192022-11-18 Phenotypic and genomic assessment of the potential threat of human spaceflight-relevant Staphylococcus capitis isolates under stress conditions Siems, Katharina Runzheimer, Katharina Rehm, Anna Schwengers, Oliver Heidler von Heilborn, David Kaser, Liv Arndt, Franca Neidhöfer, Claudio Mengel, Jan Philipp Parcina, Marijo Lipski, André Hain, Torsten Moeller, Ralf Front Microbiol Microbiology Previous studies have reported that spaceflight specific conditions such as microgravity lead to changes in bacterial physiology and resistance behavior including increased expression of virulence factors, enhanced biofilm formation and decreased susceptibility to antibiotics. To assess if spaceflight induced physiological changes can manifest in human-associated bacteria, we compared three spaceflight relevant Staphylococcus capitis isolates (DSM 111179, ISS; DSM 31028, clean room; DSM 113836; artificial gravity bedrest study) with the type strain (DSM 20326(T)). We tested the three strains regarding growth, colony morphology, metabolism, fatty acid and polar lipid pattern, biofilm formation, susceptibility to antibiotics and survival in different stress conditions such as treatment with hydrogen peroxide, exposure to desiccation, and irradiation with X-rays and UV-C. Moreover, we sequenced, assembled, and analyzed the genomes of all four strains. Potential genetic determinants for phenotypic differences were investigated by comparative genomics. We found that all four strains show similar metabolic patterns and the same susceptibility to antibiotics. All four strains were considered resistant to fosfomycin. Physiological differences were mainly observed compared to the type strain and minor differences among the other three strains. The ISS isolate and the bedrest study isolate exhibit a strong delayed yellow pigmentation, which is absent in the other two strains. Pigments were extracted and analyzed by UV/Vis spectroscopy showing characteristic carotenoid spectra. The ISS isolate showed the highest growth rate as well as weighted average melting temperature (WAMT) of fatty acids (41.8°C) of all strains. The clean room isolate showed strongest biofilm formation and a high tolerance to desiccation. In general, all strains survived desiccation better in absence of oxygen. There were no differences among the strains regarding radiation tolerance. Phenotypic and genomic differences among the strains observed in this study are not inevitably indicating an increased virulence of the spaceflight isolate. However, the increased growth rate, higher WAMT and colony pigmentation of the spaceflight isolate are relevant phenotypes that require further research within the human spaceflight context. We conclude that combining genetic analysis with classical microbiological methods allows the detailed assessment of the potential threat of bacteria in highly regulated and extreme environments such as spaceflight environments. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-11-03 /pmc/articles/PMC9669719/ /pubmed/36406458 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.1007143 Text en Copyright © 2022 Siems, Runzheimer, Rehm, Schwengers, Heidler von Heilborn, Kaser, Arndt, Neidhöfer, Mengel, Parcina, Lipski, Hain and Moeller. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Microbiology
Siems, Katharina
Runzheimer, Katharina
Rehm, Anna
Schwengers, Oliver
Heidler von Heilborn, David
Kaser, Liv
Arndt, Franca
Neidhöfer, Claudio
Mengel, Jan Philipp
Parcina, Marijo
Lipski, André
Hain, Torsten
Moeller, Ralf
Phenotypic and genomic assessment of the potential threat of human spaceflight-relevant Staphylococcus capitis isolates under stress conditions
title Phenotypic and genomic assessment of the potential threat of human spaceflight-relevant Staphylococcus capitis isolates under stress conditions
title_full Phenotypic and genomic assessment of the potential threat of human spaceflight-relevant Staphylococcus capitis isolates under stress conditions
title_fullStr Phenotypic and genomic assessment of the potential threat of human spaceflight-relevant Staphylococcus capitis isolates under stress conditions
title_full_unstemmed Phenotypic and genomic assessment of the potential threat of human spaceflight-relevant Staphylococcus capitis isolates under stress conditions
title_short Phenotypic and genomic assessment of the potential threat of human spaceflight-relevant Staphylococcus capitis isolates under stress conditions
title_sort phenotypic and genomic assessment of the potential threat of human spaceflight-relevant staphylococcus capitis isolates under stress conditions
topic Microbiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9669719/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36406458
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.1007143
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