(+)-Terpinen-4-ol Inhibits <i>Bacillus cereus</i> Biofilm Formation by Upregulating the Interspecies Quorum Sensing Signals Diketopiperazines and Diffusing Signaling Factors
Lijun Zhao, Feixia Duan, Meng Gong, Xue Tian, Yan Guo, Lirong Jia, Sha Deng
Abstract
Bacillus cereus is a Gram-positive endospore-forming foodborne pathogen that causes lethal food poisoning and significant economic losses, usually through biofilm- and endospore-induced recurrent cross- and postprocessing contamination. Due to the lack of critical inhibitory targets and control strategies, B. cereus biofilm contamination is a problem that urgently needs a solution. In this study, the antibacterial and antibiofilm activities of several natural potential bacterial quorum sensing (QS) interferers, a group of spice-originated monoterpenoids, were screened, and terpinen-4-ol effectively inhibited B. cereus growth and biofilm and spore germination with minimum growth inhibition and 50% biofilm inhibitory concentrations of 8 and 2 μmol/mL, respectively. FESEM/CLSM and phenotypic research illustrated that in addition to a decrease in the number of attached B. cereus cells, (+)-terpinen-4-ol also obviously reduced extracellular matrix synthesis, especially exopolysaccharides, and inhibited the swarming motility and protease activity of B. cereus. (+)-Terpinen-4-ol did not exert a significant effect on AI-2 signals in B. cereus. Accordingly, the B. cereus-produced interspecies QS signals diffusing signal factors (DSFs, C8–C15) and diketopiperazines (DKPs) were detected and identified here, which suppressed B. cereus biofilm formation in a concentration-dependent manner. (+)-Terpinen-4-ol significantly increased the levels of specific DSF and DKP signals in B. cereus and down-regulated the gene expression of some rpfB homologues in transcription level. Moreover, both DKPs and DSFs inhibited swarming motility and protease activity in B. cereus, while just the DSF signals 2-dodecenoic acid and 11-methyl-2-dodecenoic acid inhibited exopolysaccharide synthesis like (+)-terpinen-4-ol. In summary, B. cereus strains were found to produce nine DSF- and six DKP-type QS signaling molecules, which repressed B. cereus biofilm formation. (+)-Terpinen-4-ol was confirmed to be a promising antibacterial and antibiofilm agent against B. cereus upregulating DSFs and DKPs levels, and it could target the critical genes rpfB for DSFs turnover.