Affiliation:
1. Department of Biological Sciences and Binghamton Biofilm Research Center, Binghamton University, Binghamton, New York, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In the present study, human atherosclerotic carotid arteries were examined following endarterectomy for the presence of the Gram-positive bacterium
Propionibacterium acnes
and its potential association with biofilm structures within the arterial wall. The
P. acnes
16S rRNA gene was detectable in 4 of 15 carotid artery samples, and viable
P. acnes
was one among 10 different bacterial species recoverable in culture. Fluorescence
in situ
hybridization analysis of 5 additional atherosclerotic carotid arteries demonstrated biofilm bacteria within all samples, with
P. acnes
detectable in 4 samples. We also demonstrated that laboratory-grown cultures of
P. acnes
biofilms were susceptible to induction of a biofilm dispersion response when challenged with physiologically relevant levels of norepinephrine in the presence of iron-bound transferrin or with free iron. The production and release of lipolytic and proteolytic extracellular enzymes by
P. acnes
were shown to increase in iron-induced dispersed biofilms, and these dispersion-induced
P. acnes
VP1 biofilms showed increased expression of mRNAs for the triacylglycerol lipases PPA2105 and PPA1796 and the hyaluronate lyase PPA380 compared to that in untreated biofilms. These results demonstrate that
P. acnes
can infect the carotid arteries of humans with atherosclerosis as a component of multispecies biofilms and that dispersion is inducible for this organism, at least
in vitro
, with physiologically relevant levels of norepinephrine resulting in the production and release of degradative enzymes.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
19 articles.
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