4.5 Article

Enterococcus faecalis readily colonizes the entire gastrointestinal tract and forms biofilms in a germ-free mouse model

期刊

VIRULENCE
卷 8, 期 3, 页码 282-296

出版社

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/21505594.2016.1208890

关键词

antibiotic resistance; competitive fitness; intestinal microbiota; opportunistic pathogen

资金

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [NIAID AI058134, AI120601, R01 AR056647, R01 AI91594]
  2. NIH Medical Scientist Training Grant [NIGMS GM008244]
  3. University of Minnesota Department of Pulmonary, Allergy, and Critical Care [NHLBI HL007741]
  4. National Institute of Dental & Craniofacial Research [T90 DE 0227232]
  5. National Science Foundation (NSF) through the MRSEC program
  6. [NSF MRI DMR-1229263]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The mammalian gastrointestinal (GI) tract is a complex organ system with a twista significant portion of its composition is a community of microbial symbionts. The microbiota plays an increasingly appreciated role in many clinically-relevant conditions. It is important to understand the details of biofilm development in the GI tract since bacteria in this state not only use biofilms to improve colonization, biofilm bacteria often exhibit high levels of resistance to common, clinically relevant antibacterial drugs. Here we examine the initial colonization of the germ-free murine GI tract by Enterococcus faecalisone of the first bacterial colonizers of the naive mammalian gut. We demonstrate strong morphological similarities to our previous in vitro E. faecalis biofilm microcolony architecture using 3 complementary imaging techniques: conventional tissue Gram stain, immunofluorescent imaging (IFM) of constitutive fluorescent protein reporter expression, and low-voltage scanning electron microscopy (LV-SEM). E. faecalis biofilm microcolonies were readily identifiable throughout the entire lower GI tract, from the duodenum to the colon. Notably, biofilm development appeared to occur as discrete microcolonies directly attached to the epithelial surface rather than confluent sheets of cells throughout the GI tract even in the presence of high (>10(9)) fecal bacterial loads. An in vivo competition experiment using a pool of 11 select E. faecalis mutant strains containing sequence-defined transposon insertions showed the potential of this model to identify genetic factors involved in E. faecalis colonization of the murine GI tract.

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