Microorganisms (Sep 2024)

Characterization of <i>Escherichia coli</i> Persisters from Biofilm Culture: Multiple Dormancy Levels and Multigenerational Memory in Formation

  • Hirona Ikeda,
  • Sumio Maeda

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms12091888
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 9
p. 1888

Abstract

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Persister cells (PCs), a subpopulation occurring within normal cells, exhibit a transient tolerance to antibiotics because of their dormant state. PCs are categorized into two types: type I PCs, which emerge during the stationary phase, and type II PCs, which emerge during the logarithmic phase. Using the conventional colony-forming method, we previously demonstrated that type I PCs of Escherichia coli form more frequently in air–solid biofilm culture than in liquid culture. In the current study, we modified a cell filamentation method as a more efficient and rapid alternative for quantifying PCs. This modified method yielded results consistent with those of the conventional method with 103–104 times higher sensitivity and less detection time, within several hours, and further revealed the existence of multiple levels of type I PCs, including a substantial number of deeply dormant cells. This study also discovered a potential epigenetic memory mechanism, spanning several generations (four or six cell divisions), which influences type II PC formation based on prior biofilm experience in E. coli.

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