Here we present protocols for novice researchers to initiate phenotyping for the pharmacologically important bacterial genus Streptomyces.
Streptomycetes are filamentous soil bacteria belonging to the phylum Actinobacteria that are found throughout the world and produce a wide array of antibiotics and other secondary metabolites. Streptomyces coelicolor is a well-characterized, non-pathogenic species that is amenable to a variety of analyses in the lab. The phenotyping methods described here use S. coelicolor as a model streptomycete; however, the methods are applicable to all members of this large genus as well as some closely related actinomycetes. Phenotyping is necessary to characterize new species of Streptomyces identified in the environment, and it is also a vital first step in characterizing newly isolated mutant strains of Streptomyces. Proficiency in phenotyping is important for the many new researchers who are entering the field of Streptomyces research, which includes the study of bacterial development, cell division, chromosome segregation, and second messenger signaling. The recent crowdsourcing of antibiotic discovery through the isolation of new soil microbes has resulted in an increased need for training in phenotyping for instructors new to the field of Streptomyces research and their college or high school students. This manuscript describes methods for bacterial strain propagation, storage, and characterization through visual and microscopic examination. After reading this article, new researchers (microbiology education laboratories and citizen scientists) should be able to manipulate Streptomyces strains and begin visual characterization experiments.
Streptomycetes are Gram-positive, filamentous soil bacteria known for their ability to produce a variety of secondary metabolites, including over two-thirds of the commercially available antibiotics, as well as anti-tumor, anti-HIV, and anti-parasitic drugs1. S. coelicolor is the most genetically characterized member of the genus2,3 and is the species used in the methods described here. S. coelicolor has a complex life cycle that begins with germination of a single spore, progressing to an extensive, branching vegetative mycelium that grows into the agar medium. As the life cycle proceeds, aerial filaments are formed that break the surface tension of the substrate mycelium and are finally divided into long chains of cells that are ultimately converted into mature, grey-pigmented spores. Dispersion of these newly formed spores constitutes the beginning of the next life cycle4.
Because of its complex pattern of differentiation, S. coelicolor serves as an excellent model for the study of bacterial development. Historically, mutations result in blocks for two major stages of development and produce distinct visual phenotypes. The bld (bald) mutants are blocked for aerial mycelium formation and result in the lack of a fuzzy aerial mycelium imparting a "bald" colony appearance. Mutants inhibited in spore formation and maturation are referred to as whi (white) mutants because they typically fail to produce wild-type levels of the gray spore pigment and the aerial mycelium remains white. Other interesting mutants are inhibited in antibiotic production, cell division, chromosome segregation, or other important processes4,5.
Despite the discovery of many developmental genes in Streptomyces species, there are many more believed to exist based on the lack of saturation of mutant screens. Our laboratories continue to identify new developmental genes using a mini-transposon system that we have constructed. Novel mutant strains isolated in random mutagenesis experiments with our transposon undergo phenotypic screening to identify the possible role of each new gene discovered6,7. The methods for bacterial phenotyping described here are relevant to Streptomyces mutants isolated by transposon mutagenesis8,9,10,11,12,13 and other random methods, such as chemical and ultra-violet (UV) mutagenesis14, as well as the directed construction of mutations such as gene deletions using recombineering15,16 or CRISPR-Cas9 (Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats) genome editing technology17,18,19 and point mutations20.
As antibiotic resistance among pathogens becomes increasingly prevalent, the need for new antibiotics becomes increasingly urgent21,22. The "Small World Initiative" (or SWI) is an effective Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) learning23 and research strategy24 to combat antibiotic resistance through the crowdsourcing of college students, and more recently high school students. Supported courses work includes identifying new soil microbes that produce novel antibiotics (http://www.smallworldinitiative.org). It is believed that a major source of undiscovered antibiotics will continue to be Streptomyces species found in a wide range of soil and water habitats25,26,27,28,29,31. Recently, our laboratory and the work of others have discovered and characterized signaling genes in Streptomyces species that regulate morphology and development, including antibiotic production7,32,33. Changes in expression of these genes result in a change in the amount and timing of antibiotics produced. Skilled phenotyping of new species and new antibiotic-producing mutants will continue to be important. As new instructors and their students become major contributors to the field of drug discovery, training in bacterial phenotyping is necessary for the success of these novice individuals. Furthermore, these experiments are tractable for high school STEM or university microbiology education laboratories. They represent a demonstration of basic microbial genetic principles in a teaching lab setting.
1. Prepare Instruments, Culture Media, Solutions, and Petri Dishes
2. Streak Streptomyces onto Plates for Propagation
3. Create Glycerol Mycelial Stocks for Bacterial Storage
NOTE: Mycelial stocks may be created for all Streptomyces strains, including whi and bld strains, and other developmental mutants that are unable to complete sporulation.
4. Create Glycerol Spore Stocks for Strains Capable of Sporulation
NOTE: Spore stocks are preferable for long-term viability but are only feasible for strains that are capable of completing sporulation.
5. Perform Mutagenesis
6. Compare and Record the Visual Appearance
7. Perform Phase-Contrast Microscopy
8. Perform Fluorescence Microscopy
Initial phenotyping experiments are necessary for characterizing new species and strains and can be used as a complimentary approach to the phylogenetics and DNA-DNA hybridization experiments that are used for characterizing new species. Streptomyces mutants resulting from random mutagenesis methods such as chemical, UV, or transposon mutagenesis are typically identified through direct, visual screens on agar plates. Colonies of Streptomyces are examined for changes in phenotype in comparison to the wild-type, parental strain. For example, a lighter colored aerial mycelium may indicate a lower level of gray pigment caused by a defect in sporulation, or the lack of a fuzzy appearance is indicative of a block in aerial mycelium formation (Figure 1). Many streptomycetes produce pigmented antibiotics in vegetative mycelium or surrounding agar. S. coelicolor produces two pigmented antibiotics as well as two non-pigmented ones. Actinorhodin is a blue-pigmented antibiotic and undecylprodigiosin is a red-pigmented antibiotic45. Strains that have undergone initial visual colony screens are then propagated by streaking for single colonies.
Following visual identification of potentially interesting mutants, strains are subjected to microscopic examination. Phase-contrast microscopy is especially suited to examining Streptomyces mutants for developmental defects, using the wild-type strain as a control (Figure 2). Wild type S. coelicolor colonies typically produce an aerial mycelium by about two days of growth at 30 °C on MS agar, and long chains of spores by three days of growth. The life cycle will progress slightly slower or faster on other types of media. It is imperative that the mutants be analyzed under the same growth conditions as the wild type when drawing conclusions about the developmental defects and delays. Bald mutants may produce spores after prolonged growth on agar media. A class of mutants referred to as white mutants may either be delayed for spore formation, show a reduction in the abundance of spores produced, produce spores with shape and/or size defects, or simply produce lower levels of the mature, gray spore pigment46. Other mutants investigated thus far may be delayed or accelerated in the life cycle progression such as the mutants affected for the accumulation of signaling molecules (e.g., cyclic-di-GMP47).
A simple follow-up to the light microscopy technique described above is fluorescence microscopy using propidium iodide to stain chromosomal DNA nucleoids and fluorescently labeled wheat germ agglutinin to stain the cell wall of sporulation septa. Spores lacking a chromosome will be devoid of the red propidium iodide staining, while spores that contain less DNA than usual may be identified if they appear to have decreased staining (Figure 3). Wheat germ agglutinin may be used to stain the cell wall and differences in cell wall staining patterns (i.e., cell division defects) may be observed. In Figure 4 the wild-type strain of S. venezuelae, a species that is recently being used as another model streptomycete because of its faster life cycle and ability to sporulate in liquid45, has been stained with WGA-FITC to elucidate the ladder-like array of division septa that are typically seen early during sporulation.
The initial phenotyping strategies described here should result in the following: 1) Identification of mutant strains of interest for further study; 2) Acquired knowledge about the newly identified mutant and the potential role of the gene that has been mutated; 3) The formulation of a subsequent series of next experimental steps that can be used to further clarify the role of the gene in question. In the case of a newly identified streptomycete from the environment, the researcher will gain knowledge of the potential new species compared to already characterized species of Streptomyces.
Figure 1: Photograph of a representative agar plate demonstrating macroscopic colony phenotypes of S. coelicolor. The agar plate shows the fuzzy, gray visual appearance of the aerial mycelium for wild-type S. coelicolor strain MT1110 (WT) in comparison to various random transposon insertion mutants with developmental phenotypes. Mutants are either lacking an aerial mycelium [bald (bld)] or an aerial mycelium with reduced spore pigmentation [white (whi)]. Transposon mutants were generated using mini-Tn5 for insertion mutagenesis6,7. The strains were grown on MS agar for 5 days at 30 °C. Petri dish diameter, 100 mm.
Figure 2: Phase-contrast micrographs showing a representative aerial filament for S. coelicolor white mutant strains containing random transposon insertion mutations. (A) Shown is a representative wild type aerial filament that has undergone synchronous, regularly-spaced cell divisions, producing evenly shaped and sized spores (MT1110). (B–F) The remaining panels show the vastly different microscopic phenotypes of various white mutants that were isolated via random transposon mutagenesis. Panel B shows an aerial filament that has not undergone sporulation, but instead has produced bulging areas within the filament. Long arrows in C, D, and F indicate abnormally large spores that are characteristic of mutants MIC42, MIC43, and TH49. The short arrow in panel D indicates an example of a lysed spore compartment. Panel E shows the partially constricted smaller compartments that are typical of the spore chains produced by mutant TH10. The strains were grown on MS agar for 5 days at 30 °C. The mutants are unrelated to those shown in Figure 1. A wild type spore is approximately 1.1 µm on the long axis. Scale bar = 2 µm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3: Representative micrographs showing S. coelicolor mutant chromosome segregation phenotypes. (A) A diagram representation shows the typical wild-type, regularly-spaced staining appearance for a chain of spores (every spore contains chromosomal DNA) compared to the intermittent staining pattern for a mutant that displays a chromosome segregation defect. (B) Each pair of panels shows the same spore chain observed by Differential Interference Contrast (DIC) image on the left and a propidium iodide-stained fluorescence image is shown on the right. The wild-type phenotype (a, b) is compared to two random transposon insertion mutants (c, d and e, f). Arrows indicate spores devoid of DNA. The strains were grown on MS agar for 5 days at 30 °C. The mutants shown are unrelated to those in Figure 1 and Figure 2. Scale bar = 1 µm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4: Fluorescence micrograph of S. venezuelae wild-type strain stained with WGA-FITC. (A) A diagram of an aerial filament appears smooth with no indentations and no visible signs of sporulation using phase-contrast microscopy in comparison with the ladder-like array of cell wall staining that indicates an early stage of sporulation has begun in that same filament using WGA-FITC under fluorescence microscopy. (B) Micrographs of wild-type S. venezuelae. (a) Smooth aerial filaments are present among chains of spores. (b) Within the mycelium shown in panel a, one aerial filament at an early stage in development possesses a ladder-like array of cell wall deposition. Arrows indicate the regularly-spaced formation of cross-walls stained by WGA-FITC that develop synchronously within a single aerial filament as it undergoes developmentally-associated sporulation. The strain was grown on MYM(Maltose, Yeast extract, Malt extract) MYM agar for 38 h at 30 °C. Scale bar = 2 µm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Here we present protocols for beginning Streptomyces researchers to initiate studies by including the steps needed to propagate strains and prepare stocks for long-term storage. We then describe the protocols for visual and microscopic characterization of Streptomyces strains. Some typical initial steps in phenotyping developmental mutants are: 1) visual examination of the mutant colonies compared to wild type colonies on agar medium; 2) phase-contrast microscopy; and 3) fluorescence microscopy of sporogenic aerial hyphae. Based upon the phenotype displayed in these three steps, a variety of techniques may be employed to further discern the phenotype of a particular strain.
Initial phenotyping experiments are commonly used to characterize new species, identify mutants of interest, partially characterize mutants, and begin to discern the typical role of a particular gene based on the phenotype of an identified mutant. The methods described here have already been used in university teaching laboratories to identify and characterize a wide variety of Streptomyces mutants, including those with defects in cell division48,49,50,51,52,53,54, sporulation55,56, aerial mycelium formation57,58, antibiotic production59, second messenger signaling47, and chromosome segregation60. These techniques are the vital first steps to determining the phenotype of mutants in general and reveal a large amount of important information about the roles of genes of interest. The methods may easily be extended to other species of Streptomyces and have already been used to describe strains of S. griseus, S. venezuelae, S. scabies, and many other streptomycetes. The video protocols described here are expected to serve as an important resource for new researchers entering fields of Streptomyces research, such as in the area of drug discovery. This includes the new instructors who are working to combat the antibiotic resistance crisis and educating the countless numbers of new undergraduate student researchers joining the crowdsourcing efforts of the Small World Initiative.
The techniques described here can be easily adapted to college and high school classroom use in addition to research laboratories, using the modifications described in the video and text. Students in a first year microscopy module at a small liberal arts college were able to streak strains, take digital photographs of strains grown on agar media, and perform phase-contrast and fluorescence microscopy, which culminated in the submission of a portfolio of multi-paneled figures at the end of the 3 week module, representing 15 h of in-lab work. Approximately 160 first year students were responsible for the initial phenotyping of 320 novel transposon mutants. Undergraduate research students at three institutions participated in the initial phenotyping of additional mutants and the subsequent characterization of many of the strains. The comprehensive data obtained in a relatively short period of time, illustrate the value of the protocols described here. Hundreds of additional mutants have been stored as glycerol mycelial stocks for future characterization.
Following the initial experiments described here, a variety of methods may be employed to extend the quality of information pertaining to strains of interest. If the mutation is unknown, a genotyping method should be employed to determine the type and/or location of the mutation. For example, random transposon mutagenesis of the wild-type chromosome6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13 results in colonies that should undergo initial phenotypic screens such as those described above. Then the location of the transposon should be identified using a technique such as inverse polymerase chain reaction (iPCR)61. Determining the genotype of newly discovered mutants is an important step following initial characterization.
Some commonly used advanced methods for subsequent phenotyping analysis that may be mentioned in the classroom or explored through further research include green fluorescent protein (GFP) tagging to determine localization patterns for the protein of interest, gene expression analyses such as real time quantitative PCR (qPCR) and global gene expression patterns of wild-type versus mutant via RNA Sequencing (RNA-seq). Phenotyping skills are also required for genetic complementation analysis. In a complementation experiment, the wild-type copy of a gene is introduced into a mutated strain to determine whether the newly added allele can compensate for the loss-of-function of the mutated allele. Comparing the phenotype of the complemented strain to that of both the original mutant and the parental, wild-type strain is required.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
The authors would like to acknowledge Otterbein University for Undergraduate Student Research Fellowships and Student Research Fund Awards to GVK and SGK; and the Otterbein Professor Gilbert E. Mills Memorial Endowed Sabbatical Program Award and The Department of Biology and Earth Science Faculty Research and Scholarship Endowed Award to JAB. The Bert and Jane Horn Endowed Student Research Fund in the Sciences was awarded to GVK and SGK. The authors would also like to gratefully acknowledge Duquesne University funded Undergraduate Research Program Fellowships for GVK and SGK. Former Juniata College undergraduate research students, Ryan Johnson and Lindsey Draper contributed the microscopy images for Figures 2 and 3, respectively.
50% Glycerol | Sigma-Aldrich | G5516 | |
Immersion Oil (Type DF) | Cragille | 16482 | |
Lens Paper | Fisherbrand | 11-995 | |
Sterile Water | GeneMate | G-3250-1L | |
100% Ethanol | Sigma-Aldrich | E7023 | |
Propidium Iodide | Invitrogen | P1304MP | |
Toothpicks (flat) | Target | 081-22-1957 | |
Pipette Tips (10 ml) | GeneMate | P-1240-10 | |
Pipette Tips (200 ml) | GeneMate | P-1240-200Y | |
Pipette Tips (1250 ml) | GeneMate | P-1240-1250 | |
Wooden Applicators 6'' | Solon Care | 070809 | |
Cotton Swabs | Fisherbrand | 23-400-124 | |
Soy Flour | Bob's Red Mill | 1516C164 | |
D-Mannitol | Sigma-Aldrich | M4125-1KG | |
Agar | Sigma-Aldrich | A1296-1KG | |
Glycerol 100% | VWR amresco life science | 0854-1L | |
0.8% NaCl (Saline) | Sigma-Aldrich | SLBB9000V | |
1.2 mL freezer tube | NEST | 606101 | |
Ultra low (-80°C) freezer | SO-LOW | U85-18 | |
Cryo Safety Gloves | Bel-Art | H13201 | |
Petri dishes | Sigma-Aldrich | P5856-500EA | |
Cover slips #1.5 | Thomas Scientific | 64-0721 | |
Slides | Carolina | 63-2010 | |
Autoclave | Tuttnauer | 2540E | |
Phase-Contrast Microscope | Olympus | BX40 | |
Forceps | Carolina Biological | 624504 | |
Bunsen Burner | Carolina Biological | 706706 | |
Methanol | Sigma-Aldrich | 34860-1L-R | |
PBS (phosphate buffer saline) | Sigma-Aldrich | P4417-50TAB | |
WGA-FITC | Biotium | 29022-1 | |
Clear nail polish | OPI | 22001009000 | |
Image J | NIH | Free Software | |
100 mL beaker | Pyrex USA | 1000-T | |
1 L beaker | Carolina Biological | 721253 | |
1 L flask | Fisherbrand | S63274 | |
250 mL flask | Pyrex USA | 4980 | |
100 mL graduated cylinder | Carolina Biological | 721788 | |
500 mL graduated cylinder | Carolina Biological | 721792 | |
Stir Bar | Fisher Scientific | 22-271825 | |
Centrifuge | Eppendorf | 5810R | |
Camera for Microscope | Olympus | DP72 | |
Nitrile Examination Gloves (Med) | Bio Excell | 71011002 | |
Vortex Mixer | Carolina Biological | 701077 |