D. S.
Wunschel
*,
J. R.
Hutchison
,
B. L.
Deatherage Kaiser
,
E. D.
Merkley
,
B. M.
Hess
,
A.
Lin
and
M. G.
Warner
Chemical and Biological Signature Sciences, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, WA 99354, USA. E-mail: David.Wunschel@pnnl.gov; Tel: (509) 371-6852
First published on 14th November 2017
The process of sporulation is vital for the stability and infectious cycle of Bacillus anthracis. The spore is the infectious form of the organism and therefore relevant to biodefense. While the morphological and molecular events occurring during sporulation have been well studied, the influence of growth medium and temperature on the proteins expressed in sporulated cultures is not well understood. Understanding the features of B. anthracis sporulation specific to natural vs. laboratory production will address an important question in microbial forensics. In an effort to bridge this knowledge gap, a system for sporulation on two types of agar-immobilized soils was used for comparison to cultures sporulated on two common types of solid laboratory media, and one liquid sporulation medium. The total number of proteins identified as well as their identity differed between samples generated in each medium and growth temperature, demonstrating that sporulation environment significantly impacts the protein content of the spore. In addition, a subset of proteins common in all of the soil-cultivated samples was distinct from the expression profiles in laboratory medium (and vice versa). These differences included proteins involved in thiamine and phosphate metabolism in the sporulated cultures produced on soils with a notable increase in expression of ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporters annotated to be for phosphate and antimicrobial peptides. A distinct set of ABC transporters for amino acids, sugars and oligopeptides were found in cultures produced on laboratory media as well as increases in carbon and amino acid metabolism-related proteins. These protein expression changes indicate that the sporulation environment impacts the protein profiles in specific ways that are reflected in the metabolic and membrane transporter proteins present in sporulated cultures.
The composition and dynamics of the B. anthracis sporulation proteome has been studied by Liu et al. during different stages of sporulation. A number of distinct changes were observed in addition to sporulation proteins, including hydrolytic and exosporium specific proteins.6 The protein content of specific B. anthracis spore structures, such as the exosporium and coat, have also been studied in detail.7,8 As a result, proteins considered to be specific to spore formation and mature spores have been identified.6 Liu et al. also hypothesized that the proteins present in the spore are likely to be a reflection of the accumulated proteome from vegetative growth in addition to proteins produced in the mother cell and actively recruited into the mature spore, such as the coat and exosporium proteins. If true, it would be extremely useful to understand how different environmental conditions impact the protein composition of a mature spore. Differences in the B. anthracis sporulation proteome related to culture conditions have not been previously examined, nor has the proteome of spores produced on soil.
The proteomic changes in B. cereus and B. subtilis strains have been examined following broth culture to exponential phase in a medium containing soil extracted soluble organic matter (SESOM) and Luria Bertani broth.9,10 The ability of each species to germinate and form spores in each culture system is well documented.9 A comparison of the proteomes following growth in each medium showed that cultivation on soil extract stimulated an increase in the expression of ABC transporter proteins involved in importing peptides and amino acids into the cell. Expression of proteins involved with protein expression, polyamine, fatty acid, and amino acid biosynthesis was also increased in the soil medium samples. While these are important observations, not all members of genus Bacillus, or even the B. cereus group of species, have adopted similar survival strategies.
The B. cereus group of organisms includes strains belonging to the species B. cereus, B. thuringiensis, B. anthracis, as well as the lesser studied B. mycoides, B. pseudomycoides and B. weihenstephanensis. Members of genus Bacillus are abundant members of soil communities and B. cereus strains are saprophytic soil organisms that are able to cycle between germination, active vegetative growth, and sporulation in soils.9 By contrast, the relative genetic homogeneity of B. anthracis strains isolated from soils suggests that this species is largely dependent on a mammalian host to support germination and vegetative growth with relatively little vegetative growth in soils.11 Germination and vegetative growth has been suggested for B. anthracis in some soil environments,12,13 however different survival strategies are employed by B. anthracis relative to B. cereus. This suggests that the response of B. anthracis to the soil environment needs to be investigated.
Previous reports on B. anthracis spore proteomics have generated samples grown in laboratory media, while the proteomics of B. cereus cells cultured on a soil extract were performed on vegetative cells. A significant gap remains in our knowledge regarding the influence of soils on B. anthracis proteomic composition during the terminal stages of sporulation. This is particularly important for understanding sporulation events in the natural cycle of sporulation following release from an infected animal relative to intentional production on a laboratory medium. In order to address this gap, we have used a bottom-up proteomic analysis to examine the proteome of B. anthracis spores produced on three different laboratory culture media in comparison to spores produced on soil-agar systems. By comparing the proteomes of each type of sporulated culture, we sought to determine which proteins might be present in soil-produced spores that are missing or underrepresented in spores produced on laboratory media. We have identified such differences, leading to hypotheses about the environmental influences on soil-produced spores that may be absent when spores are produced on laboratory media.
Four types of solid media and one type of liquid medium were used for sporulation. The culture media used included: Nutrient Broth (NB) with CCY salts prepared as reported Buhr et al.14 Blood agar plates prepared as Tryptic Soy Agar (TSA) plates with 5% bovine blood (Hardy Diagnostics A188, Santa Maria, CA), Brain Heart Infusion (BHI) agar (BD Diagnostics, Sparks MD), and two immobilized soil agars. Soil agars were prepared by suspending 200 g of soil and 15 g of agar (BD 214530) in 1 L of water prior to autoclaving and dispensing into petri dishes. The soils used to create the soil agars were: Acid soil (WARD Scientific 470021-070, Rochester, NY) a commercially available potting soil, and Horizon C soil (WARD Scientific 470026-312) a subsurface soil. Three sets of replicate plates were inoculated for each medium and condition. In the case of blood agar, three sets of replicate plates were inoculated for culture at 25 °C for 7 days, three sets inoculated for culture at 37 °C for 7 days, and three sets inoculated for culture at 37 °C for 3 days. The combinations of experimental factors used in the study are outlined in Table 1.
Culture variables | Laboratory sporulation media | Soil sporulation media | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sporulation time | Sporulation temperature | TSA with 5% blood agar | Brain heart infusion agar (BHI) | Nutrient broth-CCY salts (NB-CCY) | Acid soil agar (+ blood amendment) | Horizon soil agar (+ blood amendment) |
3 day | 37 °C | 3 replicates | 3 replicates | |||
7 day | 25 °C | 3 replicates | 3 replicates | 3 replicates | ||
7 day | 37 °C | 3 replicates | 3 replicates | 3 replicates | 3 replicates |
Cultures were incubated for 3 to 7 days at either 37 °C or 25 °C. Spores were harvested by centrifugation (liquid cultures) or by flooding the plates with 10 mL of sterile water and scraping from agar plates. Each of three replicate sets of plates were combined and transferred to a conical tube and centrifuged for 20 minutes at 5000g. The supernatant was discarded and spores were resuspended in 30 mL sterile water. The spore suspensions were incubated at 4 °C for 7 days to promote vegetative cell lysis. Suspensions were then washed three additional times in the same manner in sterile water. Differential plate counts (with and without heating) as described above were done to enumerate the total number of cells and the total number of spores within a spore suspension and the percent spore values are provided in Table 2. Samples were inspected using phase contrast microscopy to confirm the presence of spores with less than 5% vegetative cells or debris. The total spore yield was calculated from the harvested sample and the fold increase calculated by dividing the yield by the inocula of vegetative cells in blood deposited on the plate. All samples were stored at 4 °C until protein sample preparation.
Medium, temperature, time | Ave spore yield | Yield % RSD | Ave % spore | Spore % RSD | Ave # proteins | Protein # % RSD |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Blood agar, 37 °C, 3 day | 3.7 × 1010 | 11 | 86.5 | 5.5 | 367 | 6 |
Blood agar, 37 °C, 7 day | 3.9 × 1010 | 11 | 85.7 | 7.7 | 353 | 6 |
Blood agar, 25 °C, 7 day | 1.8 × 1010 | 15 | 83.2 | 5.3 | 350 | 19 |
BHI agar, 37 °C, 7 day | 4.1 × 1010 | 9 | 97.9 | 1.3 | 363 | 5 |
NB-CCY salts, 37 °C, 3 day | 2.7 × 1010 | 50 | 120.5 | 25.0 | 346 | 8 |
Horizon soil, 25 °C, 7 day | 4.8 × 109 | 5 | 97.8 | 9.2 | 285 | 5 |
Horizon soil, 37 °C, 7 day | 2.2 × 108 | 79 | 120.8 | 22.4 | 293 | 14 |
Acid soil 25 °C, 7 day | 4.0 × 109 | 25 | 108.4 | 11.0 | 284 | 10 |
Acid soil 37° C, 7 day | 2.2 × 108 | 79 | 42.9 | 7.8 | 315 | 11 |
The spore purification method used in this study did not employ a gradient purification, instead a cold shock and water washing method was used. This method is similar to the spore preparation method used in previous proteomic studies.6,7 Spore preparations were visually inspected to ensure that less than 5% non-spore material was visible. This is consistent with the criteria used by Redmond et al.7 In the first comprehensive study on B. anthracis spore proteomics, Liu et al. previously recognized that some binding of residual debris or proteins may occur, but postulated that water washing was preferable to harsher methods because these proteins (1) likely bind in nature and (2) these protein may play unanticipated roles in B. anthracis biology.6
Peptide parent and fragment mass information was captured using an Orbitrap XL system (Thermo Electron, Thousand Oaks, CA). Eluate from the HPLC was ionized using a 75 μm ID fused electrospray emitter etched to a tip and operated at 2.25 kV relative to the mass spectrometer interface. The ion transfer tube was maintained at 200 °C and 200 V. The ion injection time was set for automatic gain control with a maximum injection time of 200 ms for 5 × 107 charges in the linear ion trap. Dynamic, data-dependent parent ion selection was performed where the top eight most abundant ions detected from the parent mass measurement in the Orbitrap were selected for MS-MS in the linear ion-trap analyzer using a 3 m/z window and relative collision energy of 35%.
The goal of this study was to characterize the proteomic differences induced by sporulation in natural vs. laboratory environments. Vegetative cells were propagated in bovine blood augmented with Brain Heart Infusion broth and used as an inoculum of approximately 4 × 106 cells per plate for each of the nine sporulation conditions listed in Table 1. The highest spore yields were obtained from the blood agar, BHI agar, and NB-CCY liquid sporulation media above 2.0 × 1010 spores per replicate. Horizon soil and Acid soil at 37 °C had the lowest spore yields at 2.2 × 108 spores per replicate (Table 2). By contrast, the media showing the highest percentage of spores were the soil, NB-CCY medium ore and BHI medium. The exception was the Acid soil cultures at 37 °C which had the lowest percentage of spores and lowest yield.
A Pearson correlation analysis was performed on all 81 datasets to measure the similarity of each dataset to each of the others (Fig. 1). The correlation analysis provided a measure of relative similarity from negatively correlated (−1) to uncorrelated (0) to positively correlated (+1), represented by a color scheme in the plot. The datasets from spores produced on Horizon soil at 25 °C appeared to have the best correlation to other Horizon 25 °C datasets and, to a lesser degree, the 25 °C Acid soil samples. However the trends were less clear for the remainder of the datasets from soil. The NB-CCY 37 °C datasets appeared to be most similar within the replicates of that medium type. The BHI 37 °C and blood agar 37 °C datasets appear to have better correlation to one another than to the blood agar 25 °C datasets and those from sporulated on other media.
While some general trends appear in the correlation analysis data, the specific proteins that differ between sporulated samples needed to be identified to help elucidate differences between natural vs. laboratory environments. To identify these protein profiles, three comparisons were done. The first comparison was performed to find the proteins that distinguish between laboratory and soil media conditions. The second comparison was performed to identify proteins that distinguish between cultures sporulated at 25 °C and 37 °C within the blood and soil media datasets. Finally, comparisons between specific media to find proteins that distinguished Horizon soil from NB-CCY as well as Horizon soil from blood agar media were completed.
Fig. 2 Venn diagram of proteins found in soil or laboratory media using spectral count values used for 672 proteins found with at least 2 counts and at least 10% of data sets. |
To identify proteins that were differentially expressed in sporulated cultures cultivated on soil vs. laboratory media, significance testing on relative protein abundances was performed. Proteins meeting the statistical significance (<0.05) and minimum log2 abundance difference (5.0) criteria were considered differentially expressed in datasets from soil agars (Acid or Horizon) and laboratory media (BHI agar, blood agar, or NB-CCY). A total of 154 proteins met this criteria and included proteins that were both unique to one group and those that were significantly increased in either soil or lab media; 37 proteins were enriched in samples sporulated on soil, and 117 proteins were enriched following sporulation on laboratory media (ESI Table 1†). Fig. 3 contains a heat map of 50 of the 154 proteins observed to be differentially present in spores generated on laboratory and soil media, including all of the proteins increased in or found only in spores from soil agars. The additional 104 proteins not included in Fig. 3 were only found in one or more types of laboratory media. Within these data, distinct clusters of proteins were present in BHI and blood media datasets but largely absent in the NB-CCY broth, Acid and Horizon soil agar datasets. Likewise, there were proteins present in the two types of immobilized soils that were largely absent in the NB-CCY broth, BHI and blood media datasets.
Fig. 3 Heat map showing the distribution of differentially expressed proteins in soil vs. lab media for 50 of the 154 proteins differentially regulated between the two growth conditions. |
The proteins enriched in laboratory media samples generally fell into the following predicted functional categories: nucleotide triphosphate metabolism, cysteine to thiamine metabolism, and general sugar and energy metabolism (specifically glycolysis, pyruvate metabolism and the TCA cycle) (Table 3). Additional proteins that showed increased abundance in laboratory media are annotated to be involved in fatty acid biosynthesis and degradation as well as valine, leucine, isoleucine amino acid metabolism. A number of ABC transporters annotated to be specific for amino acids, oligopeptides, lipoproteins, heme, sodium, and phosphonate were more abundant on laboratory media. Finally, the rod-shape determining protein Mbl and those involved in cell wall biosynthesis were also generally enriched in these samples.
Soil vs. laboratory media | 25 °C vs. 37 °C | ||
---|---|---|---|
Increased in soil | Increased in laboratory media | Increased in 25 °C | Increased in 37 °C |
Phosphate transport and metabolism | Glycolysis, pyruvate metabolism, TCA cycle | Cell envelope structural proteins | TCA cycle proteins |
Catalases | Fatty acid biosynthesis/degradation | Cell wall lytic proteins | Thiamine and biotin metabolism |
Antimicrobial peptide transport | Pyrimidine metabolism | Peptidases and Proteases | |
Sugar, amino acid and peptide transport |
Proteins with increased abundance in sporulated cultures produced on soil agars are annotated to function in phosphate metabolism and vitamin biosynthesis. The proteins annotated to function in glycine to thiamine interconversion and as catalases were also more abundant in spores produced on one or both soil agars relative to those from laboratory medium spores (Table 3) Finally, proteins annotated as ABC transporter proteins for phosphate and antimicrobial peptide transport efflux were also detected in spores generated on the soil media (BAS3022 and BAS3023) (Fig. 4).
Fig. 4 Heat map showing the distribution of the detected ABC transporters based on their spectral count values across all medium types and temperatures. |
The media samples were analyzed for their elemental content using ICP-OES (Table 4). The amount of potassium, phosphorus and sodium in the soil media was lower or undetectable in the soil media using optical emission. By contrast, the amount of aluminum, manganese and barium was higher in the soil media. The decrease in phosphorus in the two soil media correlates with the increase in ABC phosphate transporters observed in samples from cultures sporulated on soil (Fig. 4).
Analyte | Media type | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Blood agar | BHI | Horizon soil | Acid soil | NB-CCY salts | Bovine blood | |
Aluminum | ND | ND | 954 | 248 | ND | ND |
Barium | ND | ND | 6.4 | 5.27 | ND | ND |
Calcium | ND | ND | 2550 | 1330 | 86300 | 203000 |
Iron | ND | ND | 1590 | 486 | ND | 136000 |
Magnesium | 69.7 | ND | 1200 | 133 | 42200 | 8890 |
Manganese | ND | ND | 43.4 | 14.2 | ND | ND |
Phosphorus | 599 | 971 | 64.9 | ND | 1380000 | 83800 |
Potassium | 419 | 890 | ND | ND | 3010000 | 438000 |
Sodium | 3200 | 3350 | ND | ND | 383000 | 2710000 |
Strontium | ND | ND | 3.64 | ND | ND | ND |
Zinc | ND | ND | 6.78 | ND | ND | ND |
While there are many differences between sporulated cultures produced at each temperature, a few consistent themes were observed independent of whether the sporulated cultures were produced on blood or the two soils. The proteins annotated to be involved in vitamin metabolism, glycolysis, and the TCA cycle were increased at 37 °C relative to 25 °C. By contrast, more proteins thought to be present on or in the vegetative cell and spore surface, such as S-layer proteins, spore coat, cell wall lytic enzymes (e.g. muramyl-alanine amidase), were found in 25 °C samples. The effect was more pronounced in blood media where an increased amount of immune inhibitors (BAS0638 and BAS1197) and cell wall enzymes were observed at the lower temperature. A similar increase in spore surface and spore coat proteins was observed during sporulation of B. cereus at 20 °C by Bressuire-Isoard et al.24
There were cases where temperature had different impacts depending on which media the spores were produced on. The proteins annotated to be involved in pyrimidine and purine metabolism were increased at 37 °C in the cultures produced on soils while these proteins were more abundant in cultures sporulated at 25 °C in blood medium. This reinforces the complexity of environmental impacts on protein expression.
Different sets of ABC transporter proteins were found to be more abundant in sporulated cultures produced on laboratory media. ABC transporters annotated to be specific for sugars, amino acids, peptides and lipoproteins were more abundant in cultures produced on laboratory media. One class of ABC transporters annotated to be specific for bacteriocin (BAS3140) and bacitracin (BAS4334) were found to be increased in cultures sporulated on blood over those produced on soil. Based on the gene annotation, these ABC transporters are predicted to have a similar function as the FtsX-like permease transporter for antimicrobial peptides found in sporulated cultures produced on soil. This observation was largely driven by the blood 37 °C datasets and the same transporters were also found in the BHI, but not NB-CCY, samples (Fig. 4).
Generalized differences between laboratory media and soil systems were observed. These observations need to be expanded to other strains and extended to B. anthracis spores found naturally in soils, however ABC transporters and proteins with specific predicted functions appear to reflect the nutritional environment experienced during sporulation. Additional patterns of protein expression related to sporulation on soil that have not been described here may also exist. These may be present within the set of identified proteins whose functions are not all fully understood as well as those proteins currently identified only as hypothetical.
These observations aid our understanding of B. anthracis sporulation in a soil environment and may be useful in discrimination of laboratory-produced spores from those formed in soil. In turn, these observations help to addresses a basic research need in microbial forensics outlined in the U.S. National Academy of Science report on science needs in microbial forensics for, “⋯development of high-confidence methodologies to distinguish among natural, accidental, and deliberate outbreaks of infectious disease”.5 Additional research on the phenotypic state of B. anthracis and other pathogens in their natural state will be needed to address this research challenge in conjunction with the genomic methods discussed in the report. Furthermore, targeted studies on specific proteins that distinguish between growth environments need to be performed. These studies are necessary to establish their detectability following varied methods of sample production, preparation, storage and environmental aging.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c7an01412k |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2018 |