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Author Notes:

Address correspondence to Jorge E. Vidal, jvidalg@emory.edu.

We thank Hong Yi, Elizabeth Wright, and Jeannette Taylor for their assistance with electron microscopy; they were supported in part by the Robert P. Apkarian Integrated Electron Microscopy Core.

We thank Joshua R. Shak and Gideon Matzkin for critical reading of the manuscript.

We also thank Reinhold Brückner from the Department of Microbiology, University of Kaiserslautern, for providing pPP2, and Manuel Espinoza from the “Centro de Investigaciones Biologicas,” Madrid, Spain, for his kind gift of plasmid pMV158GFP.

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Research Funding:

This research was supported in part by PHS grant UL1 RR025008 from the Clinical and Translational Science Award program, NIH, National Center for Research Resources (J.E.V.).

Quorum-Sensing Systems LuxS/Autoinducer 2 and Com Regulate Streptococcus pneumoniae Biofilms in a Bioreactor with Living Cultures of Human Respiratory Cells

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Journal Title:

Infection and Immunity

Volume:

Volume 81, Number 4

Publisher:

, Pages 1341-1353

Type of Work:

Article | Final Publisher PDF

Abstract:

Streptococcus pneumoniae forms organized biofilms in the human upper respiratory tract that may play an essential role in both persistence and acute respiratory infection. However, the production and regulation of biofilms on human cells is not yet fully understood. In this work, we developed a bioreactor with living cultures of human respiratory epithelial cells (HREC) and a continuous flow of nutrients, mimicking the microenvironment of the human respiratory epithelium, to study the production and regulation of S. pneumoniae biofilms (SPB). SPB were also produced under static conditions on immobilized HREC. Our experiments demonstrated that the biomass of SPB increased significantly when grown on HREC compared to the amount on abiotic surfaces. Additionally, pneumococcal strains produced more early biofilms on lung cells than on pharyngeal cells. Utilizing the bioreactor or immobilized human cells, the production of early SPB was found to be regulated by two quorum-sensing systems, Com and LuxS/AI-2, since a mutation in either comC or luxS rendered the pneumococcus unable to produce early biofilms on HREC. Interestingly, while LuxS/autoinducer 2 (AI-2) regulated biofilms on both HREC and abiotic surfaces, Com control was specific for those structures produced on HREC. The biofilm phenotypes of strain D39-derivative ΔcomC and ΔluxS QS mutants were reversed by genetic complementation. Of note, SPB formed on immobilized HREC and incubated under static conditions were completely lysed 24 h postinoculation. Biofilm lysis was also regulated by the Com and LuxS/AI-2 quorum-sensing systems.

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© 2013, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

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