Distribution of bacterial growth activity in flow-chamber biofilms

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Distribution of bacterial growth activity in flow-chamber biofilms. / Sternberg, C; Christensen, B B; Johansen, T; Toftgaard Nielsen, A; Andersen, J B; Givskov, M; Molin, Søren.

In: Applied and Environmental Microbiology, Vol. 65, No. 9, 1999, p. 4108-17.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Sternberg, C, Christensen, BB, Johansen, T, Toftgaard Nielsen, A, Andersen, JB, Givskov, M & Molin, S 1999, 'Distribution of bacterial growth activity in flow-chamber biofilms', Applied and Environmental Microbiology, vol. 65, no. 9, pp. 4108-17.

APA

Sternberg, C., Christensen, B. B., Johansen, T., Toftgaard Nielsen, A., Andersen, J. B., Givskov, M., & Molin, S. (1999). Distribution of bacterial growth activity in flow-chamber biofilms. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 65(9), 4108-17.

Vancouver

Sternberg C, Christensen BB, Johansen T, Toftgaard Nielsen A, Andersen JB, Givskov M et al. Distribution of bacterial growth activity in flow-chamber biofilms. Applied and Environmental Microbiology. 1999;65(9):4108-17.

Author

Sternberg, C ; Christensen, B B ; Johansen, T ; Toftgaard Nielsen, A ; Andersen, J B ; Givskov, M ; Molin, Søren. / Distribution of bacterial growth activity in flow-chamber biofilms. In: Applied and Environmental Microbiology. 1999 ; Vol. 65, No. 9. pp. 4108-17.

Bibtex

@article{392ef1b8857e4544a2269b944c031f6c,
title = "Distribution of bacterial growth activity in flow-chamber biofilms",
abstract = "In microbial communities such as those found in biofilms, individual organisms most often display heterogeneous behavior with respect to their metabolic activity, growth status, gene expression pattern, etc. In that context, a novel reporter system for monitoring of cellular growth activity has been designed. It comprises a transposon cassette carrying fusions between the growth rate-regulated Escherichia coli rrnBP1 promoter and different variant gfp genes. It is shown that the P1 promoter is regulated in the same way in E. coli and Pseudomonas putida, making it useful for monitoring of growth activity in organisms outside the group of enteric bacteria. Construction of fusions to genes encoding unstable Gfp proteins opened up the possibility of the monitoring of rates of rRNA synthesis and, in this way, allowing on-line determination of the distribution of growth activity in a complex community. With the use of these reporter tools, it is demonstrated that individual cells of a toluene-degrading P. putida strain growing in a benzyl alcohol-supplemented biofilm have different levels of growth activity which develop as the biofilm gets older. Cells that eventually grow very slowly or not at all may be stimulated to restart growth if provided with a more easily metabolizable carbon source. Thus, the dynamics of biofilm growth activity has been tracked to the level of individual cells, cell clusters, and microcolonies.",
author = "C Sternberg and Christensen, {B B} and T Johansen and {Toftgaard Nielsen}, A and Andersen, {J B} and M Givskov and S{\o}ren Molin",
year = "1999",
language = "English",
volume = "65",
pages = "4108--17",
journal = "Applied and Environmental Microbiology",
issn = "0099-2240",
publisher = "American Society for Microbiology",
number = "9",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Distribution of bacterial growth activity in flow-chamber biofilms

AU - Sternberg, C

AU - Christensen, B B

AU - Johansen, T

AU - Toftgaard Nielsen, A

AU - Andersen, J B

AU - Givskov, M

AU - Molin, Søren

PY - 1999

Y1 - 1999

N2 - In microbial communities such as those found in biofilms, individual organisms most often display heterogeneous behavior with respect to their metabolic activity, growth status, gene expression pattern, etc. In that context, a novel reporter system for monitoring of cellular growth activity has been designed. It comprises a transposon cassette carrying fusions between the growth rate-regulated Escherichia coli rrnBP1 promoter and different variant gfp genes. It is shown that the P1 promoter is regulated in the same way in E. coli and Pseudomonas putida, making it useful for monitoring of growth activity in organisms outside the group of enteric bacteria. Construction of fusions to genes encoding unstable Gfp proteins opened up the possibility of the monitoring of rates of rRNA synthesis and, in this way, allowing on-line determination of the distribution of growth activity in a complex community. With the use of these reporter tools, it is demonstrated that individual cells of a toluene-degrading P. putida strain growing in a benzyl alcohol-supplemented biofilm have different levels of growth activity which develop as the biofilm gets older. Cells that eventually grow very slowly or not at all may be stimulated to restart growth if provided with a more easily metabolizable carbon source. Thus, the dynamics of biofilm growth activity has been tracked to the level of individual cells, cell clusters, and microcolonies.

AB - In microbial communities such as those found in biofilms, individual organisms most often display heterogeneous behavior with respect to their metabolic activity, growth status, gene expression pattern, etc. In that context, a novel reporter system for monitoring of cellular growth activity has been designed. It comprises a transposon cassette carrying fusions between the growth rate-regulated Escherichia coli rrnBP1 promoter and different variant gfp genes. It is shown that the P1 promoter is regulated in the same way in E. coli and Pseudomonas putida, making it useful for monitoring of growth activity in organisms outside the group of enteric bacteria. Construction of fusions to genes encoding unstable Gfp proteins opened up the possibility of the monitoring of rates of rRNA synthesis and, in this way, allowing on-line determination of the distribution of growth activity in a complex community. With the use of these reporter tools, it is demonstrated that individual cells of a toluene-degrading P. putida strain growing in a benzyl alcohol-supplemented biofilm have different levels of growth activity which develop as the biofilm gets older. Cells that eventually grow very slowly or not at all may be stimulated to restart growth if provided with a more easily metabolizable carbon source. Thus, the dynamics of biofilm growth activity has been tracked to the level of individual cells, cell clusters, and microcolonies.

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 10473423

VL - 65

SP - 4108

EP - 4117

JO - Applied and Environmental Microbiology

JF - Applied and Environmental Microbiology

SN - 0099-2240

IS - 9

ER -

ID: 44306238