Simultaneous force and fluorescence measurements of a protein that forms a bond between a living bacterium and a solid surface

BH Lower, R Yongsunthon, FP Vellano III… - Journal of …, 2005 - Am Soc Microbiol
BH Lower, R Yongsunthon, FP Vellano III, SK Lower
Journal of Bacteriology, 2005Am Soc Microbiol
All microbial biofilms are initiated through direct physical contact between a bacterium and a
solid surface, a step that is controlled by inter-and intramolecular forces. Atomic force
microscopy and confocal laser scanning microscopy were used simultaneously to observe
the formation of a bond between a fluorescent chimeric protein on the surface of a living
Escherichia coli bacterium and a solid substrate in situ. The chimera was composed of a
portion of outer membrane protein A (OmpA) fused to the cyan-fluorescent protein AmCyan …
Abstract
All microbial biofilms are initiated through direct physical contact between a bacterium and a solid surface, a step that is controlled by inter- and intramolecular forces. Atomic force microscopy and confocal laser scanning microscopy were used simultaneously to observe the formation of a bond between a fluorescent chimeric protein on the surface of a living Escherichia coli bacterium and a solid substrate in situ. The chimera was composed of a portion of outer membrane protein A (OmpA) fused to the cyan-fluorescent protein AmCyan. Sucrose gradient centrifugation and fluorescent confocal slices through bacteria demonstrated that the chimeric protein was targeted and anchored to the external cell surface. The wormlike chain theory predicted that this protein should exhibit a nonlinear force-extension “signature” consistent with the sequential unraveling of the AmCyan and OmpA domains. Experimentally measured force-extension curves revealed a unique pair of “sawtooth” features that were present when a bond formed between a silicon nitride surface (atomic force microscopy tip) and E. coli cells expressing the OmpA-AmCyan protein. The observed sawtooth pair closely matched the wormlike chain model prediction for the mechanical unfolding of the AmCyan and OmpA substructures in series. These sawteeth disappeared from the measured force-extension curves when cells were treated with proteinase K. Furthermore, these unique sawteeth were absent for a mutant stain of E. coli incapable of expressing the AmCyan protein on its outer surface. Together, these data show that specific proteins exhibit unique force signatures characteristic of the bond that is formed between a living bacterium and another surface.
American Society for Microbiology
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