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Article Abstract

Microorganisms in nature form multicellular groups called biofilms. In biofilms, bacteria embedded in the extracellular matrix (ECM) interact intensely due to their proximity. Most studies have investigated genetically homogeneous biofilms, leaving a gap in knowledge on genetically heterogeneous biofilms. Recent insights show that a Gram-positive model bacterium, Bacillus subtilis, discriminates between strains of high (kin) and low (nonkin) genetic similarity, reflected in merging (kin) and boundaries (nonkin) between swarms. However, it is unclear how kinship between interacting strains affects their fitness, the genotype assortment, and incorporation of the mutant lacking the main structural ECM polysaccharide (EpsA-O) into floating biofilms (pellicles). We cultivated Bacillus subtilis strains as mixtures of isogenic, kin, and nonkin strain combinations in the biofilm-promoting minimal medium under static conditions, allowing them to form pellicles. We show that in nonkin pellicles, the dominant strain strongly reduced the frequency of the other strain. Segregation of nonkin mixtures in pellicles increased and invasion of nonkin EpsA-O-deficient mutants into pellicles decreased compared to kin and isogenic floating biofilms. Kin and isogenic strains had comparable relative frequencies in pellicles and showed more homogenous cell mixing. Overall, our results emphasize kin discrimination as a social behavior that shapes strain distribution, spatial segregation, and ECM mutant ability to incorporate into genetically heterogenous biofilms of B. subtilis. Biofilm communities have beneficial and harmful effects on human societies in natural, medical, and industrial environments. Bacillus subtilis is a biotechnologically important bacterium that serves as a model for studying biofilms. Recent studies have shown that this species engages in kin discriminatory behavior during swarming, which may have implications for community assembly, thus being of fundamental importance. Effects of kin discrimination on fitness, genotype segregation, and success of extracellular matrix (ECM) polysaccharide (EpsA-O) mutant invasion into biofilms are not well understood. We provide evidence that kin discrimination depends on the antagonism of the dominant strain against nonkin by using environmental strains with determined kin types and integrated fluorescent reporters. Moreover, this antagonism has important implications for genotype segregation and for when the bacteria are mixed with ECM producers. The work advances the understanding of kin-discrimination-dependent bacterial sociality in biofilms and its role in the assembly of multicellular groups.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9499035PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/aem.00871-22DOI Listing

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