Here we present a protocol to study the function of fimbriae in bacterial colonization.
Type 1 fimbriae are important virulence determinants of some Gram-negative pathogens, which promote bacterial colonization. The fimbrial rod is primarily composed of multiple copies of the major fimbrial subunit FimA. FimH adhesin, however, is present as a fibrillar tip structure that drive bacteria binding to host cellular mannose containing receptor. Here, we provide protocols to evaluate and compare the function of type 1 fimbrial subunits in F18ab fimbriae+ Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC). We found that both FimA and FimH are required for bacterial adhesion, invasion, and biofilm formation. Deleting fimA gene showed much more reduction in bacterial adhesion and invasion to porcine intestinal columnar epithelial cells IPEC-J2, than that of fimH mutant. Biofilm formation was significantly reduced in both mutants with an equal level. In addition, qPCR demonstrated that either fimA or fimH deletion down-regulated the bacterial flagella and F18 fimbriae genes expression, while up-regulated adhesin was involved in diffuse adherence-I (AIDA-I) gene expression, suggesting the co-regulation of cell surface-localized adhesins in F18ab fimbriae+ STEC.
Bacterial fimbriae mediated adhesion facilitates bacterial attachment to a target cell surface and establishes an initial infection. Type 1 fimbriae are widely distributed among Escherichia coli (E. coli) and promote bacterial attachment to mammalian cells by binding to the mannose-containing receptor1,2,3. In contrast to pathogenic strains, 85% of tested commensal E. coli strains of human origin do not express type 1 fimbriae4, which indicates its critical roles in disease infection. Type 1 fimbriae are also important virulence factors for extra-intestinal pathogens, such as uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC) and neonatal meningitis-causing E. coli (NMEC)2,5,6.
Infections caused by F18 fimbriae+ (including two variants: ab and ac) Shiga toxin-producing E. coli (STEC) strains are associated with porcine edema disease (ED) and post-weaning diarrhea (PWD)7. Porcine F18 fimbriae+ STEC attaches to intestinal epithelial receptors by a variety of surface adhesins, including F18 fimbriae, flagella, E. coli common pilus (ECP) and the adhesin involved in diffuse adherence (AIDA-I)8,9,10,11. Previously, we had investigated the function of type 1 fimbriae in F18ac fimbriae+ ETEC, which demonstrated that type 1 fimbriae facilitate bacterial biofilm formation and adhesion to host cells12. However, as the pathogenesis of F18ab and F18ac fimbriae+ STEC are not totally the same7, the role of type 1 fimbriae in F18ab fimbriae+ STEC remains unclear. The fimbrial rod is primarily composed of multiple copies of the major fimbrial subunit FimA, and FimH adhesin is assembled into a fibrillar tip structure that drive bacteria binding to host cellular mannose containing receptor13. Using λ-Red recombination14, we had successfully knocked out fimA/fimH gene from a F18ab fimbriae+ STEC strain F107/86 (wild-type, O139:H1, Stx2e+), and constructed complement strains for this study15.
Here, we describe a protocol to study the function of bacterial fimbriae in colonization. Bacteria adhesion assay and invasion assay are major methods to investigate the bacteria fimbrial binding performance. It is complicated and costly to perform an animal challenge model or isolate the primary cell line for further infection assays16. Usually, neither of these results are stable with good repeatability since the individual differences are present between the tested animal. In this study, IPEC-J2 cells are used. These are porcine intestinal columnar epithelial cells that have been isolated from a neonatal piglet’s mid-jejunum17. It is a stable in vitro cell model for examining the interactions of various animal and human pathogens, including Salmonella enterica and pathogenic E. coli, with intestinal epithelial cells18, helping explain the role of fimbriae in intestinal infection conveniently and quickly. Otherwise, IPEC-1 cells are another widely used porcine intestinal epithelial cell line, in which case the composition of cellular receptors are different from IPEC-J219. For the study of mammary pathogenic bacteria, it is better to use mammary epithelial cell line MAC-T20. Hence, for different bacterial pathogenic conditions, choice of a suitable cell line which mimic in vivo environments is important.
In addition, the biofilm is another essential characteristic for bacterial survival during colonization21. In the previous works, silver and congo red were used to stain the biofilm formation in the glass tubes that visually showed the results22,23. However, the difference of biofilm formation ability between varying strains cannot be measured. Here, we also present a protocol for the quantification of bacterial biofilm formation in vitro, which could easily evaluate the ability of fimbriae in biofilm formation.
The methods proposed in this study utilize a fast and simple in vitro way to determine the function of bacterial fimbriae during the bacteria infection process, which can be widely adapted to other researches in the study of virulence factor in bacterial pathogenic mechanism.
The methods provided here help to efficiently determine the function of fimbriae in bacterial colonization. Interestingly, in this study, deletion of fimA showed 15% less adhesion than fimH mutant, suggesting that tip adhesin may not be the only factor required for F18ab fimbriae+ STEC adhesion and that fimbrial rod subunit, FimA, works in bacterial attachment as well (Figure 1A). A recent study proposed that FimA modulated mechanical properties of the fimbrial s…
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This study was supported by grants from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 31672579).
96-well microplate | Corning | 3599 | adhesion and invasion assay |
96-well microplate(Round bottom) | Corning | 3799 | biofilm formation |
crystal violet | Sinopharm Chemical Reagent | 71012314 | Biofilm staining |
dextrose | Sangon Biotech | A610219 | Culture broth |
Ex Taq | TaKaRa | RR01A | PCR |
F12 medium | Gibco | 11765062 | Cell culture |
FeSO4 | Sangon Biotech | A501386 | Culture broth |
K2HPO4 | Sinopharm Chemical Reagent | 20032116 | Culture broth |
KH2PO4 | Sinopharm Chemical Reagent | 10017608 | Culture broth |
L-Arabinose | Sangon Biotech | A610071 | λ-Red recombination |
MgSO4 | Sinopharm Chemical Reagent | 20025117 | Culture broth |
NaCl | Sinopharm Chemical Reagent | 10019308 | Culture broth |
(NH4)2SO4 | Sinopharm Chemical Reagent | 10002917 | Culture broth |
Micro spectrophotometer | Thermo Fisher | Nano Drop one | Nucleic acid concentration detection |
New-born calf serum | Gibco | 16010159 | Cell culture |
Peptone | Sangon Biotech | A505247 | Culture broth |
PrimeScript RT reagent Kit with gDNA Eraser | TaKaRa | RR047 | qPCR |
Real-Time PCR | Applied Biosystems | 7500 system | qPCR |
RPMI1640 medium | Gibco | 11875500 | Cell culture |
Spectrophotometer | Eppendorf | BioSpectrometer | Absorbance detection |
Spectrophotometer (96-well microplate) | BioTek | Epoch | Absorbance detection |
SYBR Premix Ex Taq II | TaKaRa | RR820 | qPCR |
Tabletop centrifuge | Thermo Fisher | Micro 17(R) | Centrifugation |
thiamine hydrochloride | Sangon Biotech | A500986 | Culture broth |
Triton X-100 | Sangon Biotech | A110694 | adhesion and invasion assay |
TRIzol | Invitrogen | 15596018 | RNA isolation |
Tryptone | Oxoid | LP0042 | Culture broth |
Yeast extract | Oxoid | LP0021 | Culture broth |
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