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Adhesion preference of the sticky bacterium sp. Tol 5. | LitMetric

Adhesion preference of the sticky bacterium sp. Tol 5.

Front Bioeng Biotechnol

Department of Biomolecular Engineering, Graduate School of Engineering, Nagoya University, Nagoya, Aichi, Japan.

Published: February 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The Gram-negative bacterium Tol 5 has a strong ability to stick to various surfaces, thanks to a protein called AtaA, which allows it to adhere to both hydrophobic and hydrophilic materials.
  • Experiments showed that Tol 5 is particularly sticky even on surfaces designed to repel adhesion, such as certain non-stick polymers, while exhibiting weaker adhesion to a specific zwitterionic surface.
  • The study's findings may help improve the understanding of bacterial adhesion and could be useful for controlling bacteria in bioprocessing and addressing medical issues related to pathogenic bacteria.

Article Abstract

Gram-negative bacterium sp. Tol 5 exhibits high adhesiveness to various surfaces of general materials, from hydrophobic plastics to hydrophilic glass and metals, via AtaA, an trimeric autotransporter adhesin Although the adhesion of Tol 5 is nonspecific, Tol 5 cells may have prefer materials for adhesion. Here, we examined the adhesion of Tol 5 and other bacteria expressing different TAAs to various materials, including antiadhesive surfaces. The results highlighted the stickiness of Tol 5 through the action of AtaA, which enabled Tol 5 cells to adhere even to antiadhesive materials, including polytetrafluoroethylene with a low surface free energy, a hydrophilic polymer brush with steric hindrance, and mica with an ultrasmooth surface. Single-cell force spectroscopy as an atomic force microscopy technique revealed the strong cell adhesion force of Tol 5 to these antiadhesive materials. Nevertheless, Tol 5 cells showed a weak adhesion force toward a zwitterionic 2-methacryloyloxyethyl-phosphorylcholine (MPC) polymer-coated surface. Dynamic flow chamber experiments revealed that Tol 5 cells, once attached to the MPC polymer-coated surface, were exfoliated by weak shear stress. The underlying adhesive mechanism was presumed to involve exchangeable, weakly bound water molecules. Our results will contribute to the understanding and control of cell adhesion of Tol 5 for immobilized bioprocess applications and other TAA-expressing pathogenic bacteria of medical importance.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10875045PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fbioe.2024.1342418DOI Listing

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