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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, July 2009, p. 4870-4878, Vol. 75, No. 14
0099-2240/09/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.00825-09
Copyright © 2009, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Unité de Virologie et Immunologie Moléculaires, UR892 INRA, Domaine de Vilvert, F78352 Jouy en Josas Cedex, France,1 Instituto de Ciências Biológicas, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (UFMG-ICB), Belo Horizonte—MG, Brazil,2 Unité d'Ecologie et Physiologie du Système Digestif, UR910 INRA, Domaine de Vilvert, F78352 Jouy en Josas Cedex, France3
Received 10 April 2009/ Accepted 22 May 2009
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The internalization of the bacterial carrier is a fundamental step to achieve efficient DNA delivery in eukaryotic cells (7). In order to increase DNA delivery by lactic acid bacteria (LAB), invasin genes were expressed in L. lactis. Due to the safety profile of LAB, recombinant lactococci expressing invasin genes from intracellular bacteria are attractive as potential DNA delivery vectors compared to the attenuated pathogens presently used.
In this field, we previously demonstrated that L. lactis bacteria expressing the main Listeria monocytogenes invasin, internalin A (L. lactis InlA+), were able to invade eukaryotic cells and efficiently deliver a functional green fluorescent protein (GFP) expression plasmid into epithelial/endothelial cells (9). Even though attractive, the experimental use of lactococci expressing InlA in a mouse model has a major bottleneck: InlA, which binds to human E-cadherin (15), does not interact with murine E-cadherin. Consequently, in vivo experimental studies using lactococci expressing InlA as DNA delivery vehicles are limited to transgenic mice expressing human E-cadherin or to guinea pigs (13).
Fibronectin binding protein A (FnBPA) of Staphylococcus aureus is another bacterial invasin that is involved in intracellular spreading of S. aureus in the host (27). It is a multifunctional adhesion protein having both fibrinogen and fibronectin binding capacities (24). Its N-terminal part, also called domain A, is responsible for fibrinogen (29) and elastin (20) binding, whereas its C-terminal part, including domains B, C, and D, binds to fibronectin (25). FnBPA is known to mediate adhesion to host tissue and bacterial uptake into nonphagocytic host cells (27). Its expression by L. lactis was previously shown to be sufficient to confer the ability to invade nonphagocytic cells in vitro and in vivo, while the expression of domains C and D confers invasivity only in vitro (19).
In this study, we show that L. lactis bacteria expressing full-length FnBPA of S. aureus (L. lactis FnBPA+) or a truncated form encompassing only its C and D domains (L. lactis CD+) are internalized as efficiently as L. lactis InlA+ in the human intestinal cell line Caco-2. We also provide, for the first time, direct microscopic evidence of the intracellular location of the internalized lactococci, showing that the bacteria are heterogeneously distributed in the cell monolayer and that their number per cell can reach a surprisingly high level. However, we demonstrate that FbpA, a fibronectin binding protein from the commensal Lactobacillus acidophilus NCFM, does not mediate bacterial internalization: no difference in invasivity was observed between the wild-type (wt) strain and the mutant with fbpA inactivated. This result indicates that, although widely distributed among bacteria, fibronectin binding proteins are not universal mediators of bacterial internalization, even at low levels. Finally, we also demonstrate that, similarly to L. lactis InlA+, L. lactis FnBPA+ and L. lactis CD+ can efficiently deliver a eukaryotic GFP expression plasmid in Caco-2 cells and trigger GFP expression in these cells. Consequently, L. lactis FnBPA+ can be used for further DNA delivery experiments in vivo.
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TABLE 1. Strains and plasmids used in the study
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Assays of bacterial invasiveness in human epithelial cells.
Bacterial entry into human epithelial cells was assayed using the human colon carcinoma cell line Caco-2 (ATCC number HTB37) as described previously (4). Eukaryotic cells were cultured in RPMI medium supplemented with 2 mM L-glutamine (BioWhittaker, Cambrex Bio Science, Verviers, Belgium) and 20% fetal calf serum. Caco-2 cell lines maintained under these conditions without antibiotics were used between passages 9 and 12. The gentamicin survival assay was used to estimate bacterial survival as follows. L. lactis strains were grown to an optical density at 600 nm (OD600) of 0.9 to 1.0, washed, and diluted such that the multiplicity of infection (MOI) was about 103 bacteria per cell. The bacterial suspension was added to mammalian cells grown in P-24 plates (Corning Glass Works). Amounts of 2 x 105 cells per well were used. After 1 h of coincubation, 20 µg/ml of gentamicin was added to kill noninternalized bacteria. After 2 h of gentamicin treatment, cells were washed and lysed in 0.2% Triton X-100 and serial dilutions of the lysate were plated for bacterial counting. The results presented correspond to the averages of the results of three independent gentamicin assays done in triplicate.
Preparation of protein extracts and analysis by Western blotting.
L. lactis protein extracts were prepared as previously described (3) from 2 ml of stationary phase cultures (OD600, 0.9 to 1.0). Equivalent amounts of protein extracts were resolved in denaturing conditions (sodium dodecyl sulfate-8% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis) and transferred onto a nitrocellulose membrane as described previously (16). The membrane was incubated overnight at 4°C in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) containing 10% (vol/vol) nonfat dry milk and 0.1% Tween 20 and then for 1 h at room temperature with a 1/2,000 dilution of a rabbit antiserum directed against the D region of FnBPA. The membrane was rinsed and incubated in PBS containing nonfat dry milk (5% vol/vol), 0.1% Tween 20, and horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibody (P.A.R.I.S) for 1 h at room temperature. Signals were detected by using an enhanced chemiluminiscence kit (Amersham Bioscience).
Analysis of bacterial internalization by confocal microscopy.
Amounts of 2 ml of stationary phase cultures of L. lactis, L. lactis FnBPA+, L. lactis CD+, and L. lactis InlA+ were washed twice in PBS and stained with the green fluorescent dye carboxyfluorescein succinimidyl ester (CFSE) at 50 µM for 20 min at 37°C under constant shaking in the dark (14). Bacteria were washed in PBS and used to perform invasiveness assays with Caco-2 cells grown as described above on glass coverslips pretreated with 10 µg/ml poly-D-lysine (Sigma-Aldrich). After 1 h of infection and 2 h of incubation in the presence of gentamicin (20 µg/ml), cells were fixed for 20 min with paraformaldehyde (2.5% in PBS) and permeabilized with Triton X-100 (0.1%) for 5 min at room temperature. The actin cytoskeleton was stained with Alexa Fluor 594-labeled phalloidin (Invitrogen) in PBS containing bovine serum albumin (1%) for 20 min at room temperature. Samples were mounted with Fluoromount G medium (Interchim), and the images were captured by using a Zeiss LSM 510 META inverted confocal laser-scanning microscope equipped with an argon and a helium-neon laser (for double fluorescence at 488 and 543 nm) and with a Zeiss 63x Plan-Apochromat lens. A composite picture of 39 to 44 sections (0.41 µm or 0.8 µm apart in the z axis) of each sample was collected and analyzed using Zeiss LSM Image Browser software (version 4.2).
Analysis of bacterial internalization by conventional immunofluorescence microscopy.
An antiserum directed against L. lactis was prepared by immunizing a rabbit with bacterial wall extracts. Specific response against the bacterium was checked by using an agglutination test and indirect immunofluorescence as described below. Caco-2 cells were grown on glass coverslips pretreated with poly-D-lysine. An invasiveness assay with CFSE-stained L. lactis was performed as described above. After 1 h of infection and 2 h of incubation in the presence of gentamicin (20 µg/ml), cells were fixed with 2.5% paraformaldehyde in PBS. Noninternalized L. lactis were visualized by using rabbit anti-L. lactis serum (diluted 1/100) as primary antibody followed by Alexa Fluor 594-labeled goat anti-rabbit immunoglobulin (Invitrogen) as secondary antibody. The nuclei were stained with 4,6-diamidinophenylindole (DAPI). Samples were mounted as described above and analyzed with a Zeiss Axiovert 200 M inverted fluorescence microscope equipped with a 20x Zeiss LD A-Plan phase-contrast lens and a CoolSNAP HQ camera (Roper Scientific). For each field observed, a phase-contrast image and fluorescence images in the blue, red, and green channels were acquired and processed using MetaVue (version 6.3; Molecular Devices) and ImageJ (version 1.38; http://rsb.info.nih.gov/ij/) software.
Analysis of GFP expression by Caco-2 cells using flow cytometry.
The gfp open reading frame under the control of the eukaryotic immediate early promoter of the human cytomegalovirus was used to demonstrate the potential of L. lactis to deliver a functional gene into the Caco-2 mammalian cell line. L. lactis InlA+ GFP, L. lactis FnBPA+ GFP, L. lactis CD+ GFP, and L. lactis GFP were grown to an OD600 of 0.9 to 1.0, and bacteria were added to cells at a MOI of 103. Internalization assays with these strains were performed as described above. After 1 h or 3 h of infection, cells were incubated in RPMI medium with gentamicin (20 µg/ml) for 2 h. Cells were collected at 24, 48, and 72 h; rinsed with PBS; and fixed (Cell fix; BD Biosciences). Quantification of fluorescent cells was performed using a FACSCalibur flow cytometer and CellQuest Pro software (Becton Dickinson). For each interaction experiment, 500,000 cells were analyzed. Assays were performed in triplicate.
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FIG. 1. Detection of S. aureus fibronectin binding protein A or its C and D domains in L. lactis by Western blot analysis. Cell extracts from cultures of recombinant L. lactis producing either S. aureus FnBPA or its C and D domains were analyzed by Western blotting using a rabbit antiserum against domain D of FnBPA. Lane 1, wt L. lactis; lane 2, L. lactis FnBPA+; lane 3, L. lactis CD+. f. l., full-length.
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FIG. 2. Assays of invasiveness of L. lactis FnBPA+, L. lactis CD+, and L. lactis InlA+ on Caco-2 cells. Amounts of 2 x 105 Caco-2 cells were used for each assay. wt L. lactis was used as negative control. Results are means ± standard deviations from triplicates. Error bars represent standard deviations. The results presented are from one experiment representative of three performed independently. *, survival rate was significantly different from that obtained for wt L. lactis; #, survival rates were statistically comparable (the Student t test, P < 0.05).
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We first used conventional fluorescence microscopy to visualize internalized bacteria in situ (Fig. 3). Cell monolayers were thus fixed without permeabilization and noninternalized, extracellular bacteria were specifically stained for visualization by indirect immunofluorescence using an anti-L. lactis serum and a red fluorophore. Consequently, on three-color (green, red, and blue) overlay photographs, doubly stained noninternalized bacteria appeared orange to yellow and singly stained intracellular bacteria appeared green. After incubation with wt L. lactis, almost no intracellular bacteria could be detected. In contrast, intracellular bacteria were detected in the cytoplasm of Caco-2 cells after coculture with the three invasive lactococcal strains. They were not evenly distributed in the cell islets but were preferentially detected in cells located at the periphery of the islets, where they form intracytoplasmic clusters that seem to contain up to several tens of bacteria. This heterogeneous location suggests that InlA and FnBPA receptors are more accessible at the periphery of the islets. Moreover, the intracellular distribution appeared more homogeneous for L. lactis InlA+. Noninternalized bacteria could be observed almost exclusively outside the cellular islets or attached at the surface of the cells.
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FIG. 3. L. lactis internalization in Caco-2 cells analyzed by conventional fluorescence microscopy. The CFSE-stained (green) bacteria (wt L. lactis, L. lactis FnBPA+, L. lactis CD+, and L. lactis InlA+) were coincubated with Caco-2 cells for 1 h to perform internalization and fixed without permeabilization. Extracellular, noninternalized bacteria were stained with Alexa Fluor 594 (red) for visualization by indirect immunofluorescence using an anti-L. lactis serum. Nuclei were stained with DAPI (blue). The samples were analyzed by conventional fluorescence microscopy. Each panel represents the overlay of the inverted phase-contrast image of the field and the three fluorescence images acquired in the blue, red, and green channels. Intracellular bacteria appear in green, and extracellular bacteria in orange to yellow. Large clumps of intracellular bacteria are clearly visible in samples with internalizing strains. Bars, 50 µm.
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FIG. 4. L. lactis internalization in Caco-2 cells analyzed by confocal microscopy. The CFSE-stained (green) bacteria (wt L. lactis, L. lactis FnBPA+, L. lactis CD+, and L. lactis InlA+) were coincubated with Caco-2 cells for 1 h to perform internalization, and the actin cytoskeleton was stained by phalloidin (red) after fixation and permeabilization. The fluorescent samples were analyzed by confocal microscopy. Each panel represents a section from the stack on the z axis appropriately chosen to visualize both extracellular and intracellular bacteria. For each field, two three-dimensional reconstruction sections perpendicular to the plane of the monolayer and parallel to the x or y axis are shown below (x-z section, green line) and to the right (y-z section, red line) of each panel. Clumps of several tens of bacteria per Caco-2 cell (white arrows) are clearly visible for internalizing strains. Bars, 20 µm.
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FIG. 5. Assays of invasiveness of L. acidophilus NCFM, L. acidophilus NCFM with fbpA inactivated, L. lactis FnBPA+, and L. lactis InlA+ with Caco-2 cells. Amounts of 2 x 105 Caco-2 cells were used in each assay. wt L. lactis was used as the negative control. Results are means ± standard deviations of triplicates. Error bars represent standard deviations. The results presented are from one experiment representative of three performed independently. #, survival rates were statistically comparable (the Student t test, P < 0.05); Lb. acido., L. acidophilus; fbpA-, deletion of fibronectin binding protein-encoding gene.
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FIG. 6. In vitro gene transfer assessment following invasion of Caco-2 cells by L. lactis strains carrying pValac:GFP plasmid. (A) The percentages of Caco-2 cells expressing GFP following coincubation for 1 h or 3 h with L. lactis GFP, L. lactis FnBPA+ GFP, L. lactis CD+ GFP, and L. lactis InlA+ GFP were determined by flow cytometry at 24, 48, and 72 h after coincubation using the positivity threshold indicated on the FL1/FSC dot-plots. (B) The values obtained were reported in graphs for a better comparison. (a) Values following 1 h of incubation. (b) Values following 3 h of incubation. The flow cytometry assays shown here are from one experiment representative of three performed independently. FL1, relative fluorescence intensity in the green channel; FSC, forward scatter.
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To improve plasmid DNA delivery by lactococci, we developed invasive lactococcal strains, like L. lactis InlA+ (9), whose internalization is mediated through the binding of InlA to E-cadherin expressed on epithelial/endothelial cells (15). This interaction is species specific, since InlA interacts with human E-cadherin but not with its homolog in some rodents, including mice (12). This observation excludes mice as an experimental model to study InlA-mediated DNA delivery improvement in vivo, although it was recently reported that two single substitutions in InlA increased binding affinity to formerly incompatible murine E-cadherin by four orders of magnitude, extending its binding specificity (31). This recent finding opens the possibility of expressing this mutated InlA in lactococci and using the mutants in conventional mice. As this limitation does not exist with guinea pigs, we used this animal model in our previous study to demonstrate the ability of L. lactis InlA+ to invade intestinal cells in vivo (7).
In order to explore the potential use of other bacterial internalins allowing further animal experiments for mucosal DNA delivery, we analyze here the binding and internalizing properties of S. aureus FnBPA and its ability to confer DNA delivery properties to L. lactis. This invasin would be more suitable for further in vivo studies because it has many binding regions and could be used in a wider range of animal models. Here, we show that cell wall-anchored full-length FnBPA promotes the entry of L. lactis into Caco-2 cells as efficiently as InlA and confers to the bacteria very similar plasmid DNA delivery properties, as judged by its ability to transfer a pValac:GFP plasmid into Caco-2 cells to elicit GFP expression. Moreover, we provide microscopic evidence of FnBPA- and InlA-mediated L. lactis internalization that raises interesting questions about the process of internalization of these genetically modified bacteria.
Staphylococcus aureus FnBPA was the first surface protein of bacterial pathogens shown to be sufficient to confer invasivity on L. lactis for entry into human 293 embryonic kidney cells (27). In this study, we confirm with the human Caco-2 intestinal cell line that full-length FnBPA and its CD domain can mediate L. lactis internalization. Moreover, we compare the internalization and DNA delivery abilities of L. lactis expressing S. aureus FnBPA or CD and L. lactis expressing L. monocytogenes InlA. The rates of invasiveness of L. lactis InlA+ and L. lactis FnBPA+ determined after the gentamicin treatment were similar and about 1,000-fold higher than that obtained with the wt L. lactis strain. In contrast, L. lactis CD+ exhibited a significantly lower rate of invasiveness than L. lactis FnBPA+. In order to explore the possibility that bacterial fibronectin binding proteins, especially those from nonpathogenic bacteria, could be more widely involved in bacterial internalization, we analyzed whether the FbpA protein from the nonpathogenic commensal organism L. acidophilus NCFM could mediate a "natural" low level internalization as we previously showed for L. lactis (9, 10). It would have been possible subsequently to improve this internalization by constructing recombinant strains overexpressing this protein. However, our results with the mutant with fbpA inactivated indicate that if this background internalization exists, it is not mediated by FbpA but by other proteins. Thus, fibronectin binding proteins are not universal promoters of bacterial internalization and those from pathogenic bacteria probably trigger specific signals in host cells that are necessary for efficient entry. This suggests that two different classes of fibronectin binding proteins can be distinguished, those from pathogenic bacteria conferring both cell adhesion and internalization and those from either food-grade or commensal bacteria conferring only cell adhesion.
One of the two main original interests of our paper was (i) to confirm internalization data by direct visualization of recombinant lactococci expressing InlA and FnBPA inside cells using conventional and confocal microscopy and (ii) to analyze precisely their cellular and subcellular locations after internalization in vitro, which was never done before. In previous papers (9, 10, 27), the internalization process was evaluated using only an antibiotic resistance assay similar to the one used in the present study. However, this assay suffers some bias: when a high MOI is used, bacteria can form a biofilm at the surface of the cells and remain protected from the antibiotic treatment although they are not internalized. The visualization experiments performed in our work clearly discard this artifact. Moreover, they provide interesting information about the localization and numbers of bacteria inside the Caco-2 cell islets. Our images clearly show that both invasins drive lactococci to a similar cytoplasmic location in Caco-2 cells. The preferential distribution of internalized bacteria at the periphery of the Caco-2 cell islets can be explained by the fact that E-cadherin and
5β1 integrins (15, 28), the respective InlA and FnBPA receptors, are accessible at the periphery but not at the center of the Caco-2 cell islets. However, the surprisingly high number of bacteria detected in the cells in which internalization occurred is a point that remains difficult to explain. Two nonexclusive mechanisms could be involved: (i) massive internalization of several tens of bacteria in a single cell through their binding to fibronectin or E-cadherin, leading to the formation of a complex subsequently internalized by the eukaryotic cells as a single unit, and (ii) intracellular multiplication of a few internalized bacteria. Although the latter possibility appears less probable, as the time left after the beginning of the gentamicin treatment is probably too short to allow lactococcal multiplication in the unfavorable intracytoplasmic environment, further work is required to clarify the mechanisms involved.
Another important point of our work was to demonstrate for the first time that L. lactis bacteria expressing FnBPA can efficiently deliver a eukaryotic expression plasmid, with subsequent protein expression, thus indicating that this bacterial invasin can be used for plasmid delivery. It is known that FnBPA increases both the adherence of L. lactis to immobilized fibronectin and its infectivity in experimental endocarditis to levels similar to those observed for S. aureus, thus identifying FnBPA as a critical virulence factor in endovascular infection (18). This raises the question of the safety of Lactococcus strains expressing this protein. A previous study showed that L. lactis expressing FnBPA or its CD domains can cause valvular lesions in rats. However, this occurs only when lactococci are injected by the parenteral route to animals that have preexisting valvular lesions. The conditions used in mucosal immunization, i.e., local administration at a mucosal surface of a healthy animal, cannot result in a massive release of recombinant bacteria in the bloodstream and can consequently be considered much safer. The results of flow cytometry analysis indicate that around 1% of Caco-2 cells expressed GFP after coincubation with the FnBPA-expressing invasive strains bearing the pValac:GFP plasmid, while no fluorescence was detectable with the noninvasive strain bearing this plasmid. These results prove the ability of these invasive strains to transfer functional plasmids in Caco-2 cells as efficiently as those expressing InlA. Consequently, these results indicate that L. lactis expressing FnBPA represents a promising tool for mucosal DNA delivery that will be tested in vivo in future experiments using the mouse model.
Valeria Guimarães received grants from the Region of Ile-de-France and Animal Health Division of INRA (convention no. E1511). Silvia Innocentin is a recipient of a European Marie Curie Ph.D. grant from the LABHEALTH program (MEST-CT-2004-514428).
Published ahead of print on 29 May 2009. ![]()
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5β1. Cell. Microbiol. 1:101-117.[CrossRef][Medline]
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