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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, January 2003, p. 686-690, Vol. 69, No. 1
0099-2240/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.69.1.686-690.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Effect of Stress on the Ability of a phlA-Based Quantitative Competitive PCR Assay To Monitor Biocontrol Strain Pseudomonas fluorescens CHA0
Fabio Rezzonico,1 Yvan Moënne-Loccoz,2 and Geneviève Défago1*
Phytopathology Group, Institute of Plant Science, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH), CH-8092 Zürich, Switzerland,1
UMR CNRS Ecologie Microbienne, Université Claude Bernard (Lyon 1), F-69622 Villeurbanne, France2
Received 29 April 2002/
Accepted 6 September 2002

ABSTRACT
A quantitative competitive PCR (QC-PCR) assay targeting the
phlA gene of
Pseudomonas fluorescens CHA0 was developed and
tested in vitro. Statistically significant, positive correlations
were found between QC-PCR and both CFU and total cell number
when studying cells in log or stationary phase. The correlations
disappeared when considering stressed cells.

INTRODUCTION
The root-colonizing bacterium
Pseudomonas fluorescens CHA0,
which can protect plants from soil-borne fungal diseases, has
become a model for studying the behavior of biocontrol inoculants
in the soil ecosystem (
2-
4,
10,
11,
15). When introduced into
the environment, CHA0 may under certain conditions persist as
mixed populations of culturable and nonculturable cells (
2,
4,
15), which limits the usefulness of colony counts.
Recently, quantitative competitive PCR (QC-PCR) has been successfully used as a rapid and sensitive means to detect and enumerate bacteria in pure culture, food, and environmental samples (5, 9). The method is based on the coamplification, with the same set of primers, of the DNA sequence to be quantified (the target) and a known amount of a similar sequence of slightly different size (the competitor). It allows quantification of the target, which in turn enables an estimation of the number of corresponding cells.
The objectives of this work were to determine if QC-PCR could be applied to enumerate P. fluorescens CHA0 cells in vitro and to assess the effect of stress on the performance of the assay. We chose the Pseudomonas gene phlA, implicated in the synthesis of the biocontrol metabolite 2,4-diacetylphloroglucinol, as the target.

Experimental samples.
Cells were obtained at 27°C with shaking (160 rpm) after
growth for 14 to 16 h (log cells; 33 samples) or incubation
for 48 h to 7 days (stationary-phase cells; 25 samples) in tryptic
soy broth (Difco, Detroit, Mich.), Luria-Bertani broth (LB)
(
13), King's B broth (KB) (
7), or M9 broth medium containing
0.1% glucose (
10). Stress conditions (for 81 samples in total)
were obtained by resuspending LB- or KB-grown log cells as follows:
(i) 4.5 h to 7 days in M9 medium containing 0.1% glucose and
1.5 M NaCl (NaCl stress [
10]) (17 samples), (ii) 1 to 21 days
under nitrogen atmosphere in M9 medium containing 0.1% glucose
and 50 mM potassium hexacyanoferrate (oxygen limitation and
low [230 mV] redox potential [
10]) (13 samples), (iii) 0.5 h
to 14 days in 60 mM citric acid-80 mM Na
2HPO
4 (pH 4) or 50 mM
glycine-11 mM HCl (pH 3; acidity stress) (17 samples), (iv)
overnight in 0.9% NaCl containing 0.5 to 50 mM CuSO
4 (metal
stress) (18 samples), or (v) by prolonged incubation (7 to 30
days) in KB or LB (16 samples).
Culturable cells of CHA0 were enumerated on Kings B agar (for all 137 samples) and total cells were counted by immunofluorescence microscopy (3, 10) (for 102 of 137 samples). Total cell counts and CFU were similar in the absence of stress, whereas nonculturable cells were found in large amounts under stress conditions.
Since modifications in DNA packing and conformation resulting from exposure to stress may affect PCR efficacy (12), we assessed the effects of antibiotics inhibiting de novo protein synthesis, i.e., chloramphenicol (200 µg/ml), or DNA supercoiling, i.e., ciprofloxacin (20 µg/ml), on PCR amplification. This was done after incubating CHA0 cells with or without the antibiotics at pH 7 (control) and 4 (acidity stress) in the buffers described above. Antibiotics were used at concentrations enabling growth of CHA0 in LB.

Competitor oligonucleotide.
The 20-bp primers PhlA-1f and PhlA-1r (Table
1) were designed
for amplification of the target oligonucleotide based on the
published (
14)
phlA sequence. Primer specificity was verified
by BLAST alignment of the 418-bp amplicon and confirmed by PCR
analysis of selected Phl-producing and non-Phl-producing bacteria.
The competitor oligonucleotide was constructed by PCR using
PhlA-1r and PhlA-1c. Primer PhlA-1c, designed as described by
Celi et al. (
1), is 40 bp long and has a 20-bp region that binds
41 bp downstream of the PhlA-1f binding site. The remaining
overhanging 20-bp sequence is identical to PhlA-1f. Thus, PCR
yields a 377-bp competitor which can be amplified by the same
primers as the target. The competitor was separated on 2% agarose
and purified with a QIAquick gel extraction kit (Qiagen, Basel,
Switzerland). Its concentration was determined both spectrophotometrically
and visually on agarose by comparison with DNA standards. Correct
sequences of both target and competitor were verified by sequencing.

DNA extraction and PCRs.
Various methods were tested to extract and amplify DNA from
CHA0. Direct amplification of cell lysate was carried out, as
it proved to give reproducible results which were as good as
when purified DNA was used (data not shown). Cell suspensions
(5 µl) were heated for 10 min at 99°C with 95 µl
of lysis buffer (50 mM KCl, 10 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.3], 0.1% Tween
20) in a PTC-100 thermal cycler (MJ Research, Waltham, Mass.).
PCR amplification was carried out in 20-µl reaction mixtures
containing 4 µl of cell lysate, 4 µl of internal
standard (for QC-PCR only), and 1
x PCR buffer. The latter contained
100 µM (each) dATP, dCTP, dGTP, and dTTP, 0.07 U of
Taq polymerase (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Piscataway, N.J.) per
µl, and 0.20 µM (each) primers. Bovine serum albumin
(0.25 mg/ml; Biofinex, Praroman, Switzerland) and 5% dimethyl
sulfoxide were used as PCR enhancers when amplifying
phlA. During
competitor construction, PCR was performed under the following
conditions: 5 min at 94°C; 30 cycles of 30 s at 94°C,
30 s at 60°C, and 1 min at 72°C; and then 10 min at
72°C. QC-PCR was performed as described above but with only
24 cycles. All PCR products were separated by electrophoresis
in 2% agarose.

QC-PCR in the absence of stress.
A linear correlation was obtained, as expected, between cell
density and the competitor concentration needed to have the
same amplification of both fragments when cell suspensions of
CHA0 and competitor solutions were diluted twofold repeatedly
(illustrated with log cells in Fig.
1). Similar results were
obtained when purified cell DNA was used instead of cell lysate
(data not shown). Next, QC-PCR was performed on independent
samples consisting of log or stationary-phase cells. The logarithm
of the concentration of competitor needed to have two bands
of equal intensity was plotted against the logarithm of cell
concentration. Statistically significant correlations were found
between QC-PCR results (derived from eight serial twofold dilutions)
and CFU or the total number (most of them were culturable) of
CHA0 cells (Fig.
2).

QC-PCR in the presence of stress.
No correlation was obtained when considering samples of CHA0
cells subjected to stress, regardless of whether QC-PCR results
were compared with the number of total cells or with CFU (Fig.
2). A proportion of the nonculturable cells in some of these
samples responded to Kogure's cell elongation test (
8), yielding
as many as 6.2 log nutrient-responsive (i.e., presumably viable)
but nonculturable cells/ml in certain cases, but no correlation
was found between Kogure's counts of nutrient-responsive cells
(done as described previously [
3,
10]) and QC-PCR results based
on 31 stress samples studied (data not shown).
In Fig. 2A, most of the points derived from stress situations are located left of the regression line obtained in the absence of stress, meaning that cell numbers estimated by QC-PCR were higher than CFU. This excess DNA might have belonged to nonculturable cells (including dead cells) and/or corresponded to extracellular DNA (probably released by natural lysis of dead cells). The presence of extracellular DNA was indicated by the fact that cell-free samples obtained by filtration through a 0.2-µm-pore-size Minisart-plus membrane (Sartorius, Göttingen, Germany) still enabled PCR amplification of phlA, whereas no amplification took place when cell-free samples were incubated for 2 h with 5 U (in a 30-µl volume) of restriction enzyme Sau3AI (cuts immediately before the sequence GATC, which predictably occurs five times in the target sequence) prior to PCR (data not shown). Yet, elimination of extracellular DNA by Sau3AI digestion (which had no effect on the cell culturability of CHA0) was not sufficient to bring QC-PCR results down to the level of culturable cells (Fig. 3). This means that extracellular DNA could not explain the discrepancy between both types of results. In Fig. 2B, the points for cells subjected to stress are found on both sides of the regression line obtained in the absence of stress. One implication is that not all of the DNA present in some of the samples was amplified by PCR, although complete cell lysis took place (confirmed by microscopy). Perhaps this was caused by a particular conformation of DNA in stressed cells.

Effect of antibiotics affecting DNA conformation and packing.
Oliver and Warner (
12) have shown that the loss of random amplified
polymorphic DNA (RAPD) signal in starved
Vibrio vulnificus,
presumably linked to modifications in DNA packing and conformation,
could be prevented by inhibiting de novo protein synthesis using
chloramphenicol or DNA supercoiling using ciprofloxacin. Incubation
of CHA0 cells in the presence of either antibiotic had no effect
on
phlA PCR efficacy at pH 7, even in the case of ciprofloxacin,
which caused loss of colony-forming ability. The
phlA PCR signal
disappeared shortly after exposure of cells to pH 4, along with
a decrease in the number of culturable cells, even when chloramphenicol
or ciprofloxacin was used. Similar results were obtained when
amplifying
rrs instead of
phlA or when performing RAPD analysis
(Table
2). In summary, the two antibiotics were unable to prevent
the disappearance of the PCR signals under acidic stress.
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
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TABLE 2. Effect of chloramphenicol (200 µg/ml) and ciprofloxacin (20 µg/ml) on survival (CFU) and PCR amplification of P. fluorescens CHA0 (used at 7.7 log CFU/ml) incubated at pH 7 (control) or pH 4 (acidity stress)
|

Search for cytoplasmic PCR inhibitors.
Another explanation for the incomplete PCR amplification might
be the presence of cytoplasmic PCR inhibitors released during
PCR lysis of stressed cells. To test this hypothesis, CHA0 samples
from pH 7 cultures were mixed with pH 4 CHA0 samples, either
before or after having implemented cell lysis, and PCR was performed.
No significant loss of PCR amplification was found (Fig.
4),
ruling out this hypothesis. In fact, the same fading of the
PCR signal observed when progressively increasing the relative
proportion of pH 4 samples, from 50:50 up to a 1:99 (vol/vol)
ratio, was obtained when using water or pH 4 buffer instead
(data not shown).

Conclusion.
Successful detection of
P. fluorescens CHA0 by PCR depended
strongly on the physiological state of the cells, and QC-PCR
gave effective results in vitro only when applied to samples
from which most CHA0 cells where culturable. When cells were
stressed, the amount of DNA estimated by QC-PCR was higher than
the total amount of DNA present in culturable cells, which at
least in the case of CuSO
4 stress was likely due to the contribution
of nonculturable cells rather than that of extracellular DNA.
However, the amount of DNA estimated by QC-PCR did not necessarily
correspond to that present in all CHA0 cells either, and the
loss of amplification efficacy following stress was not due
to PCR inhibitors synthesized by stressed cells. Overall, it
appears that stress negatively affected the ability of cell
DNA to be amplified by PCR. These findings may limit the usefulness
of PCR amplification to monitor pseudomonads in stressful environments
(e.g., bulk soil). They also have implications when studying
the genetic diversity of bacterial communities by culture-independent
methods, which often take for granted the fact that DNA can
be amplified equally from cells of different taxonomic and/or
physiological status.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Fabio Mascher and Carsten Hase for helpful discussion.
This work was supported by the Swiss Biotechnology SPP (project 5002-04502311), the Swiss Federal Office for Education and Science (COST Action 830), the Fachverein für Arbeit und Umwelt (FAU, Zürich, Switzerland), and the French Embassy in Switzerland (France-Switzerland research grant).

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Phytopathology Group, Institute of Plant Science, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH), Universitätstr. 2, LFW, CH-8092 Zürich, Switzerland. Phone: 41-1-632 38 69. Fax: 41-1-632 15 72. E-mail:
genevieve.defago{at}ipw.agrl.ethz.ch.


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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, January 2003, p. 686-690, Vol. 69, No. 1
0099-2240/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.69.1.686-690.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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