A Method for Sample Preparation to Visualize Biofilm Forming Bacteria on Fungal Hyphae

Published: March 29, 2024

Abstract

Source: Guennoc, Cora Miquel, et al, A New Method for Qualitative Multi-scale Analysis of Bacterial Biofilms on Filamentous Fungal Colonies Using Confocal and Electron Microscopy. J. Vis. Exp. (2017).

This video describes a method to grow and qualitatively analyze bacterial biofilms on fungal hyphae using microscopy. Bacterial biofilms frequently form on fungal surfaces and involve numerous bacterial-fungal interaction processes, such as metabolic cooperation, competition, or predation.

Protocol

1. Preparation of an In Vitro Biofilm of Bacteria on the Fungal Colony

  1. Centrifuge the bacterial culture at 5,000 x g for 3 min and suspend the pellet in 25 ml of sterile 0.1 M potassium phosphate buffer (25 g/L KH2PO4 and 2.78 g/L K2HPO4, pH 5.8). Repeat this step once and adjust the final bacterial concentration to 109 cells/ml with the same buffer.
  2. Fill a 6-well microplate with 5 ml of the bacterial suspension (or sterile 0.1 M potassium phosphate buffer for the negative control).
  3. Cut the cellophane membrane of the fungal culture with a sterile razor blade to obtain squares of cellophane with a single fungal colony on each membrane. Carefully remove the cellophane squares containing hyphae from the solid medium using forceps and transfer the square of cellophane containing hyphae to a well of the microplate containing the bacterial suspension.
  4. Gently shake the microplate while the fungal colonies are still attached to the cellophane; then, remove the cellophane sheets, leaving the fungal colonies in the plate.
  5. Incubate the microplate with gentle agitation (~60 rpm) at a temperature adapted to the studied microorganisms.
    Note: The time of incubation depends on the speed of establishment of the biofilm and the stage to be analyzed. For P. fluorescens BBc6/L. bicolor, incubate at 20 °C for 30 min to get early-stage biofilms and up to 16 hr to get mature biofilms.

2. Laser Scanning Confocal Microscopy Analysis of the Biofilm Formation

  1. Sample preparation
    1. To remove planktonic bacteria and bacteria electrostatically attached to the hyphae, rinse the fungus by transferring it to a new 6-well microplate filled with 5 ml of a strong salt solution (NaCl, 17 g/L); gently shake for 1 min.
    2. Transfer the fungus to a new 6-well microplate containing 5 ml of sterile 0.1 M potassium phosphate buffer, gently shake for 2 min, and transfer the fungus to fresh potassium phosphate buffer.
    3. Cut the part of the fungal colony to be imaged with a scalpel while keeping it in the potassium phosphate buffer, such that the obtained section contains about half of the fungal colony.
    4. To stain the sample, transfer it to a Petri dish filled with sterile water containing an appropriate fluorescent dye (depending on the aim of the analysis), and incubate it in the dark.
      1. To visualize the fungal network, use, for example, Congo Red (0.1% final concentration, 5 min of incubation), wheat germ agglutin (WGA) lectin conjugated to Alexa Fluor 633 (10 µg/ml final concentration, 10 min of incubation) or FUN1 (10 µM final concentration, 10 min of incubation).
      2. If using a non-fluorescent-tagged bacterium, counterstain the bacterial cells with a DNA-specific fluorescent probe among the numerous cell-permeant DNA dyes commercially available. For example, use DAPI (0.25 µg/ml final concentration, 10 min of incubation).
      3. To visualize the matrix proteins, use a protein stain.
    5. After staining, rinse the sample by transferring it to a Petri dish lid containing 10 ml of sterile 0.1 M potassium phosphate and gently shake for 1 min.
    6. Half submerge a slide in the Petri dish lid and delicately bring the cut section to float above the slide. Then, slowly remove the slide from the buffer solution, allowing the sample to gently settle on the slide.
      Note: For this step, it is very important to proceed gently to avoid biofilm disturbance.
    7. Finally, add 10 μl of anti-fading mounting medium to the sample and cover it with a glass coverslip.
      Note: Once the slide is prepared, the microscopic analysis must be performed as soon as possible (within at most 30 min) to avoid modification in the biofilm structure.

Disclosures

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Materials

6 well Falcon Tissue Culture Plates  Fisher Scientific 08-772-33 Used in 2.2 & 3.1
Congo Red Fisher Scientific C580-25 Used in 3.1.4.1
FUN 1 Cell Stain Thermo Fisher Scientific F7030 Used in 3.1.4.1
Wheat Germ Agglutinin, Alexa Fluor 633 Conjugate Thermo Fisher Scientific W21404 Used in 3.1.4.1
DAPI solution Thermo Fisher Scientific 62248 Used in 3.1.4.2
Propidium iodide Thermo Fisher Scientific P3566 Used in 3.1.4.3
FilmTracer SYPRO Ruby Biofilm Matrix protein Stain Thermo Fisher Scientific F10318 Used in 3.1.4.4
Fluoromount-G Slide Mounting Medium Fisher Scientific OB100-01 Used in 3.1.7
LSM780 Axio Observer Z1 Zeiss Used in 3.2.1
ZEN 2.1 lite black software Zeiss Used in 3.2.1
High Vacuum Coater Leica EM ACE600 Leica Used in 4
GeminiSEM-FEG Zeiss Used in 4

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Cite This Article
A Method for Sample Preparation to Visualize Biofilm Forming Bacteria on Fungal Hyphae. J. Vis. Exp. (Pending Publication), e22067, doi: (2024).

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