Source: UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA submitted to NRP
TRICARBOXYLIC ACID CYCLE MEDIATED REGULATION OF STAPHYLOCOCCAL BIOFILM FORMATION
Sponsoring Institution
State Agricultural Experiment Station
Project Status
COMPLETE
Funding Source
Reporting Frequency
Annual
Accession No.
0214461
Grant No.
(N/A)
Cumulative Award Amt.
(N/A)
Proposal No.
(N/A)
Multistate No.
(N/A)
Project Start Date
Jul 1, 2008
Project End Date
Jun 30, 2010
Grant Year
(N/A)
Program Code
[(N/A)]- (N/A)
Recipient Organization
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA
(N/A)
LINCOLN,NE 68583
Performing Department
VETERINARY BIOMEDICAL SCIENCE
Non Technical Summary
Bacterial growth occurs in one of two states: free-floating or attached to a surface (biofilm state). Biofilms are a complex aggregation of bacteria encapsulated in an adhesive exopolysaccharide (an excreted sugar polymer) matrix. These biofilms can be beneficial as in the case of ômicrobial fuel cellsö or deleterious, such as biofouling on the hulls of naval vessels; contamination of ethanol fuel production fermentors; biocorrosion of metals in the medical and food industries; dental caries; and bacterial infections associated with indwelling medical devices (e.g., catheters and artificial heart valves). The economic impact of biofilms in the United States has been estimated to be between several billion dollars to greater than 100 billion dollars annually due to equipment damage, product contamination, energy losses, and increased health care costs. Although bacterial biofilms negatively affect many major industries in Nebraska and the USA, our primary goal is in enhancing the health and well-being of Nebraskans by understanding and controlling staphylococcal biofilm-associated infections on indwelling medical devices. In support of this goal, we will identify the metabolic signals that mediate biofilm formation by Staphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus epidermidis. The identification of small molecules that regulate biofilm formation will provide a starting point for the design of novel compounds to prevent biofilm formation and biofilm associated infections.
Animal Health Component
10%
Research Effort Categories
Basic
80%
Applied
10%
Developmental
10%
Classification

Knowledge Area (KA)Subject of Investigation (SOI)Field of Science (FOS)Percent
71240101100100%
Goals / Objectives
Staphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus epidermidis are the leading causes of hospital-associated infections in the United States. Frequently, these hospital-associated infections involve the formation of a biofilm on an indwelling medical device. A biofilm is a complex aggregation of bacteria encapsulated by an adhesive exopolysaccharide matrix. This exopolysaccharide matrix provides structural stability to the biofilm, enhanced adhesion to surfaces, and protection from host defenses and antibiotics. Our lab recently demonstrated that the staphylococcal exopolysaccharide matrix is synthesized when the tricarboxylic acid cycle is repressed. Of importance, tricarboxylic acid cycle activity is regulated by the availability of nutrients, oxygen, and iron. The linkage of tricarboxylic acid cycle activity and exopolysaccharide synthesis and the susceptibility of the tricarboxylic acid cycle to environmental inactivation led us to speculate that one mechanism by which staphylococci perceive external environmental change is through alterations in tricarboxylic acid cycle activity. Thus, the central hypothesis of this application is that the tricarboxylic acid cycle acts as a novel signal transduction pathway to translate external stimuli/conditions into intracellular signals (e.g., NADH, ATP, aplha-ketoglutarate) that can stimulate or repress the activity of regulatory proteins. The goal of this proposal is to identify tricarboxylic acid cycle associated metabolites that regulate exopolysaccharide synthesis. The identification of small molecules that regulate biofilm formation will provide a starting point for the design of novel compounds to prevent biofilm formation. The long-term goal of this research is to determine how staphylococci perceive external environmental conditions to regulate adaptation to the host environment and to develop therapeutic strategies to disrupt bacterial adaptation to the host. Potential Impact: Approximately 50,000 to 120,000 persons develop a hospital-acquired bacteremia annually due to vascular catheterization; staphylococci account for nearly 50% of these infections. The pathogenesis of these biomaterial-related infections is directly linked to the ability of staphylococci to produce of PIA and form a biofilm. Identification of TCA cycle associated metabolites that regulate PIA synthesis is the first step in designing drugs to interfere with this synthesis. Due to the prevalence of staphylococcal biofilms in indwelling medical device associated infections, development of therapies to treat or prevent these infections would enhance the health of Nebraska patients and reduce the associated health care costs. If this research can be extrapolated to industrially important bacteria, then this work could represent a major economic boost to Nebraska industries (e.g., ethanol production facilities) and provide a stimulus for the development of new industries within Nebraska.
Project Methods
PIA synthesis is increased during growth in a nutrient-replete or iron-limited medium and under conditions of low oxygen availability. Additionally, stress-inducing stimuli such as heat, ethanol, and high concentrations of salt increase the production of PIA. To determine the metabolic changes that correspond with increased PIA synthesis, we will grow Staphylococcus aureus and S. epidermidis in conditions known to enhance PIA synthesis (e.g., in with 4% ethanol, low-oxygen, or low-iron), harvest the bacteria, isolate the cytosolic fractions, and analyze the metabolic status using NMR metabolomics (metabolomics is the study of the chemical patterns generated by cellular processes, like PIA synthesis.) In addition, we will determine the amount of cell-associated PIA produced as previously described. We have developed the differential NMR metabolomics technology as a systems biology tool. The approach enables us to follow functional changes by monitoring perturbations in the bacterial metabolome, where changes in the relative concentration of metabolites occur as a direct result of a modification in protein activity. Basically, NMR spectrum obtained from similar metabolomic data will cluster together in a 2D plot (2D scores plot). Therefore, an important component of the technique is the simultaneous preparation of reference cultures (untreated) and test cultures (e.g., 4% ethanol.) Test systems are bacterial cultures grown under conditions that perturb the natural state of the bacteria, such as mutations, addition of a drug, or changes in growth media or temperature. Briefly, ten reference and ten test cultures are prepared and grown to a uniform optical density, the bacteria are harvested by centrifugation, lysed, and suspended in a phosphate buffer. The cell debris is removed by centrifugation and the cell-free lysate is transferred to an NMR tube. A standard 1D 1H NMR spectrum is collected for each sample on a Bruker 500 MHz NMR spectrometer equipped with a cryoprobe, sample changer and software to automate the data collection. The NMR spectrum provides a "snap-shot" of the state of the bacteria, where each metabolite is represented by peaks in the NMR spectra and intensity is proportional to concentration. Major variations in the NMR spectra are analyzed using principal component analysis (PCA), a well-established statistical tool that transforms a multidimensional data set (NMR spectra) into a single-point in PC-space. The relative location of an NMR spectrum depends on the number and intensity of peaks, where spectra collected from cell-free lysates with similar metabolite composition will have a similar peak pattern and will therefore cluster together in a 2D scores plot. The metabolites associated with peaks from the spectra of cell-free lysates that cluster together will be correlated with the PIA data to determine if a correlation exists. To determine if a correlation is valid, we will incubate bacteria with an excess of the metabolite and examine the effect on PIA accumulation.

Progress 07/01/08 to 06/30/10

Outputs
OUTPUTS: In this study, we used NMR metabolomics to demonstrate that divergent environmental signals are transduced into common metabolomic changes that are "sensed" by metabolite-responsive regulators, such as CcpA, to affect staphylococcal exopolysaccharide biosynthesis. These data clarify one mechanism by which very different environmental signals cause common phenotypic changes. In addition, due to the frequency of the TCA cycle in diverse genera of bacteria and the intrinsic properties of TCA cycle enzymes, it is likely the TCA cycle acts as a signal transduction pathway in many bacteria. In addition, these data confirm the close linkage of TCA cycle activity and virulence factor synthesis. PARTICIPANTS: Personnel that worked on this project: Marat R. Sadykov, Post-doctoral fellow, 2006-2010 Stephanie Turner, Student worker 2009-2010 Megan Hiatt, UCARE student 2008-2010 Sarah Vitosh, Iowa State College of Veterinary Medicine Summer Scholars Program, 2010 Theodoric Mattes, UCARE student 2008-2010 Lauren Kreimer (Biochemistry, Ph.D. student) TARGET AUDIENCES: These results have been communicated to veterinarians and scientists by publication in peer-reviewed journals. PROJECT MODIFICATIONS: Not relevant to this project.

Impacts
This project has produced a vast amount of data that has resulted in two publications, 2 manuscripts in preparation, and 1 grant proposal submitted to the NIH. This research has allowed one post-doctoral fellow, one graduate student, and two undergraduate students to be trained in molecular microbiology and to understand the importance of animal health in state and national priorities. In addition, these results have been communicated to veterinarians and scientists by publication in peer-reviewed journals.

Publications

  • M.R. Sadykov, T.A. Mattes, T.T. Luong, Y. Zhu, S. R. Day, C.D. Sifri, C.Y. Lee, and G.A. Somerville. 2010. Tricarboxylic acid cycle-dependent synthesis of Staphylococcus aureus types 5 and 8 capsular polysaccharides. J. Bact. 192: 1459-1462. PMCID: PMC2820852.
  • M.R. Sadykov, B. Zhang, S. Halouska, J.L. Nelson, L.W. Kreimer, Y. Zhu, R. Powers, and G.A. Somerville. 2010. Using NMR metabolomics to investigate tricarboxylic acid cycle dependent signal transduction in Staphylococcus epidermidis. J. Biol. Chem. (In press).


Progress 10/01/08 to 09/30/09

Outputs
OUTPUTS: The objective of our proposal was to determine the intracellular metabolites that facilitate staphylococcal biofilm formation. To accomplish our objectives, we grew staphylococci under environmental conditions (i.e., iron-limitation and ethanol stress) that enhance biofilm formation and determined the metabolic changes associated with these conditions. Analyzing the NMR metabolomic data using a principle component analysis (PCA), revealed that the metabolic changes in a tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle mutant (SE1457-acnA::ermB) and wild-type S. epidermidis grown under iron-limiting conditions or with ethanol stress conditions are very similar. These data support our central hypothesis that the TCA cycle acts as a signal transduction pathway. Consistent with this hypothesis, annotation of the spectra revealed a core set of metabolites whose intracellular concentrations were altered in response to TCA cycle stress or inactivation. These alterations in metabolite concentrations, not only correlate with biofilm formation, but inactivation of regulators that respond to these metabolites (i.e., Rex and RpiR) alters biofilm formation. PARTICIPANTS: Greg Somerville (PI) - 2 calender months/year Robert Powers (Co-PI) - 2 calender months/year Marat Sadykov (Post-doctoral fellow) 3 calender months/year Bo Zhang (Graduate student)- 4 calender months/year TARGET AUDIENCES: This project has produced a wealth of data and has contributed to three publications in scientific journals. Our research publications are directed at scientists that study the environmental regulation of virulence determinant expression. PROJECT MODIFICATIONS: Nothing significant to report during this reporting period.

Impacts
This collaborative work has resulted in the identification of new regulators of biofilm formation, which will result in more publications and grant proposals. However, irrespective of the regulator(s) that mediate TCA cycle dependent control of biofilm formation, there is a causal relationship between TCA cycle activity and biofilms. The strong inverse relationship between PIA synthesis and TCA cycle activity led us to hypothesize that a "forced" induction of the TCA cycle would prevent staphylococci from synthesizing virulence determinants, forming a biofilm, and decreasing virulence in a rabbit endocarditis infection model. TCA cycle activity can be induced by preventing staphylococci from acquiring a TCA cycle derived amino acid necessary for growth. Inactivation of the glutamine transporter (glutamine is synthesized from the TCA cycle intermediate alpha-ketoglutarate) increased TCA cycle activity, transiently decreased PIA synthesis, and significantly reduced virulence. These data confirm the close linkage of TCA cycle activity and virulence factor synthesis and establish that this metabolic linkage can be manipulated to alter infectious outcomes. This has implications for the treatment of infectious bovine mastitis and bacterial infections associated with indwelling medical devices.

Publications

  • M. R. Sadykov, M. E. Olson, S. Halouska, Y. Zhu, P. D. Fey, R. Powers, and G. A. Somerville. 2008. Tricarboxylic acid cycle dependent regulation of Staphylococcus epidermidis polysaccharide intercellular adhesin synthesis. J. Bact. 190:7621-7632. PMID: 18820013
  • G.A. Somerville and R.A. Proctor. 2009. At the crossroads of bacterial metabolism and virulence factor synthesis in staphylococci. Microbiol. Mol. Biol. Rev. 73:233-248. PMID: 19487727.
  • Y. Zhu, Y. Q. Xiong, M. R. Sadykov, P. D. Fey, M. G. Lei, C. Y. Lee, A. S. Bayer, and G. A. Somerville. 2009. Tricarboxylic acid cycle dependent attenuation of Staphylococcus aureus in vivo virulence by selective inhibition of amino acid transport. Infect. Immun. 77:4256-4264. PMID: 19667045.


Progress 10/01/07 to 09/30/08

Outputs
OUTPUTS: The work on this project was begun in July of 2008 and as such we are at an early stage and do not have any outputs to report. PARTICIPANTS: One post-doctoral fellow (Marat Sadykov), one graduate student (Bo Zhang), and one undergraduate student (Stephanie Turner) are engaged in training and support on this project. TARGET AUDIENCES: The target audience for this research is the scientific community. We anticipate that completion of the project aims will define a previously undiscovered bacterial environmental sensing pathway. PROJECT MODIFICATIONS: Nothing significant to report during this reporting period.

Impacts
The work on this project was begun in July of 2008 and as such we are at an early stage and do not have any outcomes to report.

Publications

  • No publications reported this period