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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, September 2006, p. 6242-6247, Vol. 72, No. 9
0099-2240/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.00344-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208,1 Veterinary Medicine Teaching and Research Center, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of CaliforniaDavis, Tulare, California 93274,2 Department of Land, Air, and Water Resources, University of CaliforniaDavis, Davis, California 956163
Received 12 February 2006/ Accepted 16 May 2006
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5 µm in diameter, that is resistant to typical environmental stresses (6, 29, 39, 40). C. parvum oocysts originate from the waste of infected hosts and are discharged in large quantities from municipal wastewater treatment facilities, animal agriculture, and wildlife populations (2, 18, 26, 47). Because oocysts are persistent in the environment, the transmission of viable oocysts from sources to public water supplies can result in human infection even over long transport distances. Therefore, protection of public health requires a clear understanding of the factors that control the migration of Cryptosporidium in the environment. The transport of C. parvum oocysts can be influenced by interactions with surface-attached microbial communities, generally termed biofilms. Biofilms are ubiquitous in aquatic environments, where they form on rocks, plants, and sediments, and are also prevalent in wastewater treatment systems. Biofilm microorganisms are encased in a heterogeneous matrix of extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) composed of polysaccharides, proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids (10, 16). Both the morphology and chemical characteristics of biofilms are expected to promote the deposition and retention of C. parvum oocysts. Previous studies in both laboratory and environmental systems have shown that colloidal particles such as latex beads, bacteria, and virions can be readily transferred to biofilm communities from the surrounding bulk fluid (4, 13, 17, 32, 33, 37, 44, 45). As a result of this accumulation, biofilms can serve as environmental reservoirs of disease, and deposited pathogens can be released back to the water column by detachment or biofilm sloughing. This is particularly a concern with C. parvum because of its persistence under typical environmental conditions.
In this study, we investigated the capture and retention of C. parvum oocysts by Pseudomonas aeruginosa biofilms grown in small flow cell systems. To assess the role of EPS in the capture of oocysts by biofilms, two different biofilms were grown, the P. aeruginosa wild-type strain (PAO1) and a strain that overproduces the extracellular polysaccharide alginate (PDO300). Biofilms were also grown in two separate growth media, as nutrient concentrations and carbon source are known to affect P. aeruginosa biofilm architecture (22, 28, 35). Laser-scanning confocal microscopy coupled with image analysis was used to quantitatively compare the morphology of biofilms grown under different conditions.
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Flow cell biofilm system.
Biofilms were grown in three-channel flow cells (40 by 4 by 1 mm) with a glass coverslip substratum (7). Either LB broth or Jensen's medium was continuously pumped through sterile flow cell channels at a rate of 0.06 ml/min using a Watson-Marlow 205S peristaltic pump (Watson Marlow Ltd., Falmouth, England). To initiate biofilm growth, the flow of medium through the system was stopped and 0.2 ml of PAO1 or PDO300 liquid culture (optical density at 600 nm [OD600] = 0.50) was injected into each flow cell channel. No-flow conditions were maintained for 1 h after inoculation to allow bacteria to attach to the substratum. After this time, the flow was resumed and the bacteria were cultivated in the flow cell at 30°C until a confluent biofilm developed. This required 3 days in Jensen's medium and 4 days in LB broth. Sterile control channels were also used without injection of bacteria.
Acquisition and analysis of biofilm images.
Confluent biofilms were visualized in situ by means of confocal laser-scanning microscopy. Prior to image acquisition, the biofilms were stained by injecting 0.2 ml of 20 µM Syto 9 (Molecular Probes, Inc., Eugene, OR) into each channel. The biofilm was stained for 40 min in the dark, and then the residual stain was pumped out of the flow cell. Stacks of horizontal-plane images were acquired using a Zeiss LSM 510 (Carl Zeiss, Jena, Germany) equipped with a 488-nm argon laser. The image analysis program COMSTAT was used to quantitatively analyze biofilm architecture, including average thickness, biomass, total surface area, surface-area-to-volume ratio, and roughness (23). Roughness is defined as by the equation:
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is the mean thickness, Lfi is the ith individual thickness, and N is the number of thickness measurements.
Collection and purification of C. parvum oocysts.
C. parvum oocysts were collected and purified by following procedures described previously (42). Fecal samples were collected in Tulare County, California. from dairy calves naturally infected with C. parvum. Samples were rinsed through a series of mesh sieves and concentrated via sedimentation and centrifugation. Oocysts were purified through a discontinuous sucrose gradient (1) and stored in a 0.01% Tween 20 solution with antibiotics (penicillin G, streptomycin sulfate, and amphotericin B) at 4°C. This method of collection and purification of C. parvum oocysts from naturally infected dairy calves typically produces oocysts that are greater than 90% viable as measured by excystation (24). Oocysts were used in biofilm experiments within 2 months of collection, and the same batch of oocysts was normally used for parallel experiments conducted in the two media.
The concentration of C. parvum oocysts in the purified stock solution was determined through a filtration-direct count method as described by Searcy et al. (42). A sample of the C. parvum oocyst stock solution was vacuum filtered, and the filter was covered with a fluorescein isothiocyanate-conjugated monoclonal antibody solution specific for Cryptosporidium (Waterborne, Inc., New Orleans, LA). The filtered sample was allowed to incubate in the labeling solution for 30 min and then transferred to a microscope slide. The oocysts on the filter were enumerated using a Zeiss Axiophot epifluorescence microscope (Carl Zeiss, Jena, Germany) equipped with a mercury vapor lamp and an excitation/band-pass filter for fluorescein isothiocyanate.
C. parvum oocyst injection and enumeration.
Following the development of a confluent biofilm and the acquisition of confocal microscopy images, C. parvum oocysts were introduced into each flow cell channel. All C. parvum injection experiments were performed at room temperature in a controlled laboratory environment (
22°C). The oocyst stock solution was diluted with the appropriate medium to a working solution concentration of 5 x 105 oocysts/ml, the flow through the system was stopped, and 0.05 ml of the working solution was injected into the tubing upstream of each flow cell channel. Immediately after the injection, flow was resumed, allowing the oocysts to flow through each flow cell channel. After 1 h, the inflow was stopped and C. parvum oocysts were enumerated in situ. Cy3-conjugated monoclonal antibody solution specific for Cryptosporidium (Waterborne, Inc., New Orleans, LA) was injected into each channel and allowed to incubate for 40 min, after which the residual labeling solution was pumped out of the flow cell. The C. parvum oocysts retained in the biofilm on the glass coverslip were enumerated at a magnification of x160 with a Zeiss Axiophot epifluorescence microscope equipped with an excitation/band-pass filter for Cy3. A large number of oocysts was counted within the square fields of the microscope's ocular grid across a wide area of the flow cell channel, and the total number of oocysts captured by the biofilm was calculated by normalizing these results to the surface area of the entire flow cell channel. C. parvum oocysts were also resolved within the P. aeruginosa biofilm using a Zeiss LSM 510 equipped with a 488-nm argon laser and a 633-nm helium-neon laser. Horizontal-plane images were obtained at a magnification of x630.
Release of C. parvum oocysts from P. aeruginosa biofilms.
The resuspension of C. parvum oocysts was also investigated. In one set of experiments, the flow was resumed after the initial oocyst enumeration and maintained at this constant rate (0.06 ml/min) for a total of 24 h, after which the oocysts remaining in the biofilm were again enumerated. In a second set of experiments, the flow was increased to 2.5 ml/min after the initial oocyst enumeration and maintained at this higher flow rate for 1 h, after which oocysts retained in the biofilm were enumerated. To monitor possible biofilm sloughing under the higher flow rate, the system effluent was also collected at both flow rates and enumerated for resuspended Pseudomonas aeruginosa cells. To disperse any clusters of P. aeruginosa cells, the effluent samples were sonicated for 1 min (Aquasonic ultrasonic cleaner; VWR Scientific Products, West Chester, PA), placed on ice for 1 min, and vortexed for 15 s. This cycle was repeated three times per sample. The samples were then serially diluted, and viable plate counts were performed.
Zeta potential measurements.
The zeta potentials of C. parvum oocysts in Jensen's medium and in LB broth were measured using a Brookhaven Instruments Corporation (Holtsville, N.Y.) Zeta PALS particle analyzer. Oocyst suspensions were analyzed at a concentration of 5 x 104 oocysts/ml. Electrophoretic mobilities of the oocysts are converted by the instrument to a zeta potential using the Smoluchowski approximation.
Statistical analysis.
Two-way analysis of variance was used to evaluate variation of oocyst capture with surface composition (glass, PAO1 biofilm, and PDO300 biofilm) and growth medium (Jensen's and LB). One-sample t tests were used to assess differences in the number of oocysts retained at 1 h compared to 24 h (both at a flow rate of 0.06 ml/min), at a flow rate of 0.06 ml/min compared to 2.5 ml/min (both maintained for 1 h), and in the release of P. aeruginosa from the biofilm at the two flow rates. Functional relationships between biofilm structural characteristics and the fraction of oocysts captured by the biofilm were determined using linear regression.
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FIG. 1. Micrograph of C. parvum oocysts (red) associated with a P. aeruginosa (PDO300) biofilm (green). C. parvum oocysts are labeled with a Cy3-conjugated monoclonal antibody solution specific for Cryptosporidium, and P. aeruginosa cells are chromosomally tagged with a green fluorescent protein. (A) Sagittal view of the biofilm. (B) Planar view of the biofilm at the depth indicated by the white line in the sagittal view.
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FIG. 2. The fraction of C. parvum oocysts captured by the glass surface, alginate-overproducing P. aeruginosa biofilm, and wild-type P. aeruginosa biofilm 1 h (filled bars) and 24 h (open bars) after injection in Jensen's medium and LB broth.
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TABLE 1. Structural characteristics of PAO1 and PDO300 biofilms grown in Jensen's and LB media
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FIG. 3. The fraction of C. parvum oocysts captured by biofilms versus biofilm roughness (open squares) and surface-area-to-volume ratio (filled circles).
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FIG. 4. (A) The fraction of oocysts captured by wild-type and alginate-overproducing P. aeruginosa biofilms at a flow rate of 0.06 ml/min (solid bars) and remaining in the biofilm after the flow rate is increased to 2.5 ml/min (open bars). (B) The total P. aeruginosa CFU enumerated from the effluent of the flow cell system during 1 h at flow rates of 0.06 ml/min (solid bars) and 2.5 ml/min (open bars).
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The growth medium had a large effect on the fraction of oocysts captured by the biofilms, with greater oocyst capture consistently found in LB broth than in Jensen's medium. This difference was not due solely to the change in biofilm architecture as a result of medium type because more oocysts also attached to the abiotic glass surface in LB broth than in Jensen's medium. This difference in oocyst capture is most likely a result of the different chemical properties of the media, which mediate oocyst-surface interactions. C. parvum oocysts have a negative surface charge under typical aqueous conditions (8, 12, 25, 30, 38), and the oocyst surface is believed to contain proteins that extend out into solution, causing both electrostatic and steric forces to be involved in oocyst-surface associations (8, 30, 31). The zeta potential of C. parvum oocysts was 21.5 ± 0.32 mV in LB medium and 8.94 ± 2.09 mV in the Jensen's medium. Glass surfaces are normally negatively charged (11, 30), as are the surfaces of biofilms because of the presence of anionic carboxyl, sulfate, and phosphoryl groups in EPS (16). Electrostatic repulsion cannot explain the observed oocyst association patterns because oocyst deposition was greater in the LB medium than in the Jensen's medium, while the oocyst zeta potential was more negative in the LB medium than in the Jensen's medium. An alternative explanation could be a reduction in steric repulsion, which would promote oocyst-surface association. Dissolved cations, such as Ca2+, have been reported to bind to oocyst surface proteins, thereby neutralizing and collapsing surface proteins (30). It is plausible that solution conditions in the LB medium reduced steric repulsion between the oocysts and surfaces, facilitating attachment. However, the lack of knowledge of the exact composition of the LB medium, derived from peptone and yeast extract, prevents firm definition of conclusions regarding the chemical effects of this medium on oocyst-surface interactions.
It is believed that the sticky matrix of EPS secreted by biofilm microorganisms serves as a protective layer for the encased cells by capturing and binding harmful solutes such as metals and antibiotics (21, 46). We investigated the role of EPS in the capture of C. parvum oocysts using a P. aeruginosa strain that overproduces the exopolysaccharide alginate. Alginate is a polysaccharide composed of mannuronic acid and guluronic acid monomers, and the EPS from the alginate-overproducing biofilm represents 21% of the total soluble biofilm biomass. The EPS from the wild-type P. aeruginosa biofilm consists primarily of glucose, rhamnose, and nucleic acids and represents only 4 to 5% of the total soluble biomass (5, 48). Fewer C. parvum oocysts were captured by the mucoid strain than by the wild-type P. aeruginosa biofilm in both growth media used, though these trends were not statistically significant. These results clearly show that biofilm architecture was more important than EPS composition in controlling C. parvum deposition with the P. aeruginosa strains used here. It is not clear why there should be less deposition in the alginate-overproducing biofilm than in the wild-type biofilm. One possibility could be a difference in electrostatic interactions between oocysts and each of the two different biofilms. Uronic acids are known to be relatively negatively charged and can be expected to make the alginate biofilm more negative than the wild-type, and this, in combination with the negative charge of C. parvum oocysts, would be expected to hinder oocyst deposition to the alginate biofilm.
Following capture of the C. parvum oocysts by the biofilms, no release of the oocysts from the biofilm was observed after a 24-h period or after a 40-fold increase in the water flow rate through the system. This result does not mean that oocysts are permanently retained in biofilms but rather indicates that release should be expected only over longer time scales or greater increases in the overlying flow rate. Previous studies of oocyst deposition on sand grains have shown that while only small concentrations of oocysts are typically observed immediately after the initial injection is terminated, substantial numbers of oocysts can by released over a much longer time period (9, 19). We also observed that there was no statistically significant detachment of Pseudomonas cells or sloughing of biofilm clusters at the higher flow rate. These results are limited, however, by the fact that the flow field within the flow cell remained laminar even at the highest experimental flow rate. It is apparent that the maximum flow rate that could be achieved in this apparatus was insufficient to generate the hydrodynamic shear necessary to detach oocysts from the biofilm surface or to cause sloughing of the bulk biofilm. The more extreme changes in flow conditions typically found in dynamic surface water systems such as rivers are still expected to release biofilm-resident pathogens under high flow conditions.
This study demonstrated that hydrodynamic transport processes cause C. parvum oocysts to migrate from the bulk fluid to surface-attached microbial communities, where they are retained and concentrated. The results presented here indicate that biofilm architecture and surface-chemical interactions, as mediated by the background water chemistry, play a significant role in mediating the deposition of pathogens from suspension into biofilms. This association is expected to decrease the concentration of oocysts in surface waters and cause biofilms to become reservoirs of C. parvum. Deposited oocysts can then be resuspended during events that promote oocyst detachment or biofilm sloughing. Furthermore, in the event of biofilm sloughing, C. parvum oocysts will most likely be released in association with suspended cell clusters, which can cause them to exhibit different transport behavior than free oocysts. We believe that these oocyst-biofilm interactions play an important role in regulating the migration of C. parvum in aquatic systems and should be considered when predicting the fate and transport of pathogens in the environment.
We thank Lissa Dunbar for assistance in the collection and purification of C. parvum oocysts and Matthew Parsek and Grant Balzer for providing the P. aeruginosa strains and for assistance with the flow cell apparatus.
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