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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Jan 1996, 100-104, Vol 62, No. 1
V Williams and M Fletcher
The objectives of this work were (i) to use transposon mutagenesis to
produce mutants of Pseudomonas fluorescens that were altered in adhesion
ability and transport through porous media and (ii) to identify the
alterations in surface characteristics that were responsible for the
changes in attachment. Mutants of P. fluorescens were generated with
TnphoA, which enabled identification of mutants that were altered in
surface proteins. Transposon mutants were screened for alterations in
adhesion ability by attachment assays on hydrophobic polystyrene and
water-wettable polystyrene. Four TnphoA mutants with increased adhesion to
the hydrophobic surface and decreased adhesion to the water-wettable
surface were obtained. Transport of the strains through porous media was
evaluated by passing suspensions of each mutant and the parent through
columns containing quartz sand and determining the number of cells retained
in the columns. The mutants all demonstrated increased adhesion and
retention in the columns. Southern analysis demonstrated two types of
mutants with separate transposon insertion sites. Polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis of the strains demonstrated that the O antigen on the
lipopolysaccharide was either attenuated or absent. Lack of this
polysaccharide, and the consequent increased exposure of the lipid moiety
of the lipopolysaccharide, is probably responsible for the increase in
adhesion to the hydrophobic substrata and retention in the sand column.
This work combined with previous studies of attachment of P. fluorescens
demonstrates that more than one type of polymer can mediate the adhesion of
this organism to nonbiological surfaces.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Pseudomonas fluorescens adhesion and transport through porous media are affected by lipopolysaccharide composition
Center of Marine Biotechnology, University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute, Baltimore 21202, USA.
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