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ORIGINAL RESEARCH article

Front. Microbiol., 20 February 2018
Sec. Evolutionary and Genomic Microbiology

Identification of New Factors Modulating Adhesion Abilities of the Pioneer Commensal Bacterium Streptococcus salivarius

  • 1MICALIS Institute, INRA, AgroParisTech, Université Paris-Saclay, Jouy-en-Josas, France
  • 2MetaGenoPoliS, INRA, Université Paris-Saclay, Jouy-en-Josas, France
  • 3MaIAGE, INRA, Jouy-en-Josas, France
  • 4INRA, Plateforme MIMA2, Jouy-en-Josas, France
  • 5STLO, UMR 1253, INRA, Agrocampus Ouest, Rennes, France

Biofilm formation is crucial for bacterial community development and host colonization by Streptococcus salivarius, a pioneer colonizer and commensal bacterium of the human gastrointestinal tract. This ability to form biofilms depends on bacterial adhesion to host surfaces, and on the intercellular aggregation contributing to biofilm cohesiveness. Many S. salivarius isolates auto-aggregate, an adhesion process mediated by cell surface proteins. To gain an insight into the genetic factors of S. salivarius that dictate host adhesion and biofilm formation, we developed a screening method, based on the differential sedimentation of bacteria in semi-liquid conditions according to their auto-aggregation capacity, which allowed us to identify twelve mutations affecting this auto-aggregation phenotype. Mutations targeted genes encoding (i) extracellular components, including the CshA surface-exposed protein, the extracellular BglB glucan-binding protein, the GtfE, GtfG and GtfH glycosyltransferases and enzymes responsible for synthesis of cell wall polysaccharides (CwpB, CwpK), (ii) proteins responsible for the extracellular localization of proteins, such as structural components of the accessory SecA2Y2 system (Asp1, Asp2, SecA2) and the SrtA sortase, and (iii) the LiaR transcriptional response regulator. These mutations also influenced biofilm architecture, revealing that similar cell-to-cell interactions govern assembly of auto-aggregates and biofilm formation. We found that BglB, CshA, GtfH and LiaR were specifically associated with bacterial auto-aggregation, whereas Asp1, Asp2, CwpB, CwpK, GtfE, GtfG, SecA2 and SrtA also contributed to adhesion to host cells and host-derived components, or to interactions with the human pathogen Fusobacterium nucleatum. Our study demonstrates that our screening method could also be used to identify genes implicated in the bacterial interactions of pathogens or probiotics, for which aggregation is either a virulence trait or an advantageous feature, respectively.

Introduction

Streptococcus salivarius is one of the early colonizers of oral mucosa surfaces in neonates and is a commensal inhabitant of the oral cavity and digestive tract of healthy adults. S. salivarius is thought to exert a range of biological activities related to host health, in particular through its impact on the stability of microbiota composition, and its interaction with the host (Delorme et al., 2015). Despite the role of S. salivarius in both oral and digestive tract ecology, the factors that allow this bacterium to become established and then maintained in the host environment have not yet been the subject of extensive molecular and genetic analyses.

Bacterial adhesion is an initial and critical step in the oral colonization process. Adhesion processes may include attachment of the bacterial cell to host cells, to components of the extracellular matrix (ECM), to the salivary pellicle on teeth and to soluble factors, as well as to bacterial cells of the same strain (auto-aggregation) or genetically distinct species (co-aggregation). The ability of S. salivarius to colonize and maintain at multiple niches throughout the lifespan of its host suggests that this bacterium has evolved various adhesive strategies (Delorme et al., 2015). Numerous studies have described the remarkable capability of S. salivarius to bind to a wide range of biological surfaces, including buccal, hypopharyngeal, bronchial and cervicovaginal epithelial cell lines (Handley et al., 1987; Cosseau et al., 2008; Guglielmetti et al., 2010; Burton et al., 2013), various proteins in human saliva and of the ECM (Kilian and Nyvad, 1990; Schenkels et al., 1993; Couvigny et al., 2017) and to MUC2, a glycoprotein found in saliva and on mucosal surfaces of the ileum and colon (Kilian and Nyvad, 1990; Schenkels et al., 1993; McGuckin et al., 2011). S. salivarius is also able to form auto-aggregates (Couvigny et al., 2017) and to co-aggregate with numerous oral microorganisms such as the early colonizers Veillonella (Weerkamp and McBride, 1980, 1981; Handley et al., 1987) and Prevotella species (Levesque et al., 2003), the intermediate colonizers Fusobacterium nucleatum (Weerkamp and McBride, 1980; Levesque et al., 2003) and Candida albicans (Nikawa et al., 2001; Levesque et al., 2003), and the late colonizers Tannerella forsythia (Shimotahira et al., 2013) and Porphyromonas gingivalis (Levesque et al., 2003).

Our knowledge of the factors mediating adhesion of S. salivarius to biological surfaces remains limited. It has been shown that cell wall-associated fimbriae and fibrils are involved in this adhesion process. Indeed, fimbriae are responsible for adhesion to cervicovaginal epithelial cells and co-aggregation with Prevotella intermedia (Levesque et al., 2003; Burton et al., 2013), whereas fibrils mediate co-aggregation with Veillonella species and adhesion to various host surfaces (Weerkamp and McBride, 1981; Weerkamp and Jacobs, 1982). However, the genes encoding the constituent proteins of these structures remain to be identified. Recently, we showed that SrpB and SrpC, two adhesins belonging to the SRR (Serine-rich repeat) glycoprotein family, mediate auto-aggregation and adhesion to a wide range of epithelial cells and ECM proteins (Couvigny et al., 2017). SrpB/C proteins are glycosylated by the GtfE/F glycosyltransferases and are secreted through a dedicated transport system (i.e., the accessory SecA2/Y2 system) to the cell surface where they form fibril-like structures. Genes involved in SRR transport are located in the conserved secA2/Y2 genomic cluster, encoding the SecA2 motor protein, the SecY2 membrane translocation complex, the Asp1/2/3/4/5 chaperones and the GtfA/B/C/D glycosyltransferases. Components of the SecA2/Y2 system and GtfE/F are required for adhesion of S. salivarius to ECM and to epithelial cells and for auto-aggregation through their activities on SrpB/C (Couvigny et al., 2017).

The objective of this study was to identify novel factors that influence the ability of S. salivarius to form biofilms and host–cell interactions. Measurements of auto-aggregation are widely used as a method for evaluating the adhesion capacity of bacteria. We developed a strategy, based on immobilization of cell clusters in semi-liquid agar medium, to select mutants with increased and decreased auto-aggregation phenotypes. We then identified the genes involved and evaluated the ability of the auto-aggregation mutants to bind various host surfaces, to co-aggregate with F. nucleatum and to form biofilms.

Materials and Methods

Bacterial Strains, Growth Conditions, and DNA Manipulation

Bacterial strains used in this study are listed in Table 1. S. salivarius strains were grown as described previously (Couvigny et al., 2015b). F. nucleatum DSM 20482 was grown in brain heart infusion broth supplemented with 0.25% L-glutamic acid. Erythromycin (5 μg/ml) or kanamycin (1000 μg/ml) were added to the medium as required. PCRs were performed using Phusion® high-fidelity DNA polymerase (New England Biolabs, Ipswich, MA, United States). The primers were purchased from Eurofins MWG Operon (Germany) and are listed in Supplementary Table S1. When necessary, PCR products and DNA restriction fragments were purified using QIAquick kits (Qiagen). Plasmids were purified using the QIAprep Miniprep kit (Qiagen).

TABLE 1
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TABLE 1. Bacterial strains.

Isolation of Mutants with Altered Sedimentation Properties

Mutants with altered auto-aggregation properties were isolated using Todd Hewitt broth with 0.5% yeast extract with a low (0.03%) concentration of agar (Mercier et al., 2000, 2002; Llull et al., 2005). In these conditions, the extent of free displacement of bacteria in the environment depends on the viscosity of the semi-liquid (SL) medium.

Genome-Wide Mutagenesis and Characterization of Transposon Targets

Mutagenesis with pGhost9::ISS1 was performed essentially as described previously (Guedon et al., 2001). Briefly, cells containing pGhost9::ISS1 were grown overnight at 30°C in M17 medium in the presence of erythromycin. Stationary-phase cultures were diluted 1:1000 in fresh M17 broth without erythromycin, incubated for 150 min at 30°C and then at 38°C for 150 min. Samples were then diluted and plated at 38°C. Clones that grew on M17 medium containing erythromycin were selected as transposon mutants. Approximately 10,000 mutants were pooled and the mixture was deposited on the surface of 20 flasks containing SL medium and erythromycin. After 140 h of growth, 40 samples at the ends of the roots were removed and streaked out on agar plates to isolate single colonies of auto-aggregation mutants. The pGhost9::ISS1 insertion site was identified by cloning and sequencing of the chromosomal junctions as described previously (Couvigny et al., 2015b).

Whole-Genome Sequencing of Spontaneous Auto-aggregation Mutant Strains

Streptococcus salivarius spontaneous mutants JIM9443 and JIM9447 were sequenced using the Illumina HiSeq 2000 system at I2BC1, with around 7 million paired-end 100 base-long reads. Strains JIM9442, JIM9445, JIM9446, and JIM9448 were sequenced using the SOliD technology 4 platform at MetaGenoPoliS2, with around 5 million single 50 base-long reads. SOLiD reads containing adapter and/or barcode fragments with a mean quality value <20 and low-quality reads (with 3 or more “N”) were discarded. Clean reads were mapped to the reference JIM8777 strain using Bowtie (Langmead et al., 2009) and variations were detected using the Tablet software (Milne et al., 2013). The Illumina and SOLiD sample sequences are available in the SRA database (project ID PRJEB23560).

Construction of Deletion Strains by Natural Transformation

Mutant derivatives of strain JIM8777 were constructed by exchanging the coding sequence of a target gene (sequence between the start and stop codon) for an erythromycin or kanamycin resistance cassette devoid of a transcriptional regulatory region (e.g., promoter or terminator), as described previously (Couvigny et al., 2015b). After peptide-induced transformation, integration of the antibiotic cassette at the appropriate location was verified by PCR (Supplementary Table S1).

Adhesion Assay

Adhesion of S. salivarius strains to HT-29 human epithelial cell lines (colon adenocarcinoma; ATCC HTB-38) and MUC2 proteins (M2378, Sigma) was performed as described previously (Couvigny et al., 2017). Experiments were repeated at least three times, each in duplicate.

Electron Microscopy

Transmission and scanning electron microscopy (TEM and SEM, respectively) experiments were conducted as described previously (Couvigny et al., 2017). Images were acquired and analyzed at the MIMA2 microscopy and imaging platform3.

Auto-aggregation and Co-aggregation Assays

The ability of bacterial cells to auto-aggregate and co-aggregate was assessed by a spectrophotometric procedure (Handley et al., 1987). Stationary-phase cells from overnight cultures were centrifuged, washed twice with PBS and resuspended in aggregation buffer to an optical density at 600 nm (OD600) of 0.5 ± 0.05 (Burton et al., 2013). To determine percentage auto-aggregation, bacterial suspensions were placed in a glass test tube, vortexed, and the suspensions immediately transferred to a cuvette at room temperature (20 ± 1°C). The OD600 of the bacterial suspensions was monitored at various time points and the percentage auto-aggregation was expressed as follows: (1 - ODt/ODt0) × 100, where ODt represents the OD600 of the suspension at time t (4, 20, or 24 h) and ODt0 the OD600 at time zero. To evaluate the impact on auto-aggregation of various pre-treatments of bacteria, cell suspensions prepared in aggregation buffer as described above were treated with EDTA (2 mM, instantaneous), Ca2+ (CaCl2, 2 mM, instantaneous), proteinase K (0.1 M, 2 h, 37°C), trypsin (0.1 M, 2 h, 37°C) and by heat (85°C, 10 min). Proteinase K- and trypsin-treated cells were harvested by centrifugation and the pellets washed twice in aggregation buffer before the auto-aggregation assay. To determine percentage co-aggregation, suspensions of S. salivarius strains were combined with an equal volume of a test strain (F. nucleatum) or aggregation buffer (as a control) and incubated at room temperature, without agitation, for at least 6 h. The percentage co-aggregation was calculated using the following equation: 100 × [OD600 (S. salivarius control + F. nucleatum control)/2 - OD600 (S. salivarius + F. nucleatum)]/OD600 (S. salivarius control + F. nucleatum control)/2, where OD600 (S. salivarius control + F. nucleatum control) represents the OD600 of control tubes containing only the S. salivarius or F. nucleatum strain at time t and OD600 (S. salivarius + F. nucleatum) represents the OD600 of the mixture of both suspensions at time t. Experiments were repeated at least three times, each in duplicate.

Biofilm Formation

Biofilms were grown in microscope grade μclear® base 96-well plates (Greiner Bio-one, France) and analyzed by confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) as described previously (Couvigny et al., 2015b). Briefly, surface-associated bacteria were fluorescently labeled with 5 μM Syto9 (Invitrogen, France) and analyzed under a Leica SP2 CLSM at the MIMA2 platform. Cells labeled with Syto9 were exposed to an argon laser beam, set to 20% of its maximal power, at 488 nm. The resulting fluorescence was collected in the 500–550 nm range with a photomultiplier. Images (512 pixels × 515 pixels) were recorded through a water immersion long distance objective (NA = 0.8) at micrometer intervals through the thickness of the biofilm. Three independent experiments were performed for each strain. Three-dimensional projections of the biofilm structures were reconstructed using the Easy 3D function of the IMARIS 7.0 software (Bitplane, Switzerland). Extraction of quantitative biofilm geometric descriptors from the CSLM series was performed with the PHLIP Matlab-based image analysis toolbox (Mueller et al., 2006).

Statistical Analysis

Variables are expressed as the means and standard deviations of results obtained from three (auto-aggregation, co-aggregation, and adhesion assays) or two (CLSM analysis) independent experiments. Comparisons between groups of variables were analyzed using the student’s t-test. GraphPad Prism version 6 (GraphPad software Inc., La Jolla, CA, United States) was used for statistical analyses. A P-value < 0.05 was considered to be statistically significant.

Results

Auto-aggregation of S. salivarius

Twenty-eight representative strains of S. salivarius were screened for auto-aggregation (Figure 1A and Table 1). Most of the S. salivarius isolates tested under our culture conditions formed aggregates, although their auto-aggregation ability was found to be highly strain specific (ranging from 9 to 56%). We chose one of the most strongly aggregating strains, JIM8777, for further study. The chromosome sequence of JIM8777 has already been determined (Guedon et al., 2011).

FIGURE 1
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FIGURE 1. Diversity and environmental variation of the auto-aggregation phenotype in S. salivarius. (A) Auto-aggregation abilities of S. salivarius isolates. (B,C) Impact of various environmental factors on the auto-aggregation ability of S. salivarius JIM8777.

To characterize the environmental factors influencing JIM8777 auto-aggregation and to clarify the nature of the interactions, we evaluated the impact of various treatments on auto-aggregation levels. Auto-aggregation was most efficient at pH 8 (Figure 1B). We also found that addition of Ca2+ led to an increase in auto-aggregation, whereas heat-treatment, addition of EDTA, proteinase K or trypsin led to a reduction in auto-aggregation (Figure 1C), suggesting that proteins are involved in these cell-to-cell interactions.

Use of Semi-liquid Medium to Isolate S. salivarius JIM8777 Mutants with Altered Auto-aggregation Phenotypes

To identify JIM8777 genes involved in auto-aggregation, we first isolated spontaneous mutants, which exhibited increased or decreased auto-aggregation phenotype. For this, we used a strategy initially developed for selection of mutants with alterations in their ability to form chains. This method is based on differential sedimentation of bacteria in semi-liquid (SL) agar medium according to chain-forming capacity (Mercier et al., 2000, 2002; Chapot-Chartier et al., 2010). In these conditions viscosity of SL medium restricts free displacements of bacteria and sedimentation represents the main means of displacement for bacteria which do not have properties of autonomous motility. When colony of non-chain-forming bacteria initiates from one cell, simultaneous growth and sedimentation results in streaked colony (Llull et al., 2005). Contrariwise, chain-forming bacteria in these conditions are trapped in extracellular agar matrix and do not sediment, consequently forming round colonies. It is possible to observe and to select mutants escaping such immobilization as they form faster sedimenting “roots” from round colonies (Mercier et al., 2002).

We hypothesized that similarly to chain-forming bacteria, the auto-aggregates of JIM8777 strain will counteract sedimentation, resulting in formation of round colony. In keeping with this reasoning, we found that the auto-aggregates of the JIM8777 strain became immobilized in the SL medium (Figure 2A, left panel, black arrow). After 140 h of growth, we observed the appearance of “roots” and “caps” from these round colonies, presumably formed by faster- and slower-sedimenting spontaneous mutants, respectively (Figure 2A, left and middle panels, red and blue arrows). Samples of the roots and of the caps were then removed and streaked out on agar plates to isolate single colonies of SL medium sedimenting mutants. Analysis of bacterial growth in liquid medium confirmed that selected mutants exhibited altered auto-aggregation phenotypes (representative images of the two groups of mutants are presented in Figures 2B,C). Compared to the parental strain JIM8777, the slower-sedimenting mutants (such as JIM9443) showed a hyper-auto-aggregating phenotype in liquid medium, whereas the faster-sedimenting mutants (including JIM9445) showed diminished auto-aggregation capacity (Figures 2B,C).

FIGURE 2
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FIGURE 2. Identification of factors involved in S. salivarius JIM8777 auto-aggregation. (A) Growth of S. salivarius JIM8777 in semi-liquid (SL) agar medium (Left) and selection of spontaneous (Middle) and IS-induced (Right) mutants. Black arrow indicates round colonies formed by the auto-aggregating wild-type cells in SL conditions. Red and blue arrows indicate faster-sedimenting and slower-sedimenting mutants appearing as hanging down roots and as caps from round colonies, respectively. (B,C) Auto-aggregation abilities of the wild-type (JIM8777) and two spontaneous sedimenting mutants in liquid medium. Faster- (red, JIM9445) and slower-sedimenting (blue, JIM9443) mutants in SL agar medium correspond to non- and hyper-auto-aggregation mutants in liquid medium, respectively. (D) Organization of the genes involved in auto-aggregation. Mutated genes are in gray. The lengths of the genes and intergenic regions are drawn to scale. (E) Auto-aggregation and adhesion of the wild-type JIM8777 and reconstructed auto-aggregation mutants to the (F) HT-29 epithelial cell line, (G) MUC2 glycoprotein and (H) Fusobacterium nucleatum. Means and standard deviation values correspond to at least three independent experiments done in duplicate. Results were normalized against those of JIM8777. Asterisks indicate statistical significance (Student’s unpaired t-test: P < 0.005).

We then performed a similar experiment in which bacterial cells containing the whole genome-wide random insertion library of S. salivarius (obtained after pGhost9::ISS1 mutagenesis) was inoculated on the top of a flask with SL medium. After 140 h, the faster-sedimenting “roots” appeared and were collected for further analysis (Figure 2A, right panel). This experiment led to the isolation of 40 additional faster-sedimenting mutants.

Identification of Auto-aggregation Factors of S. salivarius JIM8777

The gene mutations potentially associated with the altered sedimentation and auto-aggregation phenotypes were mapped by whole genome sequencing of 6 spontaneous mutants and cloning and sequencing of the chromosomal DNA fragments flanking the insertion site of ISS1 from 11 insertion mutants. Altogether, 12 genes were identified from the two independent experiments (Figure 2D and Table 2). Two different spontaneous mutations were identified in the asp1 gene, as well as two different ISS1 insertions in the genes cshA, secA2, gtfG and gtfH. Our independent selection of several mutations in the same gene confirms the importance of these genes in the auto-aggregation phenotype.

TABLE 2
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TABLE 2. Auto-aggregation-associated genes of S. salivarius JIM8777.

To confirm the phenotypes of the bacterial mutants and the correlation between sedimentation in SL conditions and auto-aggregation in liquid medium, we constructed a series of mutants in the JIM8777 background carrying deletions of the genes in which we identified the point mutations associated with altered sedimentation (Table 1). We found that deletion of the asp1, asp2, bglB, cshA, gtfE, gtfG, gtfH, liaR, secA2, and srtA genes, point mutations in which induced a faster-sedimenting phenotype in SL conditions, led to a decreased auto-aggregation phenotype in liquid medium (Figure 2E). As cwpB and cwpK, two genes coding for enzymes predicted to synthetize cell wall polysaccharides (WPS), are located in the same operon (Figure 2D), we chose to include only one of these genes (cwpK) for further analyses and confirmed that the ΔcwpK mutant showed an increased auto-aggregation phenotype (Figure 2E). Altogether, our results confirmed that deletion of the genes identified as having an impact on bacterial sedimentation also affected the auto-aggregation properties of S. salivarius. This confirms that our method, based on differential sedimentation in SL conditions, provided an efficient tool for the specific isolation of mutants with altered auto-aggregation properties.

Capacity of JIM8777 Derivatives to Adhere to Host Surfaces and to Co-aggregate with Fusobacterium nucleatum

We investigated the ability of the auto-aggregation mutants to adhere to the human colonic epithelial cell line HT-29 (Figure 2F), to the mucin 2 (MUC2) glycoprotein (Figure 2G) and to the human pathogen F. nucleatum (co-aggregation) (Figure 2H). In comparison to the wild-type JIM8777, 5 out of 10 of the deletion mutants with altered auto-aggregation capacity (Δasp1, Δasp2, ΔgtfE, ΔsecA2, and ΔsrtA) displayed a significant (P < 0.005) reduction in adhesion to both HT-29 and MUC2 (Figures 2F,G). Moreover, the cwpK (increased auto-aggregation) and srtA (decreased auto-aggregation) deletion strains showed a drastic reduction (>90%; P < 0.0001) in co-aggregation with F. nucleatum compared to the wild-type strain (Figure 2H). The co-aggregation ability of the ΔgtfG strain was also altered but to a lesser extent (50% reduction). Similar results were obtained with the spontaneous mutants asp1spont1 (JIM9445), asp2spont (JIM9447), cwpBspont (JIM9442) and cwpKspont (JIM9443) (data not shown).

Role of JIM8777 Auto-aggregation Factors in Biofilm Development

Cell aggregation and biofilm formation are interconnected bacterial properties (Sanchez et al., 2010; Couvigny et al., 2017). We evaluated whether the auto-aggregation factors we had identified also contributed to biofilm formation by analyzing biofilms formed by JIM8777 derivatives and comparing them with those of the wild-type strain by confocal microscopy. After 5 h of sessile growth, all mutants were able to form biofilms under the conditions employed. JIM8777 formed a relatively dense and filamentous biofilm that covered the entire available surface (Figure 3). Biofilms formed by the mutants differed in their architecture from JIM8777 (P < 0.05 compared to wild-type for at least one geometric descriptor of the biofilm structure). With the exception of strain ΔgtfG, all non-auto-aggregative strains (asp1spont1asp1asp2, ΔbglBgtfEgtfHsrtA) developed compact and uniform biofilms. Hyper-auto-aggregative mutants (cwpBspont, cwpKspont and ΔcwpK) formed excessively filamentous biofilms compared to wild-type. This result indicates that the S. salivarius factors implicated in cell-to-cell interactions in planktonic conditions also influence the morphology and spatial organization of bacterial biofilm communities.

FIGURE 3
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FIGURE 3. Auto-aggregation factors of JIM8777 and their impact on biofilm architecture. (A) 3-D reconstructions of representative confocal images of 5-h-old biofilms formed by S. salivarius strains. Scale bars: 50 μm. (B) Biomass volume (μm3), maximum coverage (%) and maximum height (μm) were normalized against values obtained for JIM8777 and measured for each strain in nine different CLSM image stacks from two independent experiments. Student’s t-test was used for statistical analysis (∗∗∗∗P < 0.0001, ∗∗∗P < 0.0005, ∗∗P < 0.005, P < 0.05).

Evaluation of the Cell Surface Morphology of the cwpK and asp1 Mutants by Electron Microscopy

To provide insight into the role played by the products of the cwpK and asp1 genes in auto-aggregation, we evaluated the cell surface morphology of the corresponding mutants by scanning and transmission electron microscopy (SEM and TEM, respectively). We observed by SEM that the JIM8777 cells exhibited a rough and irregular surface that was partially covered by fibril-like structures (Figure 4A and Supplementary Figure S1). The ΔcwpK mutant displayed a smooth surface with fibril-like structures, whereas the Δasp1 mutant exhibited a rough surface without fibrils. Furthermore, the ΔcwpK Δasp1 mutant exhibited an additive phenotype, with both a smooth and bald surface. These findings suggest that surface roughness is linked to WPS biosynthesis involving CwpK, whereas Asp1 may be responsible for the presence of the extracellular fibrils.

FIGURE 4
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FIGURE 4. Surface structure of S. salivarius strains. (A) Scanning electron micrographs of S. salivarius strains. Scale bars: 1 μm. (B) Transmission electron micrographs of osmium tetroxide-treated S. salivarius strains. Scale bars: 0.2 μm. (C) Transmission electron micrographs of osmium tetroxide- and ruthenium red-treated S. salivarius strains. Black arrows indicate cell wall polysaccharide (B) and the glycoproteinaceous fibril-like structures (C). Scale bars: 0.2 μm.

TEM of osmium tetroxide-stained cells of the wild-type strain revealed the presence of an electron dense layer outside the cell wall, potentially corresponding to WPS (Figure 4B). The overall morphology of JIM8777 and Δasp1 was similar, however, the electron-dense layer was completely absent in micrographs of the ΔcwpK and ΔcwpK Δasp1 strains. A similar result was obtained with the spontaneous cwpKspont (JIM9443) mutant, confirming that the point mutation resulted in loss of function (Supplementary Figure S2).

We have shown previously that the SecA2/Y2 transported glycoproteins form fibril-like structures that can be observed outside of the cell wall of ruthenium red-stained cells (Couvigny et al., 2017). Accordingly, here we found that the fibrillar layer (mainly composed by SRR glycoproteins) was greatly diminished in the Δasp1 and ΔcwpKΔasp1 mutants (Figure 4C), as well as in the asp1spont1 and ΔsrtA strains (Supplementary Figure S2). Altogether, these results indicate that CwpB and CwpK are involved in WPS production and show that Asp1 and SrtA play a role in fibril detection, and therefore in the SRR glycoprotein synthesis pathway. It should also be noted that the surface glycoprotein layer appeared denser in the cwpK mutant background (i.e., ΔcwpK and ΔcwpKΔasp1), suggesting that WPS may hamper glycoprotein formation, exposure, or detection.

Discussion

In this study, we show that auto-aggregation is a property of many isolates of the pioneer colonizer and commensal bacterium S. salivarius. Auto-aggregation is influenced by a variety of environmental factors and involves bacterial proteins (Figure 1). To identify the proteins determining cell-to-cell interactions of a highly auto-aggregating S. salivarius strain (JIM8777), we developed a screening strategy based on immobilization of cell clusters in SL medium that allowed us to select for mutants with altered auto-aggregation. Twelve proteins involved in different aspects of auto-aggregation in S. salivarius were identified. It has been shown previously that the surface-exposed adhesin, SrpB, mediates auto-aggregation in S. salivarius JIM8777 (Couvigny et al., 2017). Our screen led us to identify mutations in several genes coding for components of the maturation and secretion pathway of SrpB that had a negative impact on the bacterial auto-aggregation phenotype: the SecA2 motor protein, the Asp1 and Asp2 chaperones, the GtfE glycosyltransferase and the SrtA sortase. We also demonstrated that the SrtA sortase is directly involved in SRR glycoprotein surface exposure. Redundancy of mutations in the SrpB pathway confirmed the importance of this pathway in S. salivarius auto-aggregation.

New determinants of S. salivarius auto-aggregation were also identified by our screening method in SL medium: CshA, BglB, CwpB, CwpK, GtfG, GtfH and LiaR. Homologs of these genes in other streptococcal species have already been reported to contribute to auto-aggregation. The Streptococcus gordonii adhesin CshA exhibits auto-aggregative properties (McNab et al., 1999) and the BglB homolog in Streptococcus mutans contributes to auto-aggregation by linking bacterial cells and extracellular molecules of glucan (Shah and Russell, 2004; Lynch et al., 2007).

Two enzymes (CwpB and CwpK), which are required for WPS biosynthesis in S. salivarius JIM8777, also participate in auto-aggregation. However, in contrast to the other genes identified, mutations in cwpB and cwpK caused an increase in auto-aggregation. A similar increase in auto-aggregation has already been associated with mutations in the WPS locus of Streptococcus mitis (Rukke et al., 2012). It is possible that WPS in JIM8777 blocks surface accessibility to S. salivarius adhesins, as demonstrated for WPS in Streptococcus pneumoniae (Sanchez et al., 2011). Interestingly, we found that the surface of S. salivarius cwp mutants displayed a much denser external fibrillar layer than the wild-type strain JIM8777, also suggesting that WPS could interfere with surface exposure of auto-aggregation promoting cell surface factors, such as SrpB.

We also identified two additional S. salivarius auto-aggregation factors: the GtfG and GtfH glycosyltransferases. Glycosyltransferases participate in the maturation and/or synthesis of various extracellular compounds, including glucans, cell wall polysaccharides, lipoteichoic acid, peptidoglycan and glycoproteins. Therefore, mutations in genes encoding the GtfG and GtfH glycosyltransferases may affect some of these compounds, leading to consequences for the auto-aggregation capacity of these mutants.

The ability of bacterial cells to form auto-aggregates is considered as an advantageous feature under certain environmental conditions, however, excessively large cell clusters may increase the probability of their clearance (Koop et al., 1989). This suggests that bacteria have finely tuned regulatory mechanisms to ensure optimal levels of auto-aggregation. In this study, we provide evidence that auto-aggregate formation is both positively and negatively modulated by various environmental factors and several bacterial components, indicating that their formation is a dynamic and controlled process. LiaR may be part of this regulatory network: we found mutations in the gene encoding this protein led to decreased auto-aggregation. LiaR homologs are implicated in the cell wall stress response and control expression of several surface proteins (Suntharalingam et al., 2009; Klinzing et al., 2013), which may have an effect on auto-aggregation. Our results indicate that auto-aggregation is a multifactorial process in S. salivarius but further investigations are required for a more comprehensive assessment of how these factors act and interplay.

Auto-aggregation measurements are widely used as an indirect method for evaluating the adhesion capacity of bacteria, including potential probiotics (Saeed and Heczko, 2007; Walter et al., 2008; Xu et al., 2009; Piwat et al., 2015). In line with this strategy, we identified mutations in genes that also affect adhesion of S. salivarius to host surfaces, such as MUC2 and HT-29 cells (i.e., asp1, asp2, gtfE, secA2, and srtA), and co-aggregation with the human pathogen F. nucleatum (i.e., cwpK, gtfG, srtA). As mentioned above, these mutations impact the SRR glycoprotein synthesis pathway. SRR glycoproteins, which are important for colonization and persistence in mice, also mediate adhesion of S. salivarius to host cells and host-derived molecules, such as MUC2 (Couvigny et al., 2017). In addition to their effect on SRR glycoproteins, GtfE glycosylates numerous other extracellular proteins in S. salivarius (Couvigny et al., 2017) and the genome of S. salivarius JIM8777 encodes 23 potential SrtA substrates (i.e., LPTXG-containing proteins) (Delorme et al., 2015). The activity of SecA2, Asp1 and Asp2 is strictly dedicated to SRR glycoprotein synthesis, whereas SrtA and GtfE may have a much broader role and additional proteins, other than those transported by the SecA2/Y2 system, could be involved in the adhesive phenotypes observed in this study.

We also identified mutations affecting co-aggregation with F. nucleatum, a multifaceted bacterium that plays a pivotal role in oral biofilm community development (Kolenbrander and London, 1993) and is associated with periodontal disease and colon cancer (Han, 2015). It has been shown that co-aggregation results predominantly from the specific interaction of a cell-surface protein of a given/specific bacterium with a polysaccharide receptor expressed on the surface of a second bacterium (Rickard et al., 2003). The requirement for this type of interaction would explain the decreased co-aggregation phenotype of cwpB and cwpK mutants of S. salivarius. It also suggests that the WPS of S. salivarius act as receptors for the binding of F. nucleatum. This explanation is supported by published data showing that WPS expressed by other oral bacteria are implicated in co-aggregation with F. nucleatum (Rosen and Sela, 2006). In addition to mutations in WPS genes, co-aggregation was also decreased in the srtA and gtfG mutants, indicating the existence of at least one more S. salivarius determinant that remains to be identified. This determinant is likely to be a glycosylated SrtA-anchored surface protein, which may function as an adhesin. This unknown protein is not transported by the SecA2Y2 system and is not a LPXTG-containing CshA or SRR protein. Thus, S. salivarius JIM8777 appears to express both a cell surface adhesin and a carbohydrate receptor specific for the interaction with F. nucleatum. This may provide a partial explanation for the strain specificity of the co-aggregation reaction (Weerkamp and McBride, 1980; Handley et al., 1987; Arzmi et al., 2015; Barbosa et al., 2015; Lima et al., 2017).

In summary, we have identified several auto-aggregation factors from our screen of a random insertion mutant library and selection of spontaneous mutants in SL medium. All of these factors influence biofilm architecture, demonstrating that cell–cell interactions governing auto-aggregation and biofilm development are interconnected. Some of these factors also contribute to the adhesion of S. salivarius to host biological substrates, including MUC2, the human colonic epithelial cell line HT-29, and F. nucleatum. These auto-aggregation factors may exert key functions in terms of human health and disease by playing roles in bacterial colonization and persistence, microbial community development and pathogen elimination. Identification of these factors paves the way for further molecular studies. In addition, our results demonstrate that the screening method developed in this study can be used to identify the genes involved in bacteria-bacteria and bacteria–host interactions. This method could be especially useful if applied to isolates, for which molecular biology tools have not yet been developed. Our screen may also facilitate molecular studies of microbial community development of pathogenic or probiotic bacteria, for which aggregation is either a virulence trait or beneficial characteristic, respectively.

Author Contributions

SK and EG designed the experiments and wrote the manuscript. BC, SK, NP, BQ, A-LA, CD, TM, RB, NL, and EG performed the experiments. BC, SK, NP, A-LA, RB, PR, NL, and EG performed the analyses. All of the authors critically reviewed the manuscript and approved the final version.

Funding

This work was supported by the Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA) and by the EU MetaHit (Metagenomics of the Human Intestinal Tract) project HEALTH-F4-2007-201052. BC was the recipient of a fellowship from the Ministère de l’Education Nationale.

Conflict of Interest Statement

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Acknowledgments

This work has benefited from the facilities and expertise of the high-throughput sequencing core facility of the I2BC (Centre de Recherche de Gif – http://www.i2bc.paris-saclay.fr/) and MetaGenoPoliS (http://mgps.eu/). We thank the MIMA2 platform (http://www6.jouy.inra.fr/mima2) of the INRA research center in Jouy-en-Josas (France) for access to their confocal and electronic microscopy facilities. Julien Deschamps (Micalis Institute, France) and Sophie Chat (IGDR, Université de Rennes 1, France) are warmly acknowledged for CLSM and TEM image analysis, respectively. We thank Céline Gautier, Japhète Mbouyou-boungou, Fabienne Beguet-Crespel and Victor Bandaly for technical assistance. We thank Diana R. Martin (The Institute of Environmental Science and Research, New Zealand) for providing S. salivarius strains. We gratefully acknowledge Pascale Serror (Micalis Institute, France) for critical reading of the manuscript. We would also like to thank Emma Pilling (Ph.D.) for English-language editing of the manuscript.

Supplementary Material

The Supplementary Material for this article can be found online at: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmicb.2018.00273/full#supplementary-material

Footnotes

  1. ^http://www.i2bc.paris-saclay.fr/
  2. ^http://mgps.eu/
  3. ^http://www6.jouy.inra.fr/mima2

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Keywords: adhesion gene, biofilm formation, aggregation, sedimentation, host interactions, commensal bacteria, Streptococcus salivarius

Citation: Couvigny B, Kulakauskas S, Pons N, Quinquis B, Abraham A-L, Meylheuc T, Delorme C, Renault P, Briandet R, Lapaque N and Guédon E (2018) Identification of New Factors Modulating Adhesion Abilities of the Pioneer Commensal Bacterium Streptococcus salivarius. Front. Microbiol. 9:273. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2018.00273

Received: 22 November 2017; Accepted: 06 February 2018;
Published: 20 February 2018.

Edited by:

Baolei Jia, Chung-Ang University, South Korea

Reviewed by:

Sarah Maddocks, Cardiff Metropolitan University, United Kingdom
Cheorl-Ho Kim, Sungkyunkwan University, South Korea
Tom Reese, National Institutes of Health (NIH), United States

Copyright © 2018 Couvigny, Kulakauskas, Pons, Quinquis, Abraham, Meylheuc, Delorme, Renault, Briandet, Lapaque and Guédon. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: Eric Guédon, eric.guedon@inra.fr

These authors have contributed equally to this work.

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