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Single-cell analysis in situ in a Bacillus subtilis swarming community identifies distinct spatially separated subpopulations differentially expressing hag (flagellin), including specialized swarmers

Authors :
Romain Briandet
Krzysztof Hinc
Daria Julkowska
I. Barry Holland
Harald Putzer
Cédric Absalon
Margareth Renault
Simone J. Séror
Soumaya Laalami
Kassem Hamze
Sabine Autret
Institut de génétique et microbiologie [Orsay] (IGM)
Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
Dept Med Biotechnol, Intercoll Fac Biotechnol
Med Acad Gdansk
Inst Biol Physicochim, UPR9273
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
MICrobiologie de l'ALImentation au Service de la Santé (MICALIS)
Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-AgroParisTech
Agence Nationale pour la Recherche [ANR-05-blan-0138]
Universite Paris-Sud
Fondation de la Recherche Medicale
Region Ile de France
CNRS [UPR 9073]
Universite Paris-Diderot
Source :
Microbiology-Sgm, Microbiology-Sgm, 2011, 157, pp.2456-2469. ⟨10.1099/mic.0.047159-0⟩
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
HAL CCSD, 2011.

Abstract

The non-domesticated Bacillus subtilis strain 3610 displays, over a wide range of humidity, hyper-branched, dendritic, swarming-like migration on a minimal agar medium. At high (70 %) humidity, the laboratory strain 168 sfp + (producing surfactin) behaves very similarly, although this strain carries a frameshift mutation in swrA, which another group has shown under their conditions (which include low humidity) is essential for swarming. We reconcile these different results by demonstrating that, while swrA is essential for dendritic migration at low humidity (30–40 %), it is dispensable at high humidity. Dendritic migration (flagella- and surfactin-dependent) of strains 168 sfp + swrA and 3610 involves elongation of dendrites for several hours as a monolayer of cells in a thin fluid film. This enabled us to determine in situ the spatiotemporal pattern of expression of some key players in migration as dendrites develop, using gfp transcriptional fusions for hag (encoding flagellin), comA (regulation of surfactin synthesis) as well as eps (exopolysaccharide synthesis). Quantitative (single-cell) analysis of hag expression in situ revealed three spatially separated subpopulations or cell types: (i) networks of chains arising early in the mother colony (MC), expressing eps but not hag; (ii) largely immobile cells in dendrite stems expressing intermediate levels of hag; and (iii) a subpopulation of cells with several distinctive features, including very low comA expression but hyper-expression of hag (and flagella). These specialized cells emerge from the MC to spearhead the terminal 1 mm of dendrite tips as swirling and streaming packs, a major characteristic of swarming migration. We discuss a model for this swarming process, emphasizing the importance of population density and of the complementary roles of packs of swarmers driving dendrite extension, while non-mobile cells in the stems extend dendrites by multiplication.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Microbiology-Sgm, Microbiology-Sgm, 2011, 157, pp.2456-2469. ⟨10.1099/mic.0.047159-0⟩
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....baddc210d1317fc18054ffd29af84864
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1099/mic.0.047159-0⟩