3.9 Article

Analysis of the Aspergillus fumigatus Biofilm Extracellular Matrix by Solid-State Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy

Journal

EUKARYOTIC CELL
Volume 14, Issue 11, Pages 1064-1072

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/EC.00050-15

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH Director's New Innovator Award [DP2OD007488]
  2. Child Health Research Institute, Stanford Transdisciplinary Initiatives Program
  3. Althouse Stanford Graduate Fellowship
  4. Programa Ciencias sem Fronteiras CsF/CNPq (Brazilian National Research Council)
  5. Cell Sciences Imaging Facility at Stanford (NIH) [1S10RR02678001]

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Aspergillus fumigatus is commonly responsible for lethal fungal infections among immunosuppressed individuals. A. fumigatus forms biofilm communities that are of increasing biomedical interest due to the association of biofilms with chronic infections and their increased resistance to antifungal agents and host immune factors. Understanding the composition of microbial biofilms and the extracellular matrix is important to understanding function and, ultimately, to developing strategies to inhibit biofilm formation. We implemented a solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) approach to define compositional parameters of the A. fumigatus extracellular matrix (ECM) when biofilms are formed in RPMI 1640 nutrient medium. Whole biofilm and isolated matrix networks were also characterized by electron microscopy, and matrix proteins were identified through protein gel analysis. The C-13 NMR results defined and quantified the carbon contributions in the insoluble ECM, including carbonyls, aromatic carbons, polysaccharide carbons (anomeric and nonanomerics), aliphatics, etc. Additional N-15 and P-31 NMR spectra permitted more specific annotation of the carbon pools according to C-N and C-P couplings. Together these data show that the A. fumigatus ECM produced under these growth conditions contains approximately 40% protein, 43% polysaccharide, 3% aromatic-containing components, and up to 14% lipid. These fundamental chemical parameters are needed to consider the relationships between composition and function in the A. fumigatus ECM and will enable future comparisons with other organisms and with A. fumigatus grown under alternate conditions.

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