Purification of the Bacterial Amyloid "Curli" from Salmonella enterica Serovar Typhimurium and Detection of Curli from Infected Host Tissues

Microbiologists are learning to appreciate the importance of "functional amyloids" that are produced by numerous bacterial species and have impacts beyond the microbial world. These structures are used by bacteria to link together, presumably to increase survival, protect against harsh con...

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Published in:Bio-protocol Vol. 12; no. 10; p. e4419
Main Authors: Sivaranjani, Murugesan, Hansen, Elizabeth G, Perera, Sumudu R, Flores, Pamela A, Tükel, Çagla, White, Aaron P
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States Bio-Protocol 20-05-2022
Bio-protocol LLC
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Summary:Microbiologists are learning to appreciate the importance of "functional amyloids" that are produced by numerous bacterial species and have impacts beyond the microbial world. These structures are used by bacteria to link together, presumably to increase survival, protect against harsh conditions, and perhaps to influence cell-cell communication. Bacterial functional amyloids are also beginning to be appreciated in the context of host-pathogen interactions, where there is evidence that they can trigger the innate immune system and are recognized as non-self-molecular patterns. The characteristic three-dimensional fold of amyloids renders them similar across the bacterial kingdom and into the eukaryotic world, where amyloid proteins can be undesirable and have pathological consequences. The bacterial protein curli, produced by pathogenic and strains, was one of the first functional amyloids discovered. Curli have since been well characterized in terms of function, and we are just starting to scratch the surface about their potential impact on eukaryotic hosts. In this manuscript, we present step-by-step protocols with pictures showing how to purify these bacterial surface structures. We have described the purification process from , acknowledging that the same method can be applied to . In addition, we describe methods for detection of curli within animal tissues ( , GI tract) and discuss purifying curli intermediates in a mutant strain as they are more cytotoxic than mature curli fibrils. Some of these methods were first described elsewhere, but we wanted to assemble them together in more detail to make it easier for researchers who want to purify curli for use in biological experiments. Our aim is to provide methods that are useful for specialists and non-specialists as bacterial amyloids become of increasing importance.
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ISSN:2331-8325
2331-8325
DOI:10.21769/BioProtoc.4419