THE PSEUDOMONAS AERUGINOSA BIOFILM INDUCTION RESPONSE TO SUBINHIBITORY ANTIBIOTICS REQUIRES oprF AND sigX
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Abstract
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a Gram-negative pathogen that forms
biofilms, which increase tolerance to antibiotics. Biofilms are dense, surfaceassociated
communities of bacteria that grow in a self-produced matrix of
polysaccharides, proteins, and extracellular DNA (eDNA). Sub-minimal inhibitory
concentration (sub-MIC) levels of antibiotics induce the formation of biofilms,
indicating a potential role in response to antibiotic stress. However, the
mechanisms behind sub-MIC antibiotic-induced biofilm formation are unknown.
We show that treatment with sub-MIC levels of cefixime (cephalosporin),
carbenicillin (β-lactam), tobramycin (aminoglycoside), chloramphenicol
(chloramphenicol), thiostrepton (thiopeptide), novobiocin (aminocoumarin),
ciprofloxacin (fluoroquinolone), or trimethoprim (antifolate) induces biofilm
formation, with maximal induction at ~ ¼ to ½ MIC. We demonstrate that
addition of exogenous eDNA or cell lysate does not stimulate biofilm formation
to the same extent as antibiotics, suggesting that the release of common goods
by antibiotic action does not solely drive the biofilm response. We show that
increased biofilm formation upon antibiotic exposure requires the outer
membrane porin OprF and the extracytoplasmic function sigma factor SigX.
Through transposon mutant screening and deletion studies, we found that OprF
is important for biofilm induction, as mutants lacking this protein did not form
increased biofilm when exposed to sub-MIC antibiotics. OprF expression is
v
controlled by SigX, and its loss increases SigX activity. Loss of SigX also prevents
biofilm induction by sub-MIC antibiotics. Together, these results show that
antibiotic-induced biofilm formation may constitute a type of stress response.
This response may be useful to screen for new antibiotics due to its ability to
reveal antibiotic activity at concentrations below the MIC. Further study of this
response may also provide targets for adjuvant therapies that reduce biofilm
formation in P. aeruginosa infections and increase the efficacy of current
antibiotics.