4.7 Article

Curli production enhances clay-E. coli aggregation and sedimentation

Journal

COLLOIDS AND SURFACES B-BIOINTERFACES
Volume 182, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.colsurfb.2019.110361

Keywords

Curli; Amyloid fibers; Clay minerals; Montmorillonite; Kaolinite; E. coli; Adhesion; Adsorption; Aggregation/flocculation

Funding

  1. Israeli Ministry of Science and Technology

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Curli are amyloid fibrils that polymerize extracellularly from curlin, a protein that is secreted by many enteric bacteria and is important for biofilm formation. Presented here is a systematic study of the effects of curli on bacteria-clay interactions. The aggregation trends of curli-producing and curli-deficient bacteria with clay minerals were followed using gradient-sedimentation experiments, Lumisizer measurements, bright-field and electron microscopy. The results revealed that curli-producing bacteria auto-aggregated into high-density flocs (1.23 g/cm(3)), ranging in size from 10 to 50 run, that settle spontaneously. In contrast, curli-deficient bacteria remained relatively stable in solution as individual cells (1-2 mu m, 1.18 g/cm(3)), even at high ionic strength (350 mM). The stability of clay suspensions mixed with curli-deficient bacteria depended on clay type and ionic strength, the general trends being consistent with the classic DLVO theory. However, suspensions of curli-producing bacteria mixed with clays were highly unstable regardless of clay type and solution chemistry, suggesting extensive interactions between the clays and the bacteria-curli aggregates. SEM measurements revealed interesting differences in morphologies of the aggregates; montrnorillonite particles coated the bacterial auto-aggregates whereas the kaolinite platelets were embedded within the larger curli-bacteria aggregates. These new observations regarding the densities, aggregation trends, and morphologies of bacteria-curli and bacteria-curliclay complexes make it clear that production of surface appendages, such as curli, need to be considered when addressing the fate, activity and transport of bacteria - particularly in aquatic environments.

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