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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, July 2004, p. 2659-2664, Vol. 48, No. 7
0066-4804/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.48.7.2659-2664.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Oxygen Limitation Contributes to Antibiotic Tolerance of Pseudomonas aeruginosa in Biofilms
Giorgia Borriello,1 Erin Werner,1 Frank Roe,1 Aana M. Kim,1 Garth D. Ehrlich,2 and Philip S. Stewart1*
Center for Biofilm Engineering and Department of Chemical Engineering, Montana State UniversityBozeman, Bozeman, Montana 59717-3980,1
Center for Genomic Sciences, Allegheny Singer Research Institute, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 152122
Received 3 October 2003/
Returned for modification 2 January 2004/
Accepted 6 March 2004

ABSTRACT
The role of oxygen limitation in protecting
Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains growing in biofilms from killing by antibiotics was
investigated in vitro. Bacteria in mature (48-h-old) colony
biofilms were poorly killed when they were exposed to tobramycin,
ciprofloxacin, carbenicillin, ceftazidime, chloramphenicol,
or tetracycline for 12 h. It was shown with oxygen microelectrodes
that these biofilms contain large anoxic regions. Oxygen penetrated
about 50 µm into the biofilms, which averaged 210 µm
thick. The region of active protein synthesis was visualized
by using an inducible green fluorescent protein. This zone was
also limited to a narrow band , approximately 30 µm wide,
adjacent to the air interface of the biofilm. The bacteria in
mature biofilms exhibited a specific growth rate of only 0.02
h
1. These results show that 48-h-old colony biofilms
are physiologically heterogeneous and that most of the cells
in the biofilm occupy an oxygen-limited, stationary-phase state.
In contrast, bacteria in 4-h-old colony biofilms were still
growing, active, and susceptible to antibiotics when they were
challenged in air. When 4-h-old colony biofilms were challenged
under anaerobic conditions, the level of killing by antibiotics
was reduced compared to that for the controls grown aerobically.
Oxygen limitation could explain 70% or more of the protection
afforded to 48-h-old colony biofilms for all antibiotics tested.
Nitrate amendment stimulated the growth of untreated control
P. aeruginosa isolates grown under anaerobic conditions but
decreased the susceptibilities of the organisms to antibiotics.
Local oxygen limitation and the presence of nitrate may contribute
to the reduced susceptibilities of
P. aeruginosa biofilms causing
infections in vivo.

INTRODUCTION
When bacteria attach to surfaces and grow as biofilms, they
are able to survive antibiotic treatments that readily eradicate
free-floating cells (
17). One straightforward mechanism that
explains this tolerance is that bacteria in a biofilm experience
nutrient limitation that leads to localized slow growth or starvation
(
3,
23). Many antibiotics are known to be less effective against
nongrowing or stationary-phase cells than against rapidly growing
cells. This protective mechanism is plausible for aerobic microorganisms,
as oxygen limitation is a common feature of biofilms.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a convenient model organism with which to investigate the roles of oxygen limitation and anaerobiosis in protecting biofilm cells from antibiotics. This bacterium is commonly isolated from infections thought to involve biofilm formation, including those associated with burn wounds, keratitis, urinary catheters, otitis media, and pneumonia in patients with cystic fibrosis (6). It has recently been demonstrated that oxygen is locally depleted in the infected mucus of individuals with cystic fibrosis, underscoring the potential relevance of anaerobiosis in vivo (22). Oxygen gradients and local anaerobic conditions have also been measured in P. aeruginosa biofilms grown in vitro (20, 24).
In addition to slow growth, some of the other factors that have been implicated in P. aeruginosa biofilm protection from killing by antibiotics include specific genetic determinants (2, 13, 21), phenotypic variation (8), the formation of specialized persister cells (16), quorum sensing (15), and overproduction of the matrix polysaccharide alginate (11). Several earlier studies have also investigated aspects of biofilm susceptibility as a function of growth rate (9, 14, 18). None of those studies, however, focused on the role of oxygen limitation in particular in the protection of P. aeruginosa biofilms.
There are two pathways through which P. aeruginosa is known to be able to grow anaerobically. The first pathway is denitrification, which requires nitrate or nitrite as an alternative electron acceptor (5). Nitrate and nitrite are present in the mucus of individuals with cystic fibrosis (10). Yoon et al. (25) have shown that P. aeruginosa forms robust biofilms under anaerobic denitrifying conditions. The same group of investigators also showed that the OprF gene is upregulated during anaerobiosis in the presence of nitrate and that its protein can be detected in the sputum of patients with cystic fibrosis. These results suggest that denitrification by P. aeruginosa could be important in vivo. The second pathway of anaerobic growth is the fermentation of arginine (19). Thus, in an anaerobic environment, in the absence of nitrate and arginine, the growth and metabolism of P. aeruginosa are completely arrested (5, 19).
There is a very limited literature that addresses the antibiotic sensitivity of P. aeruginosa under anaerobic conditions. Davey et al. (7) measured the MICs and minimal bactericidal concentrations (MBCs) of ciprofloxacin, gentamicin, and imipenem for P. aeruginosa in vitro under aerobic and anaerobic conditions. Under anaerobic conditions, the MIC and MBC of ciprofloxacin were slightly reduced, those of gentamicin were increased 8-fold, while those of imipenem were increased 1.5-fold. The fact that MICs were measured under anaerobic conditions indicates that some anaerobic growth occurred in the Mueller-Hinton broth used. These data suggest that gentamicin may be less effective against P. aeruginosa under anaerobic conditions. Bryant and Mazza (4) measured the bactericidal activities of ciprofloxacin at 5 µg/ml and imipenem at 10 µg/ml against P. aeruginosa incubated for 18 h at 37°C in human pus under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions. Neither antibiotic had much effectlog reductions were less than 1 in all casesso it was not possible to detect differences due to oxygen availability. We have not been able to locate any published data on the role of nitrates or denitrification in modulating the antibiotic susceptibility of P. aeruginosa.
The goal of the present study was to determine how oxygen and nitrate availability affect antibiotic killing in P. aeruginosa biofilms.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Bacterial strains, media, and antibiotics.
Pure cultures of
P. aeruginosa PAO1 were used throughout the
study. Bacteria were grown on tryptic soy agar (TSA) or tryptic
soy broth (TSB), supplied by Difco (Detroit, Mich.). To provide
a substrate for anaerobic respiration, 1% KNO
3 (Fisher Scientific,
Denver, Colo.) was added to TSA. Ciprofloxacin hydrochloride
powder was donated by Bayer Corporation (Leverkusen, Germany).
Tobramycin sulfate, chloramphenicol, and tetracycline hydrochloride
were purchased from Sigma Chemical Company (St. Louis, Mo.).
Carbenicillin disodium salt was supplied by Anatrace (Maumee,
Ohio). Ceftazidime pentahydrate was a gift from GlaxoSmithKline
(Research Triangle Park, N.C.). Powered antibiotics were dissolved
in sterile water and were added to molten culture medium (

50°C)
to create antibiotic-supplemented agar plates.
MICs were determined on Mueller-Hinton agar (Difco) with Etest strips (AB Biodisk, Solna, Sweden). The following antibiotics were used at the indicated concentrations: carbenicillin, 250 µg/ml; ceftazidime, 10 µg/ml; chloramphenicol, 250 µg/ml; ciprofloxacin, 1 µg/ml; tetracycline, 250 µg/ml; tobramycin, 10 µg/ml. These concentrations were selected because they are 10 to 20 times the MIC, the minimum concentration typically needed to measure some effect against a mature biofilm.
Biofilm preparation.
Colony biofilms were grown on polycarbonate membrane filters (diameter, 25 mm; Poretics, Livermore, Calif.) resting on TSA plates, as described by Walters et al. (20). Membranes were sterilized by exposure to UV light (15 min per side) and then inoculated with a 25-µl spot of an overnight culture of planktonic P. aeruginosa PAO1 previously grown in TSB and diluted with the same medium to an optical density at 600 nm of 0.05. The bacteria were incubated at 37°C and grown for either 4 h (young biofilms) or 48 h (mature biofilms). For the growth of mature colony biofilms, the membranes were transferred to fresh TSA plates every 24 h.
Anaerobic environment.
Anaerobic growth conditions were obtained by incubating the bacteria in anaerobic bags (BBL GasPak pouch system; Becton Dickinson, Cockeysville, Md.). All the agar plates used in the anaerobic system were previously placed in an anaerobic bag for at least 24 h to deplete the agar of the oxygen naturally present.
Biofilm susceptibility.
Antibiotic efficacy was tested by transferring either young or mature colony biofilms previously grown on TSA to antibiotic-supplemented agar plates. For each antibiotic, the concentration used for susceptibility testing was 10 to 20 times the MIC. For all antibiotic treatments, the bacteria were incubated at 37°C for 12 h. Each membrane-supported biofilm was sampled after the antibiotic challenge, as described by Anderl et al. (1). The cultures were diluted in phosphate-buffered water (0.31 mM phosphate, 2.0 mM magnesium), and the viable cell numbers were enumerated by plating serially diluted samples on TSA plates by the drop plating method (12). Killing was reported as the log reduction calculated relative to the cell count at the time of initiation of antibiotic exposure. Experiments were performed in triplicate. The standard error of the mean is reported for each value.
Specific growth rate.
Specific growth rates were calculated from growth curves as the slope of the linear regression of the natural log cell number-versus-time data. The error indicated is the standard deviation.
Oxygen penetration.
The profiles of the oxygen concentrations in colony biofilms were measured with a dissolved oxygen microelectrode. The oxygen microelectrode is based on the principle of the common amperometric Clark oxygen electrode. This system is described in detail elsewhere (20).
Spatial pattern of protein synthesis.
The location of active protein synthesis inside the biofilms was determined by using an inducible green fluorescent protein (GFP) construct that has been described previously (20; E. Werner, F. Roe, A. Bugnicourt, M. Franklin, A. Heydorn, S. Molin, B. Pitts, and P. S. Stewart, submitted for publication). Briefly, colony biofilms of P. aeruginosa PAO1 carrying plasmid pAB1 were transferred to TSA plates containing 1mM isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) for 4 h at 37°C. The colonies were counterstained with rhodamine B, cryoembedded, sectioned, and examined with a Leica NT confocal scanning laser microscope.

RESULTS
Most of the antibiotic susceptibility tests performed in this
study were performed with
P. aeruginosa PAO1 colony biofilms
that were grown for either 4 or 48 h prior to antibiotic exposure.
The polycarbonate membranes that supported colony biofilms were
initially seeded with approximately 10
6 CFU of cells. Bacteria
began to grow exponentially and remained in exponential phase
for approximately 6 h (Fig.
1). The specific growth rate calculated
between 0 and 5 h was 1.14 ± 0.03 h
1. Growth slowed
after 6 h, and the colony appeared to enter stationary phase.
The average specific growth rate between 24 and 48 h was 0.02
± 0.01 h
1.
The antibiotic susceptibilities of mature (48-h-old) colony
biofilms were investigated in vitro. Bacteria were challenged
with approximately 10 to 20 times the MIC measured under aerobic
conditions (Table
1) for 12 h. The antibiotics killed the
P. aeruginosa organisms growing in 48-h-old colony biofilms poorly
(Table
2). The largest log reduction was recorded with ciprofloxacin
(log reduction, 1.13). All of the other antibiotics generated
log reductions of 0.82 or less for mature biofilms.
A direct measurement of the oxygen concentration profile in
48-h-old
P. aeruginosa colony biofilms was obtained with oxygen
microelectrodes (Fig.
2). Mature biofilms were mostly anaerobic.
These measurements show that oxygen penetrated approximately
50 µm into the colony from the air interface. As the colony
biofilms were approximately 210 µm thick, the oxygen-replete
portion can be estimated to be about one-quarter of the entire
colony. Most of the mature colony biofilm can therefore be assumed
to inhabit a state of anoxia or a state with low dissolved oxygen
concentrations.
When 48-h-old colony biofilms formed by a strain of
P. aeruginosa carrying an inducible, stable GFP were exposed to the inducing
agent IPTG for 4 h, only those bacteria in a narrow band adjacent
to the air interface were able to express GFP (Fig.
3A). In
Fig.
3, green defines the region of the biofilm in which active
protein synthesis is taking place, while red indicates biomass
that is inactive. It can be deduced that IPTG penetrates the
biofilm because the zone of active GFP induction is at the edge
of the biofilm opposite from that to which the inducer was delivered.
In other work (Werner et al., submitted), it has been shown
that the zone of GFP induction corresponds to the region of
bacterial growth, as mapped by other techniques. Because the
activation of GFP fluorescence is oxygen dependent, the bright
zone could reveal only the region of aerobic protein synthesis.
In this experiment, however, in which neither an alternative
electron acceptor nor arginine was present, the zone of aerobic
metabolism is predicted to be the only zone of active protein
synthesis. The dimension of this zone of GFP synthesis was determined
by image analysis to be 32 ± 3 µm. These results
show that 48-h-old
P. aeruginosa colony biofilms are physiologically
heterogeneous. The majority of the biofilm occupied an inactive
or anaerobic state.
Oxygen availability influenced the growth of young (4-h-old)
colony biofilms. At this early stage of development, the bacteria
in colony biofilms incubated in air still had access to oxygen
and all of the cells were metabolically active. When a biofilm
formed by the strain carrying the inducible GFP construct was
grown for 4 h and then induced with IPTG for 4 h, the cells
did not yet appear to be fully aggregated and they all expressed
GFP (Fig.
3B). There were no red zones in the biofilm, as there
were in the 48-h-old biofilms (Fig.
3A), which would have indicated
inactive or anaerobic biomass. The bacteria in the 4-h-old biofilms
were still growing. The average specific growth rate calculated
between 6 and 16 h for colonies grown under aerobic conditions
was 0.16 ± 0.01 h
1 (Fig.
1). When 4-h-old colony
biofilms were transferred to anaerobic growth conditions, growth
was arrested within 2 h. The average specific growth rate under
anaerobic conditions over the same time interval (4 to 16 h)
was 0.04 ± 0.02 h
1. This shows that oxygen
is important for colony biofilm growth from 4 to 16 h under
the conditions tested.
Young (4-h-old) colony biofilms challenged under aerobic growth conditions were susceptible to antibiotics, especially ciprofloxacin and tobramycin (Fig. 4). When the same assays were performed under anaerobic growth conditions, antibiotic efficacies were reduced in all cases (Fig. 4). For example, 4-h-old colony biofilms challenged with ciprofloxacin and tobramycin on TSA in air experienced almost complete killing (log reductions, 5.05 ± 0.31 and 5.67 ± 0.00 [killing to the detection limit], respectively), while the log reductions resulting from the same two agents were much less (2.61 ± 0.13 and 2.14 ± 0.42, respectively) in the absence of oxygen. These differences were statistically significant (P < 0.001 in both cases). It was also determined that the other three antibiotics tested, carbenicillin, chloramphenicol, and tetracycline, had reduced efficacies under anaerobic growth conditions. These results show that oxygen availability is an important determinant of antibiotic susceptibility in P. aeruginosa.
Mature (48-h-old) colony biofilms may contain bacterial cells
that have been deprived of oxygen for a prolonged period. To
simulate the state of low metabolic activity that bacteria may
occupy in mature biofilms, 4-h-old colony biofilms were incubated
in an anaerobic environment for 24 h prior to antibiotic challenge.
The subsequent 12-h antibiotic treatment was also delivered
under anaerobic conditions. There was little difference between
the log reductions measured in these experiments and those determined
under anaerobic conditions without prolonged anoxia. The only
exception was for ciprofloxacin, in which case the log reduction
was reduced to 1.75 ± 0.08 under conditions of prolonged
anaerobic incubation.
To assess the effects of nitrates on P. aeruginosa growth, 4-h-old colony biofilms were transferred to plates supplemented with 1% KNO3 and incubated both aerobically and anaerobically. The log increase in viable cell numbers over the 12-h test period in an aerobic environment was 1.38 ± 0.08, slightly less than that when no nitrate was present. On the other hand, colony biofilms that were incubated anaerobically grew more in the presence of nitrate than when nitrate was absent. The log increase for biofilms incubated anaerobically in the presence of nitrate was 0.87 ± 0.08 (Fig. 1), which is statistically significantly larger than that for the anaerobic control without nitrate (P = 0.004). The specific growth rate in the presence of nitrates under anaerobic growth conditions calculated between 6 and 16 h was 0.36 ± 0.07 h1. These results show that nitrate facilitates the growth of colony biofilms under anaerobic conditions but has a slight detrimental effect on aerobically growing biofilms.
The effect of nitrate supplementation on the antibiotic susceptibilities of 4-h-old colony biofilms was evaluated under both aerobic and anaerobic growth conditions. Nitrate slightly increased the MICs under aerobic conditions (Table 1). The susceptibilities of young colony biofilms under aerobic conditions in the presence of nitrate were similar to the susceptibilities of these biofilms under aerobic conditions in the absence of nitrate for most antibiotics (Fig. 5A). For example, in the presence of oxygen, nitrate supplementation had no statistically significant effect on killing by ciprofloxacin (P = 0.42). The efficacy of killing by tobramycin decreased from a log reduction of 5.67 ± 0.00 (killing to the detection limit) in the absence of nitrate to a log reduction of 4.55 ± 0.56 in the presence of nitrate. The only antibiotic whose efficacy was notably altered by the addition of nitrate under aerobic conditions was carbenicillin (Fig. 5A). Carbenicillin had almost no effect on colony biofilm bacteria in the standard test in the presence of air and the absence of nitrate (log reduction, 0.34 ± 0.27). When nitrate was added, killing by this antibiotic rose to a log reduction of 4.04 ± 0.31. In summary, under aerobic conditions nitrate supplementation had little effect on the efficacies of most antibiotics, with the exception of carbenicillin, whose efficacy was substantially increased by the presence of nitrate.
Under anaerobic conditions, nitrate supplementation decreased
the levels of killing by ciprofloxacin and tobramycin (Fig.
5B). The log reductions obtained with both agents were more
than halved in the presence of nitrate and the absence of oxygen,
and these effects were statistically significant (
P = 0.003
and
P < 0.001 for ciprofloxacin and tobramycin, respectively).
Nitrate had no statistically significant effect on the efficacies
of the other three antibiotics under anaerobic conditions. The
enhancement of the action of carbenicillin that was so striking
under aerobic conditions was abolished under anaerobic conditions.
These data show that nitrate can reduce the efficacies of clinically
important antibiotics used for the treatment of
P. aeruginosa infections when anoxia prevails.

DISCUSSION
Anaerobic conditions reduced the efficacies of all six antibiotics
tested against
P. aeruginosa. These diminished susceptibilities
were statistically highly significant (
P < 0.001) in the
cases of ciprofloxacin, tobramycin, and carbenicillin. While
oxygen deprivation protected
P. aeruginosa, it did not reduce
susceptibility in short-term cultures to the same low levels
measured for 48-h-old colony biofilms in most cases. When the
log reductions for mature colony biofilms are compared with
the log reductions for young biofilms under anaerobic conditions,
oxygen limitation could account for as much as 62 to 100% of
the protection, depending on the agent (Table
2). This suggests
that oxygen limitation is one of the important factors in the
tolerance of
P. aeruginosa biofilms to killing by antibiotics,
but it is probably not the only factor.
The protection from bacterial killing by ciprofloxacin and tobramycin afforded by an anaerobic environment was enhanced by the addition of nitrate. This result was surprising to us, because nitrate supplementation under anaerobic conditions promoted the growth of the untreated control. This shows that antibiotic susceptibility is not strictly a function of the growth state but is determined by the specific nutrients present. The reduced efficacies of antibiotics for the killing of P. aeruginosa in the presence of nitrate and the absence of oxygen could help to explain the failure of antibiotic chemotherapy to control many infections associated with this microorganism.
Unlike conventional planktonic cultures, microbial biofilms are heterogeneous with respect to the physiological state of the cells that they harbor. Key nutrients and electron acceptors may be locally depleted inside a biofilm cell cluster. Biofilms probably contain cells occupying a spectrum of states from rapidly growing to not growing at all. The possibility that antibiotics target only one slice of this spectrum could help explain why biofilm infections respond poorly to antimicrobial chemotherapy. The data presented in this article support this protective mechanism, showing that, in P. aeruginosa the availability of the electron acceptors oxygen and nitrate modulates antibiotic susceptibility.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by NIH grant R01DC04173-01A1 and by
an award from the W. M. Keck Foundation.
Betsey Pitts assisted with microscopy, and Martin Hamilton assisted with the statistical analyses.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Center for Biofilm Engineering and Department of Chemical Engineering, Montana State UniversityBozeman, Bozeman, Montana 59717-3980. Phone: (406) 994-2890. Fax: (406) 994-6098. E-mail:
phil_s{at}erc.montana.edu.


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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, July 2004, p. 2659-2664, Vol. 48, No. 7
0066-4804/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.48.7.2659-2664.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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