Putative Surface Proteins Encoded within a Novel Transferable Locus Confer a High-Biofilm Phenotype to Enterococcus faecalis

Author:

Tendolkar Preeti M.1,Baghdayan Arto S.1,Shankar Nathan1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, P.O. Box 26901, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73190

Abstract

ABSTRACT Enterococci are opportunistic pathogens and among the leading causes of nosocomial infections. Enterococcus faecalis , the dominant species among infection-derived isolates, has recently been recognized as capable of forming biofilms on abiotic surfaces in vitro as well as on indwelling medical devices. A few bacterial factors known to contribute to biofilm formation in E. faecalis have been characterized. To identify additional factors which may be important to this process, we utilized a Tn 917 -based insertional mutagenesis strategy to generate a mutant bank in a high-biofilm-forming E. faecalis strain, E99. The resulting mutant bank was screened for mutants exhibiting a significantly reduced ability to form biofilms. One mutant, P101D12, which showed greater than 70% reduction in its ability to form biofilms compared to the wild-type parent, was further characterized. The single Tn 917 insertion in P101D12 was mapped to a gene, bee-2 , encoding a probable cell wall-anchored protein. Sequence information for the region flanking bee-2 revealed that this gene was a member of a locus (termed the bee locus for b iofilm e nhancer in e nterococcus) comprised of five genes encoding three putative cell wall-anchored proteins and two probable sortases. Contour-clamped homogeneous electric field gel and Southern hybridization analyses suggested that the bee locus is likely harbored on a large conjugative plasmid. Filter mating assays using wild-type E99 or mutant P101D12 as a donor confirmed that the bee locus could transfer conjugally at high frequency to recipient E. faecalis strains. This represents the first instance of the identification of a mobile genetic element conferring biofilm-forming property in E. faecalis .

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Molecular Biology,Microbiology

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