Inoculum Concentration Influences Pseudomonas aeruginosa Phenotype and Biofilm Architecture

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In infections, bacterial cells are often found as relatively small multicellular aggregates characterized by a heterogeneous distribution of phenotype, genotype, and growth rates depending on their surrounding microenvironment. Many laboratory models fail to mimic these characteristics, and experiments are often initiated from planktonic bacteria given optimal conditions for rapid growth without concerns about the microenvironmental characteristics during biofilm maturation. Therefore, we investigated how the initial bacterial concentration (henceforth termed the inoculum) influences the microenvironment during initial growth and how this affects the sizes and distribution of developed aggregates in an embedded biofilm model—the alginate bead biofilm model. Following 24 h of incubation, the viable biomass was independent of starting inoculum but with a radically different microenvironment which led to differences in metabolic activity depending on the inoculum. The inoculum also affected the number of cells surviving treatment with the antibiotic tobramycin, where the highest inoculum showed higher survival rates than the lowest inoculum. The change in antibiotic tolerance was correlated with cell-specific RNA content and O2 consumption rates, suggesting a direct role of metabolic activity. Thus, the starting number of bacteria results in different phenotypic trajectories governed by different microenvironmental characteristics, and we demonstrate some of the possible implications of such physiological gradients on the outcome of in vitro experiments.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftMicrobiology Spectrum
Vol/bind10
Udgave nummer6
ISSN2165-0497
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2022

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
This study was supported by the Lundbeck Foundation through grants R250-2017-633 (M.L.) and R105-A9791 (T.B.) and the Novo Nordisk Foundation Challenge program grant #0056411 (T.B.). M.L., L.K., S.L.B.L., and T.H.J. collected data. All authors analyzed the data. M.L. and L.K. wrote the manuscript with editorial inputs from T.H.J. and T.B. We declare no conflicts of interest.

Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2022 Lichtenberg et al.

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