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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, January 2002, p. 11-19, Vol. 68, No. 1
0099-2240/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.68.1.11-19.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Medical Microbiology, Dermatology and Infection, Lund University, SE-223 62 Lund, Sweden,1 Laboratory for Electron Microscopy, State Serum Institute,2 Department of Microbiology, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark3
Received 11 June 2001/ Accepted 27 September 2001
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Formation of nonculturable coccoid forms was also described for Campylobacter jejuni, some marine Vibrio species, and some other gram-negative bacteria in response to temperature changes and nutrient starvation (3, 21, 34). Coccoid forms of some of these organisms have been shown to revert into dividing organisms upon improvement of the environmental conditions (21, 34).
The coccoid form of H. pylori is not culturable in vitro, and it has been reported that this form represents the morphological manifestation of cellular degeneration and cell death (26). However, studies of nonculturable H. pylori indicate viability of such forms (9, 15, 37, 46). In a study by West et al. (46), H. pylori was able to survive in water under certain conditions, retaining the ability to take up tritium-labeled thymidine (37). Oxidative metabolism has been observed in coccoid forms of H. pylori (9), and respiration was measured in cells starved for as long as 8 months (15). Moreover, coccoid forms of H. pylori were shown to adhere to eucaryotic cells and induce cellular changes similar to those induced by spiral forms, including tyrosine phosphorylation of specific proteins (36). Finally, BALB/cA mice orally infected with the coccoid form of H. pylori developed gastric inflammation with the same severity as animals infected with the spiral form (44).
Both an oral-oral route and a fecal-oral route seem to be involved in the transmission of infection (24, 28, 35). However,H. pylori has not been cultured from environmental specimens, from the oral cavity, or to a significant extent from feces, suggesting a role of nonculturable viable forms in disease transmission. Therefore, to understand the epidemiology of H. pylori infection, it is important to investigate the role of nonculturable cells as potential survival forms in extragastric environments. This study compared concentrations of cellular ATP, gene expression, total RNA, morphology, and cytoplasmic granules of polyphosphate (poly-P) and iron of culturable and nonculturable H. pylori cells maintained under different conditions. The metabolic response to nutrient stimulus or acid stress was analyzed to measure potential viability in suspensions of nonculturable H. pylori devoid of detectable spiral forms.
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In addition, at different time points during stationary-phase culture, 5 ml was washed once in PBS and resuspended in either spent broth, fresh broth, or fresh broth containing 0.2% (vol/vol) lysed human erythrocytes, prepared as previously described (1). After microaerobic incubation at 37°C, the cellular ATP, gene expression, and total RNA were analyzed as described below.
Cold starvation.
H. pylori cells were cold starved as described by Mizoguchi et al. (29), with the exception that GB was used for the initial culture. Aliquots (5 ml) of aging cold-starved H. pylori were harvested, centrifuged, and resuspended in (i) fresh broth, (ii) fresh broth adjusted to pH 5, (iii) fresh broth adjusted to pH 5 containing 5 mM urea, or (iv) fresh broth containing 0.2% (vol/vol) lysed human erythrocytes. Cellular ATP, total RNA, gene expression, bacterial morphology, and poly-P granule content were subsequently determined.
TEM.
Fixation, staining, and embedding of H. pylori cells for transmission electron microscopy (TEM) were as previously described with few modifications (2). Approximately 109 H. pylori cells were washed once with 5 ml of minimal essential medium (Gibco), resuspended in 5 ml of equal volumes of minimal essential medium and 0.1 M sodium cacodylate buffer (pH 7.4) containing 3% (vol/vol) glutaraldehyde (2), and fixed overnight at 4°C. After centrifugation at 3,000 x g, cells were resuspended in glutaraldehyde-cacodylate buffer. Dehydration and embedding in Epon 100 (Merck) were performed according to a standard protocol (2). For each time point, eight fields of bacteria from two separate grids were examined.
EFTEM.
The presence of iron in crystalline inclusions and of phosphate in poly-P granules was determined by energy-filtering TEM (EFTEM) as previously described (12). Samples were prepared as described above for TEM, with the exception that postfixation in osmium and uranyl acetate was excluded. Thin sections (70 nm) were examined at 120 kV in a Philips electron microscope (CM120 BioTWIN) equipped with a Gatan biofilter (GIF) including a cooled charge-coupled device camera (Gatan MSC 791). The elemental compositions of the crystalline inclusions and poly-P granules were analyzed and visualized using electrons with a filter energy of 59 eV for iron and 152 eV for phosphate.
ATP determination.
The intracellular ATP concentration of H. pylori was determined using a quantitative reaction based on bioluminescence as previously described (41). The samples were either directly analyzed for ATP or frozen at 20°C until assayed. Each culture supernatant was treated similarly to compare the extracellular and intracellular ATP contents (17). Light emission was measured with a 1251 luminometer (Bio-Orbit, Turku, Finland).
RNA isolation.
At regular intervals total RNA was prepared from approximately 5 x 108 cells of broth-cultured or cold-starved H. pylori using an RNeasy minikit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) according to the instructions of the manufacturer, with the exception that DNase was also added during the initial cell lysis step. RNA concentrations were determined in a Gene Quant spectrophotometer (Pharmacia Biotech, Uppsala, Sweden) and stored at 80°C. Aliquots of RNA preparations were treated with 50 µg of RNase A (Roche Molecular Biochemicals) per ml for 60 min at 37°C.
RT-PCR.
Reverse transcription (RT) and PCR assays were carried out in a single step using a Titan one-tube RT-PCR kit (Roche Molecular Biochemicals) according to sthe manufacturers instructions with a 0.2 µM concentration of each deoxynucleoside triphosphate (dNTP) and a 0.5 µM concentration of each primer. Primers specific for ureA (11), cagA (43), and the gene (tsaA) for a 26-kDa protein of H. pylori (16) were used. Primers for vacA were constructed and selected based on computer-assisted analysis of published sequences (GenBank/EMBL data bank accession numbers U05676, U5677, and U0714500). The forward primer, Vac1 (5'-GGCACACTGGATTTGTGGCA-3'), and the reverse primer, Vac2 (5'-CGCTCGCTTGATTGGACAGA-3'), amplified a 372-bp product of H. pylori strain CCUG 17874. cDNA was synthesized for 40 min at 50°C, and after incubation at 94°C for 4 min, the mixtures were subjected to 35 cycles of denaturation at 94°C, annealing at 47°C (ureA), 55°C (cagA), 49°C (vacA), or 62°C (26-kDa protein gene); and extension at 70°C. The initial 10 PCR cycles were carried out with 30-s intervals at each indicated temperature. PCR cycles 11 to 20 lasted for 45 s, and cycles 21 to 35 were for 1 min. After a final extension of 7 min, the PCR products were detected by 1.5% (wt/vol) agarose gel electrophoresis.
Real-time RT-PCR.
The ability of H. pylori to express urease A during extended culture, cold starvation, and nutrient stimulation was studied quantitatively by real-time RT-PCR with ureA primers as described above. The RT-PCR was done in two steps using rTth DNA polymerase (Applied Biosystems) in both steps. The RT reaction mixture volume was 10 µl, comprising 1x reverse transcriptase buffer (Applied Biosystems), 1 mM MnCl2, a 0.2 mM concentration of each dNTP, 0.5 µM reverse primer, 4 mg of bovine serum albumin per ml, and 1 U of rTth DNA polymerase. Two microliters of total RNA was added to the RT mixture. The incubation conditions for the RT were 70°C for 30 s, 47°C for 30 s, and 70°C for 15 min. PCR amplification of the synthesized cDNA was monitored on-line using the LightCycler instrument (Roche Molecular Biochemicals). PCR was carried out in 20-µl volumes containing 1x chelating buffer (Applied Biosystems), 2.5 mM MgCl2, 0.2 mM dNTPs, a 30,000-fold diluted stock solution of SYBR Green I (Roche Molecular Biochemicals), and 1.25 U of rTth DNA polymerase. Each reaction mixture was loaded into a glass capillary tube, and 2 µl of the cDNA was added. After denaturation at 94°C for 30 s, the samples were subjected to 45 cycles of denaturation (95°C for 0 s), annealing (47°C for 5 s), and extension (72°C for 15 s). The temperature transition rate was set to 20°C/s, and fluorescence was monitored at the end of each extension. The specificity of the amplification was determined by melting-curve analysis (a linear temperature increase from 60 to 95°C at a rate of 0.2°C/s with continuous signal acquisition) and gel electrophoresis. For each sample, a log-linear line was fitted automatically by selecting three points above the threshold band that represented a log-linear increase in fluorescence. The intersection of the extended line with the threshold band was used to determine the fractional cycle number of the crossing point (Cp), calculated automatically by the LightCycler software.
Statistical analysis.
The chi-square test was used to determine the poly-P granule content of nutritionally stimulated H. pylori cells versus controls. A P value of 0.05 was considered significant.
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FIG. 1. Viable counts and intracellular ATP content of H. pylori CCUG 17874 during extended culture in GB (A) or during cold starvation in PBS (B). Viable counts ( ) were estimated by dilution plating (CFU per milliliter), and cellular ATP ( ) was determined by bioluminescence. Error bars represent the standard deviations of the means of triplicate samples.
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FIG. 2. (A) TEM of thin sections of H. pylori cultured in broth for 2 days. Most of these cells were spiral and contained poly-P granules showing sublimation characteristics (arrow). The inset (magnified) shows part of a cell with an intact poly-P granule (small arrow) and crystalline iron (large arrow). (B) TEM of thin sections of H. pylori cultured in broth for 16 days. Three different morphological types are illustrated: a U form (large arrow), IC forms (arrowheads), and DC forms (small arrows). Bars, 1µm.
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TABLE 1. Cell morphology and cytoplasmic content of iron inclusions and poly-P granules in H. pylori during extended culture in GB (2 to 22 days) and during cold starvation in PBS (30 days to 28 months) determined by TEM
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Total RNA content.
Total RNA was purified from 5 x 108 cells of either exponential-phase broth cultures, extended broth cultures, or cold-starved cells. Exponential-phase, 2-day broth cultures, comprising >80% spiral-shaped organisms, contained on average 123 µg of total RNA per ml. Extended broth cultures, with >95% of the organisms being of coccoid morphology and a few percent being U forms, contained 21µg/ml after 10 days, 8.2 µg/ml after 20 days, 5.4 µg/ml after 40 days, and 4.3 µg/ml after 60 days of culture. Cold-starved cells contained 105 µg of RNA per ml after 3 months and 5.7 µg/ml after 28 months.
Gene expression.
All RNA preparations were negative with conventional PCR if the RT reaction was omitted or if the preparations were pretreated with RNase. Conventional RT-PCR was performed on broth-cultured H. pylori after 4, 20, 30, 40, and 60 days and after 1, 3, and 28 months of cold starvation. Expression of the vacA and ureA genes, as well as the gene for a 26-kDa protein (tsaA), was detected at all time points tested for both broth-cultured and cold-starved cells, demonstrating that these genes are expressed in nonculturable H. pylori. The cagA gene was expressed after 40 days but not after 60 days of broth culture and for up to 3 months of cold starvation. Expression of the ureA gene, detected by real-time RT-PCR, was performed on broth-cultured H. pylori after 4, 20, 40, and 60 days and after 3, and 28 months of cold starvation (Fig. 3). The Cp value, i.e., the cycle number where amplification is detected, is related to the target concentration. A low Cp value indicates an early detection of amplification, corresponding to a high concentration of target cDNA, and vice versa. Clear differences in the levels of ureA gene expression were noted (Fig. 3A). The Cp values were approximately 30 for broth-cultured H. pylori after 4, 20, and 40 days; 32 for broth-cultured H. pylori after 60 days; and 21 and 30 for cold-starved H. pylori after 3 and 28 months, respectively. The specificity of the amplification was verified by melting-curve analysis and gel electrophoresis (Fig. 3B and C).
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FIG. 3. Real-time quantitative PCR analysis of urease A gene expression of 4-, 20-, 40-, and 60-day broth-cultured and 3- and 28-month cold-starved H. pylori. (A and B) Real-time amplification curve (A) and melting-curve (B) analysis of amplified PCR products, using SYBR Green I and the LightCycler. (C) Agarose gel electrophoresis. Lanes 1 and 2, water control; lanes 3 and 4, 4-day cells; lanes 5 and 6, 20-day cells; lanes 7 and 8, 40-day cells; lanes 9 and 10, 60-day cells; lanes 11 and 12, 3-month cells; lanes 13 and 14, 28-month cells. The experiments were done in duplicate.
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FIG. 4. Effect of human erythrocyte lysate (0.2%, vol/vol) on cellular ATP content of H. pylori. (A) H. pylori was broth cultured for 12, 16, and 18 days, harvested, and transferred to either fresh broth ( ) or fresh broth containing erythrocyte lysate ( ) the erythrocyte lysate. Cellular ATP was determined at 2, 4, and 8 h of stimulation. Duplicate experiments were performed twice. Means and standard Sdeviations are indicated.
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FIG. 5. Comparison of urease A gene expression by real time RT-PCR of broth-cultured (40 days) and cold-starved (3 months) H. pylori prior to and after erythrocyte lysate stimulation (S). (A and B) Real-time detection (A) and melting-curve analysis (B) of amplified PCR products, using SYBR Green I and the LightCycler. (C) Agarose gel electrophoresis. Lanes 1 and 2, water control; lanes 3 and 4, 40-day cells; lanes 5 and 6, stimulated 40-day cells; lanes 7 and 8, 3-month cells; lanes 9 and 10, stimulated 3-month cells. The experiments were done in duplicate.
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The cell morphology and iron and poly-P contents of cells incubated for 12 h in fresh broth compared with nontreated (spent) organisms showed similar ultrastructural patterns (data not shown). However, after 12 h of incubation of 30-day cells with broth and erythrocyte lysate, the relative number of cells containing poly-P (46 of 274, or 16.8%) increased 3.7-fold (P = 0.0022) compared with cells incubated in fresh broth (8 of 160, or 5%). Three-month cells contained 105 µg of total RNA per ml. Similar cells incubated with erythrocyte lysate for 4 h contained on average 188µg of RNA per ml. All RNA preparations of cold-starved bacteria, except those from 28-month cells analyzed with cagA primers, were RT-PCR positive with either of the four primer sets. When 3-month cells were analyzed after 8 h of erythrocyte lysate stimulus using real-time RT-PCR, a clear increase in the urease A mRNA level was found compared with nonstimulated cells. The Cp value of stimulated cells was reduced to 22, compared with 29 for spent cells (Fig. 5A). The specificity of the amplification was verified by melting-curve analysis and gel electrophoresis (Fig. 5B and C).
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In this study, the culturability of H. pylori was highly correlated with the presence of spiral forms as observed by TEM. These results were not in accordance with a study by Kusters et al. (26) reporting that culturability was lost when approximately 50% of the H. pylori cells were still in the spiral form. This may be related to the use of optimized agar culture conditions. Andersen et al. (1) used a medium containing an erythrocyte lysate to culture H. pylori, with a morphological switch occurring at 18 h postinoculation, after 72 h of culture spherical cells devoid of urease activity regained this activity, and spiral-shaped cells appeared after transfer to fresh medium. However, it is difficult to know if a 72-h culture is completely devoid of spiral forms.
Several bacteria that transform into coccoids, such as H. pylori, Salmonella, and Vibrio cholerae, have homologues to poly-P kinase, which converts poly-P and ADP to ATP (25). Poly-P may be an important energy and phosphorus source also for cells during starvation, essential for endogenous metabolism, as proposed by Bode et al. (5). In this study, the presence of poly-P in all forms of H. pylori except DC forms correlated well with culturability and the presence of ultrastructurally intact cells. In addition, poly-P was abundant in nonculturable H. pylori with an ability to synthesize cellular ATP and mRNA in response to a nutrient stimulus. In Escherichia coli, poly-P accumulates as a result of cellular responses to deficiencies in an amino acid or nitrogen, and mutants of E. coli lacking poly-P kinase die after only a few days in stationary phase (25).
Iron is an essential growth factor for H. pylori, and the ability of tissue-invading pathogens to cause disease is generally related to iron-scavenging capacity (13). Sequence analysis indicates that H. pylori has such a capacity (42). In this study we showed, based on EFTEM and ultrastructural similarities, that crystalline inclusions in both spiral and coccoid forms of H. pylori contain iron. H. pylori has been found to bind human lactoferrin (13), but the lactoferrin binding capacity of the coccoid form was significantly higher than that of the spiral form (22). Intracellular crystal structures, associated with rapid growth, were described for Bacteroides nodosus (18). Frazier et al. (14) demonstrated such iron inclusions in H. pylori, and by expressing the H. pylori ferritin in E. coli, the growth rate significantly increased.
In agreement with Sörberg et al. (40), we found high levels of cellular ATP (
10 nM) in 2- to 5-day broth cultures, while 8-day cells of nonculturable coccoid and U forms contained approximately 1 nM. After day 12 of broth culture, cellular ATP declined (to
0.1 nM), and it was detectable up to day 23; however, cold-starved cells retained higher cellular levels of ATP over a prolonged period of time. Nonculturable structurally intact cells in such cultures may be biologically active although in the process of a slow cellular degeneration.
Bacterial mRNA usually has a half-life of 2 to 3 min and is rapidly degraded by enzymes in processes that regulate gene expression (7). Here, a clear loss of total RNA was observed after conversion to coccoid forms, which corresponds well to the findings of Narikawa et al. (31). However, in contrast to a complete degradation of rRNA observed in E. coli, it was shown by Monstein et al. (30) that coccoid H. pylori cells cleave rRNA in a specific pattern. Surprisingly, we found expression of mRNAs for three genes, i.e., vacA,ureA, and tsaA, in more than 2-year-old nonculturable cold-starved cell suspensions of H. pylori, comprising a majority of IC forms and few DC and U forms. Narikawa et al. (31) found mRNAs for urease A and a 26-kDa protein in bismuth- or bile salt-induced coccoids for an additional 5 days after negative cultures and suggested that this reflects residual life during cellular degradation.
In conclusion, spiral forms of H. pylori convert to coccoid forms through intermediate U forms. We found that nonculturable H. pylori cells rapidly produce ATP and synthesize ureA mRNA in responses to a human erythrocyte lysate stimulus. Moreover, in coccoid forms different inclusions containing iron and poly-P were accumulated, possibly representing energy stores during nutrient deprivation, suggesting that some coccoid forms of H. pylori could represent a survival mechanism in the human stomach or oral cavity, as well as outside the human host. Further studies are needed to establish the possible pathophysiological role of nonculturable H. pylori.
This study was supported by a grant from the Swedish Medical Research Council (16x04723), a Lund University Hospital ALF grant (to T. W), and grants from the Swedish Agricultural Research Council (50.0497), the Board for Technical Development, and the Danish National Research Foundation.
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