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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, July 2008, p. 4256-4263, Vol. 74, No. 14
0099-2240/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.00243-08
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Department of Bioengineering, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 4259 J2-15 Nagatsuta-Cho, Midori-Ku, Yokohama 226-8501, Japan
Received 28 January 2008/ Accepted 15 May 2008
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Extensive work has been conducted to select or breed phage-resistant strains in the dairy industry (7). Dairy fermentation remains susceptible to phage infection, since pasteurized milk is not completely sterilized. In recent years, genetic strategies to improve the phage resistance of bacterial strains developed from knowledge about natural phage defense systems (4, 11, 23). Major categories of natural phage defenses include adsorption barriers, abortive infection mechanisms, and DNA restriction and modification systems (12). One long-term protection strategy is to select phage-resistant mutants with altered adsorption characteristics. These mutants can result from mechanisms that change carbohydrate composition or alter specific phage protein receptors. Nevertheless, in most strains isolated so far, the underlying mutations have not been well characterized. Few alterations in phage receptors have been correlated with a resistance phenotype at the molecular level (16, 17, 18, 24). Therefore, for this type of phage defense strategy to provide protection against different phage species that can use alternative receptors, it is important to understand common and essential features of the phage adsorption process.
Previously, we investigated the interaction between E. coli O157:H7 and its specific bacteriophage PP01 in chemostat continuous culture (15). Following PP01 phage addition, the observed E. coli O157:H7 cell lysis was greater than 4 orders of magnitude. However, the appearance of a series of phage-resistant E. coli organisms, which showed reduced efficiency of plating when PP01 phage was used, led to an increase in the cell concentration in the culture. This observation led us to the idea of strengthening an E. coli strain against phage attack by enrichment methods during continuous culture in a chemostat. As detailed in this report, the sequential exposures to four different phage mixtures prepared from sewage influent succeeded in producing a multiple-phage-resistant E. coli strain. This study describes the methodology for breeding phage resistance and the genetic nature of the resultant E. coli mutant.
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(argF-lac) recA1 deoC1
btuB
ompC]} and E. coli (ME8307) RK4784 {ompA deletion mutant of E. coli strain K-12 [F–
(argF-lac) recA1 deoC1
btuB
ompA]} were kindly provided by the National Institute of Genetics, Japan. In batch culture, E. coli was cultured overnight in 2 ml of Luria-Bertani (LB) broth at 37°C with shaking (120 rpm). The optical density of the medium at 600 nm (OD600) was measured using a Klett spectrophotometer (Hitachi High-Technologies Corp.) to estimate the cell concentration. Thirty-eight bacteriophages used in this study, IS01 to IS33, IP008, IP052, SP13, EP16, and ECV43, were screened from sewage influent and activated sludge sampled from a wastewater treatment plant in Japan. Samples for phage mixture preparations were taken from an influent to the wastewater treatment plant. The number of inhabitants served by this plant was about 200,000. Most of the contamination was of human origin. The plant treated no effluent from animal farms or industries. The daily volume of the influent was 28,000 m3. The representative sewage influent qualities were as follows: biological oxygen demand, 260 mg/liter; suspended solids, 190 mg/liter; and coliform bacterial count, 600,000 cells/ml. The sewage sample was centrifuged (11,100 x g, 5 min). Then, the obtained supernatant (10 ml) was carefully transferred to a new sterilized tube, mixed with chloroform (100 µl), incubated for 20 min by shaking (120 rpm), centrifuged (11,100 x g, 5 min), and then filtered through a 0.22-µm filter. Thirteen samples of phage mixtures (A to M) were prepared in this way on different days.
Phage infection in continuous culture.
E. coli JM109 was precultured in 2 ml of LB broth at 37°C with shaking (120 rpm). In continuous culture, 150 µl of precultured broth was inoculated into 15 ml of fresh LB broth in a 30-ml culture flask. The culture was mixed with a stir bar. A peristaltic pump was used to supply fresh medium to and remove spent medium from the culture flask at the same flow rate (15 ml/h). The dilution rate (D, 1.0 h–1) was adjusted by changing the pump running speed. Filter-sterilized air was introduced into the headspace of the culture flask at a rate of 2 liters/min. The culture was kept at 37°C with stirring and maintained overnight to establish a steady-state condition. A phage mixture (300 µl) prepared from sewage influent was then added to the culture. The continuous culture was periodically sampled to determine the concentrations of bacteria and phages. The samples were centrifuged at 11,100 x g for 5 min at 4°C to separate the supernatant and cell pellets. The phage titer of the supernatant was determined by serial dilution with sterile SM buffer (10 mM MgSO4, 100 mM NaCl, 0.01% gelatin, and 50 mM Tris-HCl [pH, 7.5]), followed by a plaque assay on lawns of E. coli JM109. The cell pellets were washed and resuspended in and diluted with phosphate-buffered saline, and the viability of the cells was determined by plating them onto LB agar. All assays were done in triplicate. After 150 to 200 h of chemostat continuous culturing, samples of the cultures were plated onto LB agar, and a colony was used as a seed for the next run. This manipulation was repeated four times (chemostat runs A to D).
Construction of the ompC expression plasmid.
The ompC DNA fragment was PCR amplified from chromosomal DNA of E. coli K-12 with primers +OmpC and –OmpC*. The oligonucleotide primers used for PCR are listed in Table 1. The primers contain recognition sites of the restriction enzymes NcoI and SalI, respectively. The PCR products were digested with NcoI/SalI and inserted into the NcoI/SalI-digested pTV118N (Takara, Kyoto, Japan) to produce plasmid pOmpC.
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TABLE 1. Oligonucleotide primers used for PCR
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TABLE 2. Susceptibility of phage-resistant E. coli strains against 40 phagesa
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Cell growth and β-galactosidase assay.
E. coli cells were grown in 4 ml LB or M9G medium (6 g of Na2HPO4, 3 g of KH2PO4, 0.2 g of MgSO4·H2O, 0.5 g of NaCl, 1 g of NH4Cl, 10 g of Casamino Acids, and 2 g of glucose [per liter of water]) at 37°C with shaking. Cell concentrations were estimated by measuring the OD660 of the medium. The OD660 was measured using a biophotorecorder (model TVS062CA; Advantec Corp., Japan) to estimate the cell concentration.
To analyze the production of a recombinant protein, the phage-resistant strain (D198) and the parent strain (JM109) were each transformed by the plasmid pUC118 and incubated in LB medium supplemented with ampicillin (50 mg/liter) and IPTG (isopropyl-β-D-1-thiogalactopyranoside; 10 mM). When the OD600 reached 0.6, the cells were separated by centrifugation, and β-galactosidase activity was assayed (14).
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FIG. 1. Continuous cultures of E. coli JM109 and its derivatives with phage mixtures prepared from sewage. Phage sample A was added to a chemostat inoculated with JM109 (run A). Different phage mixtures were added to the chemostats inoculated with isolates from each previous run; strain A150 was grown with sample B (run B), strain B174 with sample C (run C), and strain C102 with sample D (run D). The number following the run designation (A to D) indicates the time of incubation after the phage addition. Bacteria (filled circles) were first allowed to reach equilibrium density in LB medium at 37°C and a dilution rate of 1.0 h–1. At time zero, a phage mixture was added to the culture (open circles) (concentration determined by assay with JM109). At the times indicated by arrows, culture medium was used to isolate phage-resistant strains. The tables show plaque assay data with each phage sample on a lawn of the strain indicated. Standard deviations (SD) and the number of titrations (n) are shown.
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FIG. 2. Growth of E. coli JM109 and its derivative strains after infection with phage sample A. Overnight LB medium-grown cultures of bacteria were diluted to about 107 CFU/ml in fresh LB medium (5 ml) and incubated at 37°C with shaking (120 rpm) for 1 hour. The phage mixture (100 µl) was then added to the culture (arrow). Bacterial growth or lysis was monitored by measuring the culture turbidity (660 nm). E. coli strains JM109 (filled circles), A54 (open circles), A102 (open triangles), and A150 (open squares) were used.
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Susceptibility of E. coli isolates to different phages.
The transition of E. coli isolates from being phage susceptible to being phage resistant in this experiment was analyzed by a phage spot test (Table 2). The phages used were isolated from sewage influent or activated sludge of a wastewater treatment plant. These phages showed a different host range among E. coli cells isolated from sewage influent (data not shown). Three strains that were isolated from run A, A54, A102, and A150 (Fig. 1), were susceptible to all of the individual phages tested. As the chemostat continuous culturing progressed, the E. coli isolates acquired resistance to an increasing number of individual phages. The mutations responsible for the phage resistance most likely accumulated. However, in some cases, a strain isolated at a later time was susceptible to a phage to which an earlier isolate was resistant. For example, D54 was resistant to IS01, yet D102 was susceptible to the same phage. D198 was resistant to all phages except SP16 and T2.
The susceptibility of D198 to different phage mixtures, samples D to M, was analyzed by the relative phage titer, the ratio of the number of plaques produced on a lawn of D198 to that produced on a lawn of JM109 (Fig. 3). Phage mixtures in samples D, E, and K did not produce any plaques on D198. However, phage mixtures in the other samples produced plaques, indicating that D198 was not completely resistant to all phages in the sewage influent. The relative phage titer for sample M was the highest (44%).
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FIG. 3. Analysis of the phage resistance of D198. Plaque assays were conducted on a lawn of strain D198 with phage mixtures prepared from sewage influents (samples D to M). The relative phage titer (%) was defined as the ratio of the number of plaques formed on a lawn of D198 to the number formed on a lawn of its parent strain, JM109.
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ompC mutant should be a result of the deletion of micF, which is an inhibitor of OmpF located upstream of ompC in E. coli (2). The production of OmpC was not detected in D198. The loss of OmpC in D198 may account for the reduced affinity of this strain for the sewage phages, since OmpC may serve as a receptor protein for some of these phages. To test this hypothesis, the plasmid pOmpC, which encodes OmpC of E. coli K-12, was constructed and introduced into D198. This transformant (D198/OmpC) was grown in the presence of IPTG to induce OmpC, and SDS-12% PAGE revealed a protein band corresponding in size to OmpC (Fig. 4A). The susceptibility of D198 to the sewage phages was partly restored by this complementation, and 17 phages regained infectivity to strain D198/OmpC (Table 2). However, OmpC complementation did not completely restore susceptibility. The specific deletion of ompC from E. coli K-12 led to the resistance to seven phages, IS03, IS21 to IS24, EP16, and ECV43 (Table 2).
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FIG. 4. Bacterial envelope analysis. (A) Outer membrane protein analysis of JM109, D198, K-12 ompA, K-12 ompC, and D198/OmpC (a transformant of D198 with pOmpC which encodes OmpC of E. coli K-12). The positions of OmpA, -C, and -F are indicated on the right of the gel. (B) LPS analysis performed by using Sil-Best Stain-Neo. The molecular-size standards are shown on the left (lanes M).
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Identification of the D198 genetic deletion.
Since D198 did not produce OmpC, genetic analysis of the ompC region was conducted by PCR. The relative locations of the primers used for PCR are summarized in Fig. 5A. The primer set +OmpC/–OmpC did not generate an amplicon with template DNA from D198, suggesting a deletion (data not shown). However, analysis of the region upstream of ompC by PCR with various primer sets (+U6/–U4, +U5/–U3, and +U4/–U2) revealed fragments of the expected sizes with template DNA from either JM109 or D198, indicating that the genome of D198 was unaltered in this region (data not shown).
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FIG. 5. Genetic analysis of phage-resistant E. coli strain D198. (A) Positions of primers used for PCR-based gene analysis. (B) PCR analysis of JM109 and D198. Primer sets used are indicated at the bottom. (C) DNA sequence of the interrupted region of the D198 genome. The sequence in bold is identical to the sequence of the primer +U1, and the sequence in italics is identical to the region that is 207.6 kbp downstream of ompC. The lowercase "g" represents a nucleotide that is not common to either of them. Arrows indicate putative open reading frames based on the E. coli K-12 genome.
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Recombinant protein production.
To determine whether the genetic changes affecting phage resistance would impact the potential use of D198 as a host for recombinant plasmids, the growth rates of this strain were compared to those of the parent strain, JM109. As shown in Fig. 6, the growth rates of both strains were indistinguishable on rich medium or minimal medium. To compare the expression levels of a recombinant protein, these two strains were transformed with a pUC118 plasmid carrying lacZ. D198 and JM109 produced comparable levels of β-galactosidase (LacZ) enzyme activity (Fig. 6).
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FIG. 6. Cell growth and β-galactosidase assay. (A) β-Galactosidase activity of E. coli cells (JM109 and D198 transformed by pUC118). I-bars show standard deviations (n = 3). (B) Profiles of E. coli cell growth. JM109 in LB medium (open circles), D198 in LB medium (filled circles), JM109 in M9G medium (open triangles), and D198 in M9G medium (filled triangles) were used.
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Susceptibility tests suggest that the mutations responsible for multiple-phage resistance accumulate sequentially (Table 2). The chemostat provides an important device for studying bacterium-phage interactions. In continuous culture, bacteria rapidly evolve resistance to phage infection. Different mutations can produce distinct resistance phenotypes that, for example, determine whether resistance is partial or complete, determine the magnitude of the physiological cost associated with resistance, and determine whether the mutation can be countered by host-range mutation in the phage. These differences determine the ability of a mutant to invade, the effect its invasion has on the population dynamics of susceptible bacteria and of the phage, and the resulting structure of the community (5). As described here, a single colony was picked up randomly and used for the isolation of phage-resistant cells at each sampling time. However, the medium in the chemostat continuous culture contains a variety of phage-resistant cells. Some of the phage-resistant isolates selected in this study could be washed out from the system in long-term studies. On the other hand, resistant cells that were not selected might grow and become dominant in the system later on.
A phage-resistant strain, D198, was obtained after exposure to four different phage mixtures. However, additional sewage samples contained phages infectious to D198 (samples F to J and L to M) (Fig. 3). Although D198 remained susceptible to some phages, the low relative phage titer suggests that the use of D198 might minimize bacteriophage attack. Furthermore, additional exposure of D198 to different phage mixtures might yield increased resistance. The methodology presented here using successive exposures to heterogeneous mixtures of phages might be applicable to the isolation of other types of bacteria, in addition to E. coli, that are resistant to multiple phages.
Phage infection starts with the adsorption of phages on the bacterial cell surface, and the host range is controlled by the interactions of the phage and its receptor. Generally, phages use outer membrane proteins and/or LPS as their receptor. PP01-resistant cells lost ompC expression due to the deletion of a 14-kbp region upstream of ompC (16). Outer membrane analysis of D198 also indicated the loss of OmpC production. Genotypic analysis of D198 revealed a 209.4-kbp deletion that encompasses the whole ompC and genes necessary for LPS production. The deleted genes include wbbJ (O acetyltransferase), wbbK (glucosyltransferase), and wbbL (rhamnosyl transferase) involved in LPS synthesis. LPS consists of lipid A, core oligosaccharide, and O antigen. The biogenesis of LPS is a complex multistep process. The core oligosaccharide is assembled on preformed lipid A by the sequential glycosyl transfer of each monosaccharide. In addition to the ompC deletion, deletions of transferase genes may contribute to the phage-resistant phenotype.
Since OmpC complementation did not completely restore phage susceptibility to D198, additional factors affect the phage resistance properties of this strain. Genes that are included in the 209.4-kbp deletion (besides ompC) and/or other genomic mutations in D198 appear to be involved in phage interactions. Forty phages used in this study could be classified into four groups based on the OmpC complementation test with D198 and the phenotype of an ompC deletion mutant, K-12
ompC (Table 2). Phages classified into group A appear to use OmpC as a receptor, since resistance results from the specific deletion of its gene in K-12
ompC and since susceptibility was restored in D198/OmpC. Phages classified into group B do not depend on OmpC as a receptor, since its absence alone does not cause resistance. Phages in this group might use a receptor that is not produced (or not functional) in D198 because of the deletion or other unknown mutations. For phages in group C, the complementation of D198 indicates that OmpC can be used as a receptor. However, since the ompC deletion alone does not confer resistance, members of this group may also be able to use another receptor that is not made or not functional in D198. For phages in group D, it appears that OmpC is necessary but not sufficient for infection.
It is known that phage T4 uses the LPS of the outer cell envelope membrane as a receptor (8, 9). The alteration of LPS shown in Fig. 4 and the fact that genes responsible for the production of LPS were borne in the lost DNA fragment suggest that LPS plays an important role in determining the D198 phenotype. However, a complete genetic analysis of D198 has not yet been conducted.
Although the D198 genome is 4.5% smaller than that of JM109, the two strains have comparable growth rates and produce the same levels of recombinant LacZ activity (Fig. 6). As a recombinant host, E. coli is exposed to a limited and controlled set of conditions. Therefore, the genes required for survival in the gut may not be the same ones required for optimum recombinant protein production. Consistent with this theory, improvements in E. coli as a recombinant host have often involved genetic deletions (1, 3, 6). Here, we demonstrate that a large deletion surrounding ompC strengthens phage resistance, and this study provides a suitable foundation for further genomic reduction in E. coli hosts to be used for recombinant protein production.
Published ahead of print on 23 May 2008. ![]()
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