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Dive into the research topics where Pauline S. Handley is active.

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Featured researches published by Pauline S. Handley.


Trends in Microbiology | 2003

Bacterial coaggregation: an integral process in the development of multi-species biofilms.

Alexander H. Rickard; Peter Gilbert; Nicola J. High; Paul E. Kolenbrander; Pauline S. Handley

Coaggregation is a process by which genetically distinct bacteria become attached to one another via specific molecules. Cumulative evidence suggests that such adhesion influences the development of complex multi-species biofilms. Once thought to occur exclusively between dental plaque bacteria, there are increasing reports of coaggregation between bacteria from other biofilm communities in several diverse habitats. A general role for coaggregation in the formation of multi-species biofilms is discussed.


Microbiology | 1987

A Comparison of the Adhesion, Coaggregation and Cell-surface Hydrophobicity Properties of Fibrillar and Fimbriate Strains of Streptococcus salivarius

Pauline S. Handley; Derek W. S. Harty; Janet E. Wyatt; Christopher R. Brown; John P. Doran; Alan C. C. Gibbs

Fibrillar and fimbriate strains of Streptococcus salivarius were compared for their ability to adhere to buccal epithelial cells and saliva-coated hydroxyapatite beads, and for their ability to coaggregate with Veillonella strains. The fibrillar Lancefield group K strains adhered statistically significantly better to both buccal epithelial cells and saliva-coated hydroxyapatite beads than the fimbriate strains, which lacked the Lancefield group K antigen. After 1 h the fibrillar strains coaggregated statistically significantly better than the fimbriate strains with V. parvula strain V1, but after 24 h, coaggregation both of fibrillar and of fimbriate strains reached approximately 90%. Freshly isolated Veillonella strains all coaggregated with the S. salivarius strains, but the percentage coaggregation varied considerably after 1 h depending on the Veillonella strain. Coaggregation was independent of the presence of Ca2+. S. salivarius strain HB-V5, a mutant of strain HB that had lost the Veillonella-binding protein, coaggregated weakly with V. parvula strain V1, but coaggregated very well with other wild-type veillonellae, suggesting the presence of an alternative mechanism for Veillonella-binding for strain HB. Fibrillar strains were, therefore, more adhesive to oral surfaces and coaggregated with veillonellae after 1 h better than the fimbriate S. salivarius strains. Both fibrillar and fimbriate strains were highly hydrophobic in the hexadecane-buffer partition assay.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2000

Fungal colonization and biodeterioration of plasticized polyvinyl chloride

Jeremy S. Webb; Marianne Nixon; Ian M. Eastwood; Malcolm Greenhalgh; Geoffrey D. Robson; Pauline S. Handley

ABSTRACT Significant substratum damage can occur when plasticized PVC (pPVC) is colonized by microorganisms. We investigated microbial colonization of pPVC in an in situ, longitudinal study. Pieces of pPVC containing the plasticizers dioctyl phthalate and dioctyl adipate (DOA) were exposed to the atmosphere for up to 2 years. Fungal and bacterial populations were quantified, and colonizing fungi were identified by rRNA gene sequencing and morphological characteristics.Aureobasidium pullulans was the principal colonizing fungus, establishing itself on the pPVC between 25 and 40 weeks of exposure. A group of yeasts and yeast-like fungi, includingRhodotorula aurantiaca and Kluyveromyces spp., established themselves on the pPVC much later (after 80 weeks of exposure). Numerically, these organisms dominated A. pullulans after 95 weeks, with a mean viable count ± standard error of 1,000 ± 200 yeast CFU cm−2, compared to 390 ± 50 A. pullulans CFU cm−2. No bacterial colonization was observed. We also used in vitro tests to characterize the deteriogenic properties of fungi isolated from the pPVC. All strains of A. pullulans tested could grow with the intact pPVC formulation as the sole source of carbon, degrade the plasticizer DOA, produce extracellular esterase, and cause weight loss of the substratum during growth in vitro. In contrast, several yeast isolates could not grow on pPVC or degrade DOA. These results suggest that microbial succession may occur during the colonization of pPVC and that A. pullulans is critical to the establishment of a microbial community on pPVC.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2002

Phylogenetic relationships and coaggregation ability of freshwater biofilm bacteria

Alexander H. Rickard; Sa Leach; Laurence S. Hall; Cm Buswell; Nicola J. High; Pauline S. Handley

ABSTRACT Nineteen numerically dominant heterotrophic bacteria from a freshwater biofilm were identified by 16S ribosomal DNA gene sequencing, and their coaggregation partnerships were determined. Phylogenetic trees showed that both distantly related and closely related strains coaggregated at intergeneric, intrageneric, and intraspecies levels. One strain, Blastomonas natatoria 2.1, coaggregated with all 18 other strains and may function as a bridging organism in biofilm development.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2000

Coaggregation between Aquatic Bacteria Is Mediated by Specific-Growth-Phase-Dependent Lectin-Saccharide Interactions

Alexander H. Rickard; Sa Leach; Cm Buswell; Nicola J. High; Pauline S. Handley

ABSTRACT Coaggregating strains of aquatic bacteria were identified by partial 16S rRNA gene sequencing. The coaggregation abilities of four strains of Blastomonas natatoria and one strain ofMicrococcus luteus varied with culture age but were always maximum in the stationary phase of growth. Each member of a coaggregating pair carried either a heat- and protease-sensitive protein (lectin) adhesin or a saccharide receptor, as coaggregation was reversed by sugars.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2007

Fungal Communities Associated with Degradation of Polyester Polyurethane in Soil

Lee Cosgrove; Paula L. McGeechan; Geoff Robson; Pauline S. Handley

ABSTRACT Soil fungal communities involved in the biodegradation of polyester polyurethane (PU) were investigated. PU coupons were buried in two sandy loam soils with different levels of organic carbon: one was acidic (pH 5.5), and the other was more neutral (pH 6.7). After 5 months of burial, the fungal communities on the surface of the PU were compared with the native soil communities using culture-based and molecular techniques. Putative PU-degrading fungi were common in both soils, as <45% of the fungal colonies cleared the colloidal PU dispersion Impranil on solid medium. Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis showed that fungal communities on the PU were less diverse than in the soil, and only a few species in the PU communities were detectable in the soil, indicating that only a small subset of the soil fungal communities colonized the PU. Soil type influenced the composition of the PU fungal communities. Geomyces pannorum and a Phoma sp. were the dominant species recovered by culturing from the PU buried in the acidic and neutral soils, respectively. Both fungi degraded Impranil and represented >80% of cultivable colonies from each plastic. However, PU was highly susceptible to degradation in both soils, losing up to 95% of its tensile strength. Therefore, different fungi are associated with PU degradation in different soils but the physical process is independent of soil type.


Journal of Applied Microbiology | 1998

The relationship between pipe material and biofilm formation in a laboratory model system.

C.J. Kerr; K.S. Osborn; Geoffrey D. Robson; Pauline S. Handley

The aim of this study was to compare biofilm accumulation and heterotrophic bacterial diversity on three pipe materials‐cast iron, medium density polyethylene (MDPE), and unplasticised polyvinyl chloride (uPVC) ‐ using a laboratory model system run over a short period (21 d) and a longer period (7 months). Newly Modified Robbins Devices (nMRD) were run in parallel, each containing 25 discs of one material with cold tap water flowing through the devices at 3 ml min−1 (Reynolds Number 9.05) for 21 d. The numbers of bacteria on each material increased exponentially between 0 and 11 d when the biofilm viable count remained constant. The mean doubling times of the heterotrophic population on the materials during the exponential phase was 13.2 h for cast iron and 15.6 h for MDPE and uPVC. The same experiment was repeated under different environmental conditions with a lower temperature, higher free chlorine and lower number of organisms ml−1 of incoming water. The exponential phase lengthened to 16 d but the steady state count remained the same. The mean viable count after 21 d and after 7 months was on average 97% higher on cast iron than on the other materials. Very few different colony types were isolated from each material with the largest number (nine) recovered from cast iron. The numbers of planktonic bacteria in the effluent water leaving each of the nMRDs directly correlated with the numbers in the biofilm phase on each of the materials. In addition the distribution and thickness of the biofilms on the MDPE and uPVC were observed using confocal scanning laser microscopy. In conclusion, MDPE and uPVC support the lowest numbers of bacteria in a steady state biofilm in the short term (21 d) and over a longer term (7 months). The diversity of heterotrophic bacteria was greatest on cast iron.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2007

Localized Tufts of Fibrils on Staphylococcus epidermidis NCTC 11047 Are Comprised of the Accumulation-Associated Protein

Miriam A. Banner; John G. Cunniffe; Robin L. Macintosh; Timothy J. Foster; Holger Rohde; Dietrich Mack; Emmy Hoyes; Jeremy P. Derrick; Mathew Upton; Pauline S. Handley

Staphylococcus epidermidis is both a human skin commensal and an opportunistic pathogen, causing infections linked to implanted medical devices. This paper describes localized tufts of fibrillar appendages on a subpopulation (25%) of wild-type (WT) S. epidermidis NCTC 11047 cells. The fibrils (122.2 +/- 10.8 nm long) are usually in a lateral position on the cells. Fibrillar (Fib(+)) and nonfibrillar (Fib(-)) subpopulations were separated (enriched) by 34 sequential partitions of WT cells between a buffer phase and a hexadecane phase. Following enrichment, hydrophobic cells from the hexadecane phase comprised 70% Fib(+) cells and the less hydrophobic cells from the buffer phase entirely comprised Fib(-) cells. The Fib(+) and Fib(-) subpopulations did not revert on subculture (34 times) on solid medium. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of cell surface proteins from WT, Fib(+), and Fib(-) cells revealed two high-molecular-mass proteins (280 kDa and 230 kDa) on the WT and Fib(+) cells that were absent from the Fib(-) cells. Amino acid sequencing revealed that fragments of both the 280- and 230-kDa proteins had 100% identity to the accumulation-associated protein (Aap). Aap is known to cause biofilm formation if it is truncated by loss of the terminal A domain. Immunogold staining with anti-Aap antibodies labeled tuft fibrils of the WT and Fib(+) cells but not the cell surface of Fib(-) cells. The tufts were labeled with N-terminally directed antibodies (anti-A domain), showing that the fibrillar Aap was not truncated on the cell surface. Thus, the presence of full-length Aap correlated with the low biofilm-forming abilities of both WT and Fib(+) S. epidermidis NCTC 11047 populations. Reverse transcription-PCR showed that aap was transcribed in both Fib(+) and Fib(-) cells. We therefore propose that full-length Aap is expressed on cells of S. epidermidis NCTC 11047 as tufts of short fibrils and that fibril expression is regulated at a posttranscriptional level.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2009

The Terminal A Domain of the Fibrillar Accumulation-Associated Protein (Aap) of Staphylococcus epidermidis Mediates Adhesion to Human Corneocytes

Robin L. Macintosh; Jane L. Brittan; Ritwika Bhattacharya; Howard F. Jenkinson; Jeremy P. Derrick; Mathew Upton; Pauline S. Handley

The opportunistic pathogen Staphylococcus epidermidis colonizes indwelling medical devices by biofilm formation but is primarily a skin resident. In many S. epidermidis strains biofilm formation is mediated by a cell wall-anchored protein, the accumulation-associated protein (Aap). Here, we investigate the role of Aap in skin adhesion. Aap is an LPXTG protein with a domain architecture including a terminal A domain and a B-repeat region. S. epidermidis NCTC 11047 expresses Aap as localized, lateral tufts of fibrils on one subpopulation of cells (Fib(+)), whereas a second subpopulation does not express these fibrils of Aap (Fib(-)). Flow cytometry showed that 72% of NCTC 11047 cells expressed Aap and that 28% of cells did not. Aap is involved in the adhesion of Fib(+) cells to squamous epithelial cells from the hand (corneocytes), as the recombinant A-domain protein partially blocked binding to corneocytes. To confirm the role of the Aap A domain in corneocyte attachment, Aap was expressed on the surface of Lactococcus lactis MG1363 as sparsely distributed, peritrichous fibrils. The expression of Aap increased corneocyte adhesion 20-fold compared to L. lactis carrying Aap without an A domain. S. epidermidis isolates from catheters, artificial joints, skin, and the nose also used the A domain of Aap to adhere to corneocytes, emphasizing the role of Aap in skin adhesion. In addition, L. lactis expressing Aap with different numbers of B repeats revealed a positive correlation between the number of B repeats and adhesion to corneocytes, suggesting an additional function for the B region in enhancing A-domain-dependent attachment to skin. Therefore, in addition to its established role in biofilm formation, Aap can also promote adhesion to corneocytes and is likely to be an important adhesin in S. epidermidis skin colonization.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1996

The interaction of cationic liposomes with the skin-associated bacterium Staphylococcus epidermidis: effects of ionic strength and temperature.

Neil M. Sanderson; Baoqing Guo; Alan E. Jacob; Pauline S. Handley; John G. Cunniffe; Malcolm N. Jones

Cationic liposomes have been prepared from dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC), cholesterol (Chol) and stearylamine (SA). These phospholipid vesicles were exposed to adsorbed biofilms of the skin-associated bacteria Staphylococcus epidermidis, to which they showed a strong affinity. The interaction (as assessed by the apparent monolayer coverage of the biofilms by liposomes) was described in terms of a Langmuir adsorption isotherm which enabled determination of the maximum theoretical coverage of the bacterial surface and association/dissociation constants. The interaction was shown to be dependent on the ionic strength of the surrounding medium; on increasing the ionic strength the biofilm-vesicle dissociation constant decreased. This suggested that the adsorption was mediated by electrostatic effects. The adsorption of the vesicles was examined at various temperatures, enabling determination of thermodynamic parameters for the interaction. The adsorbed state of the liposomes was energetically favoured and the interaction was enthalpy driven. The Gibbs energies of adsorption were in a range from -15 to -19 kJ mol-1 and the enthalpies of adsorption from -26 to -22 kJ mol-1. Studies using cell populations of different hydrophobicity showed that the hydrophobic character of the bacterial cells also had an effect on the adsorption of the vesicles to the biofilm.

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Geoff Robson

University of Manchester

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Alan E. Jacob

University of Manchester

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Janet E. Wyatt

University of Manchester

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Nicola J. High

University of Manchester

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