Affiliation:
1. Present address: Department of Medicine, Albert Einstein Medical College, Bronx, NY 10461, USA
2. Department of Microbiology, Miami University, Oxford, OH 45056, USA
Abstract
Introduction. Infections with the respiratory pathogen
Mycoplasma pneumoniae
are often chronic, recurrent and resistant, persisting after antibiotic treatment.
M. pneumoniae
grown on glass forms protective biofilms, consistent with a role for biofilms in persistence. These biofilms consist of towers of bacteria interspersed with individual adherent cells.
Hypothesis/Gap Statement. A tissue culture model for
M. pneumoniae
biofilms has not been described or evaluated to address whether growth, development and resistance properties are consistent with persistence in the host. Moreover, it is unclear whether the
M. pneumoniae
cells in the biofilm towers and individual bacterial cells have distinct roles in disease.
Aim. We evaluated the properties of biofilms of
M. pneumoniae
grown on the immortalized human bronchial epithelial cell line BEAS-2B in relation to persistence in the host. We observed nucleation of biofilm towers and the disposition of individual cells in culture, leading to a model of how tower and individual cells contribute to infection and disease.
Methodology. With submerged BEAS-2B cells as a substrate, we evaluated growth and development of
M. pneumoniae
biofilms using scanning electron microscopy and confocal laser scanning microscopy. We characterized resistance to erythromycin and complement using minimum inhibitory concentration assays and quantification of colony forming units. We monitored biofilm tower formation using time-lapse microscopic analysis of host-cell-free
M. pneumoniae
cultures.
Results. Bacteria grown on host cells underwent similar development to those grown without host cells, including tower formation, rounding and incidence of individual cells outside towers. Erythromycin and complement significantly reduced growth of
M. pneumoniae
. Towers formed exclusively from pre-existing aggregates of bacteria. We discuss a model of the
M. pneumoniae
biofilm life cycle in which protective towers derive from pre-existing aggregates, and generate individual cytotoxic cells.
Conclusion
. M. pneumoniae can form protective biofilms in a tissue culture model, implicating biofilms in chronic infections, with aggregates of
M. pneumoniae
cells being important for establishing infections.
Subject
Microbiology (medical),General Medicine,Microbiology
Cited by
10 articles.
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