4.6 Article

A new, reliable, and high-throughput strategy to screen bacteria for antagonistic activity against Staphylococcus aureus

Journal

BMC MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12866-021-02265-4

Keywords

S; aureus; Quorum-sensing; Quorum-quenching; pKK30

Categories

Funding

  1. McGill Sustainability Systems Initiative (MSSI) through the Ideas Fund
  2. Dairy Farmers of Canada Research Cluster III grant
  3. NSERC CREATE in Milk Quality (Universite de Montreal, St-Hyacinthe, QC, Canada)
  4. Op + lait, the FRQNT Regroupement strategique pour un lait de qualite optimale (Universite de Montreal, St-Hyacinthe, QC, Canada)

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A new plasmid-based screening method was used to identify bacteria with antagonistic activity against antibiotic-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. By creating stable recombinant plasmids carrying reporter proteins under the control of a S. aureus promoter, the study successfully identified commensal bacteria with growth-inhibiting and quorum-quenching activity. This approach offers a promising strategy for developing probiotic drugs and therapeutics for S. aureus infections in both humans and animals.
Background Antibiotic-resistant Staphylococcus aureus clones have emerged globally over the last few decades. Probiotics have been actively studied as an alternative to antibiotics to prevent and treat S. aureus infections, but identifying new probiotic bacteria, that have antagonistic activity against S. aureus, is difficult since traditional screening strategies are time-consuming and expensive. Here, we describe a new plasmid-based method which uses highly stable plasmids to screen bacteria with antagonistic activity against S. aureus. Results We have created two recombinant plasmids (pQS1 and pQS3) which carry either gfp(bk) or mCherry under the control of a S. aureus quorum-sensing (QS) promoter (agrP3). Using this recombinant plasmid pair, we tested 81 bacteria isolated from Holstein dairy milk to identify bacteria that had growth-inhibiting activity against S. aureus and suggest potential explanations for the growth inhibition. The stability test illustrated that pQS1 and pQS3 remained highly stable for at least 24 h in batch culture conditions without selection pressure from antibiotics. This allowed co-culturing of S. aureus with other bacteria. Using the newly developed pQS plasmids, we found commensal bacteria, isolated from raw bovine milk, which had growth-inhibiting activity (n = 13) and quorum-quenching (QQ) activity (n = 13) towards both S. aureus Sa25 (CC97) and Sa27 (CC151). The pQS-based method is efficient and effective for simultaneously screening growth-inhibiting and QQ bacteria against S. aureus on agar media. Conclusions It was shown that growth-inhibiting and QQ activity toward pQS plasmid transformants of S. aureus can be simultaneously monitored by observing the zone of growth inhibition and reporter protein inhibition on agar plates. Newly identified antagonistic bacteria and their functional biomolecules are promising candidates for future development of probiotic drugs and prophylactics/therapeutics for bacterial infections including S. aureus. Furthermore, this new approach can be a useful method to find bacteria that can be used to prevent and treat S. aureus infections in both humans and animals.

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