Physical determinants of amyloid assembly in biofilm formation

66Citations
Citations of this article
115Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

A wide range of bacterial pathogens have been shown to form biofilms, which significantly increase their resistance to environmental stresses, such as antibiotics, and are thus of central importance in the context of bacterial diseases. One of the major structural components of these bacterial biofilms are amyloid fibrils, yet the mechanism of fibril assembly and its importance for biofilm formation are currently not fully understood. By studying fibril formation in vitro, in a model system of two common but unrelated biofilm-forming proteins, FapC from Pseudomonas fluorescens and CsgA from Escherichia coli, we found that the two proteins have a common aggregation mechanism. In both systems, fibril formation proceeds via nu-cleated growth of linear fibrils exhibiting similar measured rates of elongation, with negligible fibril self-replication. These similarities between two unrelated systems suggest that convergent evolution plays a key role in tuning the assembly kinetics of functional amyloid fibrils and indicates that only a narrow window of mechanisms and assembly rates allows for successful biofilm formation. Thus, the amyloid assembly reaction is likely to represent a means for controlling biofilm formation, both by the organism and by possible inhibitory drugs. IMPORTANCE Biofilms are generated by bacteria, embedded in the formed extracellular matrix. The biofilm’s function is to improve the survival of a bacterial colony through, for example, increased resistance to antibiotics or other environmental stresses. Proteins secreted by the bacteria act as a major structural component of this extracellular matrix, as they self-assemble into highly stable amyloid fibrils, making the biofilm very difficult to degrade by physical and chemical means once formed. By studying the self-assembly mechanism of the fibrils from their monomeric precursors in two unrelated bacteria, our experimental and theoretical approaches shed light on the mechanism of functional amyloid assembly in the context of biofilm formation. Our results suggest that fibril formation may be a ratelimiting step in biofilm formation, which in turn has implications on the protein selfassembly reaction as a target for potential antibiotic drugs.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Andreasen, M., Meisl, G., Taylor, J. D., Michaels, T. C. T., Levin, A., Otzen, D. E., … Knowles, T. P. J. (2019). Physical determinants of amyloid assembly in biofilm formation. MBio, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.02279-18

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free