is an important pathogen that causes chronic infections that involve multicellular aggregates called biofilms. Within biofilms, bacteria are surrounded in a protective extracellular matrix of proteins, exopolysaccharides (EPS), and DNA. A key matrix protein is an extracellular adhesin called CdrA, which promotes aggregation by binding to the EPS Psl and via CdrA-CdrA interactions. We hypothesized that because of its ability to bind Psl, CdrA would be important only for strains that use Psl as the primary EPS (e.g., the laboratory strain PAO1). Thus, we predicted that might be dispensable for biofilm formation by strains that do not utilize Psl (e.g., the laboratory strain PA14). Instead, we observed that deletion strains exhibited biofilm defects, regardless of their EPS dependencies. We screened a panel of clinical and environmental isolates for the presence of the allele and production of CdrA protein. All isolates that we tested contained the allele, and these alleles had minimal sequence variation compared to the reference PAO1 gene. Additionally, all isolates except one produced detectable CdrA protein. We investigated the possible mechanisms of CdrA-promoted biofilm formation in these strains where Psl is not dominant, and we discovered that CdrA binds to Pel. Although Psl and Pel chemical structures are distinct, this appears to be a specific interaction, since previous work has shown that CdrA binds discriminately to other EPS. Our findings provide new understanding of biofilm formation across isolates and emphasize the versatility of CdrA. Depending upon the strain, can use different exopolysaccharides (e.g., Psl, Pel, and alginate) to build its biofilm matrix. Previously, we demonstrated that the biofilm matrix protein CdrA binds to Psl, promoting biofilm formation and aggregate stability. As such, it was thought that CdrA might be important for biofilm assembly only in strains that rely upon Psl. However, past studies indicated that CdrA can interact with monosaccharides not present in Psl, including -acetylglucosamine, a constituent of another EPS called Pel. We discovered that CdrA also binds to Pel and promotes biofilm formation by strains in which Psl is not dominant. Thus, our findings suggest that CdrA plays a common role as a biofilm matrix cross-linker across isolates with different EPS.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7484184PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JB.00216-20DOI Listing

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