Summary Major pathogenic clonal complexes (cc) of Neisseria meningitidis differ substantially in their point prevalence among healthy carriers. We show that frequently carried pathogenic cc (e.g. sequence type ST-41/44 cc and ST-32 cc) depend on extracellular DNA (eDNA) to initiate in vitro biofilm formation, whereas biofilm formation of cc with low point prevalence (ST-8 cc and ST-11 cc) was eDNA-independent. For initial biofilm formation, a ST-32 cc type strain, but not a ST-11 type strain, utilized eDNA. The release of eDNA was mediated by lytic transglycosylase and cytoplasmic N-acetylmuramyl-l-alanine amidase genes. In late biofilms, outer membrane phospholipase A-dependent autolysis, which was observed in most cc, but not in ST-8 and ST-11 strains, was required for shear force resistance of microcolonies. Taken together, N. meningitidis evolved two different biofilm formation strategies, an eDNA-dependent one yielding shear force resistant microcolonies, and an eDNA-independent one. Based on the experimental findings and previous epidemiological observations, we hypothesize that most meningococcal cc display a settler phenotype, which is eDNA-dependent and results in a stable interaction with the host. On the contrary, spreaders (ST-11 and ST-8 cc) are unable to use eDNA for biofilm formation and might compensate for poor colonization properties by high transmission rates.
%0 Journal Article
%1 lappann_dual_2010-1
%A Lappann, Martin
%A Claus, Heike
%A van Alen, Tessa
%A Harmsen, Morten
%A Elias, Johannes
%A Molin, Søren
%A Vogel, Ulrich
%D 2010
%J Molecular Microbiology
%K imported
%R 10.1111/j.1365-2958.2010.07054.x
%T A dual role of extracellular DNA during biofilm formation of Neisseria meningitidis
%U http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20180907
%X Summary Major pathogenic clonal complexes (cc) of Neisseria meningitidis differ substantially in their point prevalence among healthy carriers. We show that frequently carried pathogenic cc (e.g. sequence type ST-41/44 cc and ST-32 cc) depend on extracellular DNA (eDNA) to initiate in vitro biofilm formation, whereas biofilm formation of cc with low point prevalence (ST-8 cc and ST-11 cc) was eDNA-independent. For initial biofilm formation, a ST-32 cc type strain, but not a ST-11 type strain, utilized eDNA. The release of eDNA was mediated by lytic transglycosylase and cytoplasmic N-acetylmuramyl-l-alanine amidase genes. In late biofilms, outer membrane phospholipase A-dependent autolysis, which was observed in most cc, but not in ST-8 and ST-11 strains, was required for shear force resistance of microcolonies. Taken together, N. meningitidis evolved two different biofilm formation strategies, an eDNA-dependent one yielding shear force resistant microcolonies, and an eDNA-independent one. Based on the experimental findings and previous epidemiological observations, we hypothesize that most meningococcal cc display a settler phenotype, which is eDNA-dependent and results in a stable interaction with the host. On the contrary, spreaders (ST-11 and ST-8 cc) are unable to use eDNA for biofilm formation and might compensate for poor colonization properties by high transmission rates.
@article{lappann_dual_2010-1,
abstract = {Summary Major pathogenic clonal complexes (cc) of Neisseria meningitidis differ substantially in their point prevalence among healthy carriers. We show that frequently carried pathogenic cc (e.g. sequence type {ST-41/44} cc and {ST-32} cc) depend on extracellular {DNA} {(eDNA)} to initiate in vitro biofilm formation, whereas biofilm formation of cc with low point prevalence {(ST-8} cc and {ST-11} cc) was {eDNA-independent.} For initial biofilm formation, a {ST-32} cc type strain, but not a {ST-11} type strain, utilized {eDNA.} The release of {eDNA} was mediated by lytic transglycosylase and cytoplasmic N-acetylmuramyl-l-alanine amidase genes. In late biofilms, outer membrane phospholipase A-dependent autolysis, which was observed in most cc, but not in {ST-8} and {ST-11} strains, was required for shear force resistance of microcolonies. Taken together, N. meningitidis evolved two different biofilm formation strategies, an {eDNA-dependent} one yielding shear force resistant microcolonies, and an {eDNA-independent} one. Based on the experimental findings and previous epidemiological observations, we hypothesize that most meningococcal cc display a settler phenotype, which is {eDNA-dependent} and results in a stable interaction with the host. On the contrary, spreaders {(ST-11} and {ST-8} cc) are unable to use {eDNA} for biofilm formation and might compensate for poor colonization properties by high transmission rates.},
added-at = {2011-03-11T10:05:34.000+0100},
author = {Lappann, Martin and Claus, Heike and van Alen, Tessa and Harmsen, Morten and Elias, Johannes and Molin, Søren and Vogel, Ulrich},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/21f13a805b77e61cb07e1f51e5c86c2d1/jelias},
doi = {10.1111/j.1365-2958.2010.07054.x},
interhash = {74e2fdb4e8517b8f32ff03f5efae76c0},
intrahash = {1f13a805b77e61cb07e1f51e5c86c2d1},
issn = {1365-2958},
journal = {Molecular Microbiology},
keywords = {imported},
month = feb,
note = {{PMID:} 20180907},
timestamp = {2011-03-11T10:06:45.000+0100},
title = {A dual role of extracellular {DNA} during biofilm formation of Neisseria meningitidis},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20180907},
year = 2010
}