The Inoculation Method Could Impact the Outcome of Microbiological Experiments

For the past 150 years, bacteria have been investigated primarily in liquid batch cultures. Contrary to most expectations, these cultures are not homogeneous mixtures of single-cell bacteria, because free-floating bacterial aggregates eventually develop in most liquid batch cultures. These aggregate...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied and environmental microbiology 2018-03, Vol.84 (5)
Hauptverfasser: Kragh, Kasper Nørskov, Alhede, Maria, Rybtke, Morten, Stavnsberg, Camilla, Jensen, Peter Ø, Tolker-Nielsen, Tim, Whiteley, Marvin, Bjarnsholt, Thomas
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:For the past 150 years, bacteria have been investigated primarily in liquid batch cultures. Contrary to most expectations, these cultures are not homogeneous mixtures of single-cell bacteria, because free-floating bacterial aggregates eventually develop in most liquid batch cultures. These aggregates share characteristics with biofilms, such as increased antibiotic tolerance. We investigated how aggregates develop and what influences this development in liquid batch cultures of We focused on how the method of inoculation affected aggregation by assessing aggregate frequency and size using confocal laser scanning microscopy. Several traditional methods of initiating an overnight bacterial culture, i.e., inoculation directly from frozen cultures, inoculation using agar-grown cells, or inoculation using cells grown in liquid cultures, were investigated. We discovered a direct link between the inoculation method and the size and frequency of biofilm aggregates in liquid batch cultures, with inoculation directly from a plate resulting in the most numerous and largest aggregates. These large aggregates had an overall impact on the cultures' subsequent tolerance toward tobramycin, indicating that the inoculation method has a profound impact on antibiotic tolerance. We also observed a mechanism whereby preformed aggregates recruited single cells from the surrounding culture in a "snowball effect," building up aggregated biomass in the culture. This recruitment was found to rely heavily on the exopolysaccharide Psl. Additionally, we found that both and produced aggregates in liquid batch cultures. Our results stress the importance of inoculation consistency throughout experiments and the substantial impact aggregate development in liquid batch cultures may have on the outcomes of microbiological experiments. Pure liquid cultures are fundamental to the field of microbiological research. These cultures are normally thought of as homogeneous mixtures of single-cell bacteria; the present study shows that this is not always true. Bacteria may aggregate in these liquid cultures. The aggregation can be induced by the method chosen for inoculation. The presence of aggregates can significantly change the outcomes of experiments by altering the phenotype of the cultures. The study found a mechanism whereby preformed aggregates are able to recruit surrounding single cells in a form of snowball effect, creating more and larger aggregates in the cultures. Once formed, these agg
ISSN:0099-2240
1098-5336
DOI:10.1128/aem.02264-17