Comparative gene expression analysis of Porphyromonas gingivalis ATCC 33277 in planktonic and biofilms states

Background and objective Porphyromonas gingivalis is a keystone pathogen in the onset and progression of periodontitis. Its pathogenicity has been related to its presence and survival within the subgingival biofilm. The aim of the present study was to compare the genome-wide transcription activities of P. gingivalis in biofilm and in planktonic growth, using microarray technology. Material and methods P. gingivalis ATCC 33277 was incubated in multi-well culture plates at 37°C for 96 hours under anaerobic conditions using an in vitro static model to develop both the planktonic and biofilm states (the latter over sterile ceramic calcium hydroxyapatite discs). The biofilm development was monitored by Confocal Laser Scanning Microscopy (CLSM) and Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM). After incubation, the bacterial cells were harvested and total RNA was extracted and purified. Three biological replicates for each cell state were independently hybridized for transcriptomic comparisons. A linear model was used for determining differentially expressed genes and reverse transcription quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) was used to confirm differential expression. The filtering criteria of ≥ ±2 change in gene expression and significance p-values of <0.05 were selected. Results A total of 92 out of 1,909 genes (4.8%) were differentially expressed by P. gingivalis growing in biofilm compared to planktonic. The 54 up-regulated genes in biofilm growth were mainly related to cell envelope, transport, and binding or outer membranes proteins. Thirty-eight showed decreased expression, mainly genes related to transposases or oxidative stress. Conclusion The adaptive response of P. gingivalis in biofilm growth demonstrated a differential gene expression.


Introduction
Human dental plaque is a complex and dynamic biofilm attached to tooth surfaces, where microbial communities are embedded in a matrix of bacterial extracellular polymeric substances (EPS), proteins, salivary peptides and food scraps [1,2]. The differential activity of these microbial communities within the dental biofilm may have profound implications in the onset and progression of periodontitis, one of the most prevalent chronic inflammatory diseases affecting humans [3]. Porphyromonas gingivalis, a Gram-negative and black-pigmented anaerobic bacterium is one of the keystone pathogens associated with the etiology of periodontitis. Its main ecological niche is the oral microbiome [4] and its pathogenic activity has been directly related to its relative high numbers and proportions within the subgingival biofilm, as well as the expression of virulence factors that facilitate its colonization within the periodontal tissues and its resistance from the host inflammatory and immune responses. [5][6][7].
Virulence factors in periodontal pathogens have been attributed to either presence of highly pathogenic strains or to the up-and down-regulation of a number of genes due to the specific ecological conditions of the bacterial communities within the biofilm. In fact, several transcriptomic studies have been conducted to elucidate the behavior of different pathogenic bacteria growing in biofilm [8][9][10][11]. Whiteley et al. [10] reported that about 1% of the genes from Pseudomonas aeruginosa had shown differential expression when growing in biofilm compared with planktonic. Liu et al. [9] reported that 16.2% of the genes from Clostridium acetobutylicum were differentially expressed in biofilm growth, mainly up-regulation of genes involved in amino acid biosynthesis, sporulation, extracellular polymer degradation and other various metabolic processes, what indicated that C. acetobutylicum had a distinct phenotype when growing in a biofilm.
Similarly, transcriptomic studies have reported that approximately 18.0% of the W50 genome of P. gingivalis was differentially expressed in biofilms [8]. These studies have shown down-regulation of genes encoding for cell envelope biogenesis, DNA replication, energy production and biosynthesis of co-factors and up-regulation of genes involved in transport and binding proteins. Some of these studies have focused specifically on LuxS-dependent signaling and quorum-sensing-regulated genes since they play an important role in the physiology of these micro-organisms, their communication with other bacteria, and their adaptation to the biofilm environment [12][13][14]. Yamamoto et al. [15] reported that an increase of more than 1.5-fold in the number P. gingivalis (ATCC 33277) genes differentially regulated during the biofilm growth (312/2,090 genes, 155 genes were up-regulated and 157 genes were downregulated).
In spite of these studies, our understanding of the regulatory processes and interactions, which allow P. gingivalis to grow within the biofilm and to develop its virulence is still limited. It is, therefore, the aim of this study to assess the differential expression of P. gingivalis genes under two different physiological states, planktonic and biofilm growth, using transcriptomic analysis in an in vitro static model.
In order to study the gene expression of P. gingivalis, in biofilm or planktonic growth, under the same culture conditions, a volume of 1.5 mL of P. gingivalis inoculums was placed in pre-sterilized polystyrene 24-well tissue culture plates (Greiner Bio-one, Frickenhausen, Germany) with or without the presence of sterile ceramic calcium hydroxyapatite discs (HA) [7-mm diameter (standard deviation, SD = 0.2) and 1.8 mm thickness] (Clarkson Chromatography Products, Williamsport, PA, USA). To carry out the experiment, a total of 45 multiwell plates were used. In each plate 19 wells were filled with disk to develop the biofilms (each of the aggregates in each hydroxyapatite disk is considered as a biofilm) and the other five wells were used to analyze the planktonic state without hydroxyapatite disk.
Plates were incubated in anaerobic conditions at 37˚C for 96 h. Wells containing only culture medium were also incubated to verify sterility and the possible contamination of bacteria growing in both planktonic and biofilm growth was frequently checked.

Confocal Laser Scanning Microscopy (CLSM) analysis to monitor P. gingivalis biofilm development
To ensure the change of P. gingivalis phenotype, from planktonic to biofilm, its growth was studied by CLSM when the biofilm reached a mature state (from 24 to 96 h). To confirm the reproducibility of the biofilm-growth, three independent experiments using trios of biofilms were carried out for each incubation time (a concentration of 10 8 CFU/mL P. gingivalis cells in planktonic culture were placed on sterile hydroxyapatite discs). Before the CLSM analysis, the discs were rinsed in 2 mL of sterile Buffer Phosphate Saline (PBS) three times (10 sec of immersion time per rinse), in order to remove non-adherent bacteria. Non-invasive confocal imaging of fully hydrated biofilms was carried out using a fixed-stage Ix83 Olympus inverted microscope coupled to an Olympus FV1200 confocal system and with a ×63 water-immersion lens (Olympus; Shinjuku, Tokio, Japan). Specimens were stained with LIVE/DEAD 1 BacLightTM Bacterial Viability Kit solution (Molecular Probes B. V., Leiden, The Netherlands) at room temperature. A 1:1 fluorocromes ratio and 9±1 min of staining time was used to obtain the optimum fluorescence signal at the corresponding wave lengths (Syto9: 515-530 nm; PI: >600 nm). At least three separate and representative locations on the HA discs covered with biofilm were selected for the study. The CLSM control software was set to take a z-series of scans (xyz) of 0.5 μm thickness (8 bits, 1024x1024 pixels). Image stacks were analyzed with the proprietary Olympus 1 software (Olympus).

Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) analysis
Before SEM analysis, three hydroxyapatite discs covered with biofilms grown in vitro for 96 h were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde and 2.5% glutaraldehyde for 4h at 4˚C. Then, the discs were washed twice in PBS and sterile water (immersion time 10 min) and then, dehydrated through a series of graded ethanol solutions (50, 60, 70, 80, 90 and 100%; immersion time per series, 10 min), Then, the samples were critical point dried, sputter-coated with gold and analysed with an scanning electron microscope JSM 6400 (JSM6400; JEOL, Tokyo, Japan) equipped with back-scattered electron detector and with an image resolution of 25 KV.

Harvesting of planktonic and biofilm cells for gene expression analysis
After 96 h of incubation, P. gingivalis planktonic and biofilm cells were harvested (three biological replicates of each state) for independent hybridization.
For planktonic cells 1 mL was recovered from 15 diskless well. In the same experiments a set of 300 biofilms were harvested independently, then added to 1 mL of sterile PBS, disaggregated by vortexing during 3 min. In both cases the samples were recovered as partial plucks by centrifugation at 9,000 rpm at 4˚C during 5 min, in order to obtain a final 10 μg of total RNA for each replicate in each state. To preserve the bacterial total RNA intact during the time taken for the procedures, the work has always been in cold conditions.
In all cases, after the incubation period, an aliquot of each sample and 1 to 3 discs were used as quality control. They were cultivated on supplemented blood agar plates under anaerobic conditions at 37˚C during two weeks to assure the absence of contamination.

Total RNA extraction
Total RNA was extracted from the harvested samples using the TRIzol 1 Max Bacterial RNA Isolation Kit (Ambion, Life Technologies, Carlsbad, CA, USA). Briefly, pools from planktonic and biofilm growth samples were suspended in 200 μL of preheated Max bacterial Reagent 1 (Ambion), incubated at 95˚C for 4 min and then chilled on ice for 10 min. After, 1 mL of TRIzol 1 reagent (Ambion) was added to lysate the cells, incubating them at room temperature 5 min. After that, 200 μL of cold chloroform was added and incubated at room temperature for 3 min. The mixtures were then centrifuged at 13,000 rpm for 15 min at 4˚C. RNA colourless aqueous phase (~600 μL) was collected, augmented with 0.5 mL of cold isopropanol, mixed by inversion, and incubated at room temperature for 10 min. After centrifugation at 13,000 rpm for 10 min at 4˚C, the pellet of RNA was suspended in 1 mL of cold 75% ethanol, centrifuged at 9,000 rpm for 5 min, air-dried and suspended in 50 μL of RNase-free water (Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany). The samples were then treated with DNase I (Ambion, NY, USA) to remove any contaminating DNA (set of RNase-free DNase; Qiagen, CA, USA) and purified using columns of RNeasy Mini kit (Qiagen) according to the manufacturer's protocol.
RNA quantity was measured by NanoDrop ND1000 spectrophotometer (NanoDrop-Technologies; Thermo Scientific™, LLC, Wilmington, DE, USA). RNA quality was monitored by Agilent 2100 Bioanalyzer (Agilent Technologies, Santa Clara, CA, USA). All the samples used in this study exhibited an A260/A280 ratio of at least 2.0.

cDNA synthesis and transcriptomic analysis
Three biological replicates were independently hybridized for each transcriptomic comparison. Fluorescently labeled cDNA for microarray hybridizations was obtained by using the SuperScript Indirect cDNA Labeling System (Invitrogen). In brief, 5 μg of total RNA was transformed to cDNA with Superscript III reverse transcriptase using random hexamers as primers and with aminoallyl-modified nucleotides in the reaction mixture. After cDNA purification, the Cy3 fluorescent dyes (Amersham Biosciences) were coupled to the amino-modified first-strand cDNA. Labelling efficiency was assessed using a NanoDrop ND1000 spectrophotometer (NanoDropTechnologies).
Preparation of probes and hybridization was performed as described (One-Color Microarray Based Gene Expression Analysis Manual Ver. 6.5, Agilent Technologies). Briefly, for each hybridization, 600 ng of Cy3 probes were mixed and added to 5 μL of 10x Blocking Agent and Nuclease free water in a 25 μL reaction. Then, 25 μL from 2x GExHybridization buffer was added and mixed carefully. The samples were placed on ice and quickly loaded onto arrays, hybridized at 65˚C for 17 h and then washed once in GE wash buffer 1 at room temperature (1 min) and once in GE Wash Buffer 2 at 37˚C (1 min).
Slides corresponded to Agilent P. gingivalis Oligo Microarrays 8x15K (074976), a genome annotation specific for strain ATCC 33277 and W83. For each culture pair, three technical replicates of array hybridizations were performed.

Microarray and data analysis
Images from Cy3 channel were equilibrated and captured with a high-resolution scanner (Agilent) and spots quantified using Feature Extraction software (Agilent). Background correction and normalization of data expression were performed using LIMMA [16,17]. LIMMA is part of bioconductor, an R language project [18]. For local background correction and normalization, the methods "normexp" and loess in LIMMA were used, respectively [16]. To ensure similar distribution across arrays and to achieve consistency among arrays, log-ratio values were scaled using the median-absolute-value as scale estimator [17].
Linear model methods were used for determining differentially expressed genes. Each probe was tested for changes in expression over replicates by using an empirical Bayes moderated t-statistic [17]. To control the false discovery rate p-values were corrected by using the method of Benjamani and Hochberg [16,17]. The expected false discovery rate was controlled to be less than 5% and a filtering criterium of increase/decrease up to 2-fold differential expression between states was selected.
The National Center for Biotechnology (Genomics Unit) at Universidad Autónoma, Madrid (Spain) performed the hybridizations and statistical analysis.

Assessment of microarray data by Reverse Transcription-quantitative Polymerase Chain Reaction (RT-qPCR)
To confirm the microarray results using RT-qPCR, nine genes differentially expressed between both situations were selected, four genes from the up-regulated group and five from the downregulated one. Specific primers were designed using the Universal Probe Library Roche software tool (Roche Diagnostics) ( Table 1). All quantifications were normalized to the P. gingivalis 16S rRNA gene.
To carry out the Reverse Transcription-qPCR, cDNA was generated from 1 μg of total RNA using the High Capacity cDNA Archive Kit (Applied Biosystems, ThermoFisher Scientific) in a 10 μL of final reaction volume. After that, quantitative PCR reactions were performed in triplicate by using 5 μL per well of each cDNA, and 3 μL of a mix composed by 0.4 μM of each primer, 5x HOT FIREPol 1 EvaGreen 1 qPCR Mix Plus (ROX), and nuclease-free water, to reach a final volume of 8 μL in 384-well optical plates. PCR reactions were run in an Applied Biosystems ABI PRISM 7900HT machine with SDS v2.4 software and standard protocol from Applied Biosystems (95˚C 10 min, 40 cycles of 95˚C 15 sec and 60˚C 60 sec, and a final standard dissociation protocol). The results were analysed with the Comparative Ct Method (ΔΔCt) [19].

Results
CLSM and SEM confirmed that P. gingivalis ATCC 33277 changed its phenotypic state, from planktonic to a mono-species biofilm. Fig 1 shows representative CLSM (depicting viable bacteria as green and nonviable as red stained cells.) and SEM images of the obtained biofilms at 96 h of incubation, With the use of the filtering criteria threshold of two-fold change in differential expression (up or down) of the contained in P. gingivalis ATCC 33277 arrays, a total of 92 out of 1,909 (4.8%) genes were differentially expressed in the biofilm phenotype compared to planktonic growth. These differences were statistically significant (p<0.05). Fig 2 shows the genes differentially expressed in P. gingivalis ATCC 33277 biofilms compared to planktonic cells. From the identified genes, the 54 up-regulated genes in the biofilm were mainly related to cell envelope, transport and binding proteins, outer membranes proteins, DNA repair enzymes, ribosomal proteins, or genes related to transcription initiation. Conversely, the 38 genes that were down-regulated in biofilm cells were mostly genes encoding proteins related to transposases, the CRISPRs system (cluster regularly inter-spaced short palindromic repeats) or oxidative stress.
In Table 2, these genes are grouped by functional categories, such as the genes encoding for the cationic outer membrane proteins (OmpH-1 and OmpH-2, PG_0448, and PG_0987), which have shown up-regulated expression in this model of P. gingivalis biofilm. These genes Transcriptomic of P.gingivalis in planktonic and biofilm states codifying proteins located specifically in the outer membrane vesicles, have been recognized as important virulence factors of P. gingivalis. Moreover, the gene coding lipoprotein PGN_0151 appeared up regulated by a factor of 3.16 (SD 0.28) compared to planktonic state (Table 2). Similarly, the genes related with the Por Secretion System (PorSS) (porP, PGN_1514 and PG_0448), involved in the biosynthesis of cell surface polysaccharides and implicated in the translocation of gingipains were up-regulated in biofilm growth. These proteins are well known virulence factors and serve as anchors for Rgp, Kgp, hemagglutinins, and the hemoglobin receptor protein. Only one gene, implicated in predicted exporter proteins (PGN_0946) was found significantly down regulated. An additional group of genes related to oxidative stress and metabolism was differentially expressed in P. gingivalis, as shown in Table 2. This group of genes, represented by PGN_2076 and PG_2213, are involved in oxidative and/or regulatory mechanisms, as Nitric oxide (NO) stress resistance and were significantly suppressed in biofilm growth. These genes enable bacteria to survive within the inflammatory microenvironment of the periodontal pocket. Similarly, alkyl hydroperoxidase reductase subunits genes (AhpC-F (PG_0618, PGN_0660, PG_0619 and PGN_0661) were down regulated in P. gingivalis biofilms. These genes are involved in the primary defense against reactive oxygen species (ROS), and therefore affecting the bacterium aero-tolerance. In fact, PG_0619 was the gene most differentially suppressed (-13.13 (SD 0.70)). On the other hand, the putative genes related to metabolism NADPH-NAD transhydrogenases (PGN_1120, PGN_1122 and pntB) were up-regulated.
The genes involved in transposon functions, demonstrated heterogeneous results (Table 2). While genes corresponding to partial transposase in ISPg1 (PGN_0219, PGN_0575, PGN 1216 and PGN_1420) and PGN_0579 were down-regulated, genes belonging to the partial transposase in ISPg4 (PGN_0478) and PGN_0578 were up-regulated.
Genes related to the CRISPRs and associated CAS proteins system (CRISPR/Cas), like (PGN_1924-Cas2, PGN_1925-Cas1) were down-regulated in biofilm growth, while the gene PGN_1286, thought to be a lysozyme, was up regulated.
Among the genes related to fimbriae, only one gene, fimD, one of the minor components of the fimbriae A, appeared down-regulated by a factor of -2.30 (SD 0.26) in biofilm versus planktonic cells. Among the genes involved in the biogenesis of components of ribosomal subunits, the genes rpmH, rpsF and rpII were up-regulated while KsgA were down-regulated when in comparing biofilm with planktonic growth.
The array data (Table 2) indicated that several RNA polymerase sigma factors of the σ70 family (PG_0214, PG_0985, PGN_0319, PGN_0450, PGN_0970), involved in the regulation of biofilm formation and diverse physiological processes, particularly virulence, were up-regulated in biofilm versus planktonic cells. On the other hand, PGN_0082, a probable transcriptional regulator in the AraC family, was down-regulated in biofilms cells.
The riboflavin-related gene encoded to the 3,4-dihydroxy-2-butanone 4-phosphate synthase/ GTP cyclohydrolase II protein (PGN_0643) was found up-regulated in P. gingivalis biofilm. This gene has been implicated in quorum sensing signaling and extracellular electron transfer. On the contrary, the gene VimF was down-regulated. This gene has been involved in the maturation/activation/anchorage of gingipains and other virulence factors of P. gingivalis. Transcriptomic of P.gingivalis in planktonic and biofilm states

GENES RELATED TO FIMBRIA
Transcriptomic of P.gingivalis in planktonic and biofilm states Lastly, 45% of the 92 differentially regulated P. gingivalis genes were of unknown or poorly characterized functions, most of them encoding unknown proteins.
The microarray results were validated by RT-qPCR on four of the genes from the up-regulated group and five from the down-regulated group. Fig 3 illustrates the high correlation between the gene expression of logarithm-transformed of RT-qPCR plotted against the average log 2 ratio values obtained by microarray analysis (R = 0.9716).

Discussion
This microarray-based comparative transcriptomic study has shown the up-and down-regulation of specific genes of P. gingivalis during the early stages of biofilm maturation (96 h of incubation). These gene expression patterns showed that 4.8% (92/1,909) of the genes of P. gingivalis significantly changed in biofilm, when compared to planktonic growth. Although this does not represent a huge difference between the two lifestyles [10,20,21], small changes in the level of expression of one gene can be amplified through regulatory networks and result in significant phenotypic alterations [22][23][24]. These results are in agreement with previous reports on other pathogens, such as P. aeruginosa or Escherichia coli grown under similar differential growth conditions, in which less of 5% of differential expression was demonstrated [10,11,25,26]. When assessing the different functional categories affected by the differentially regulated genes, a wide diversity was observed, which may indicate that the adaptation of P. gingivalis to a community lifestyle required a broad-based transcriptional modulation. This adaptation involved different virulence factors, as proteins codifying for outer membrane proteins or for fimbriae. Outer membrane vesicles (OMVs) of P. gingivalis, which are formed by "blebbing" portions of their outer membrane, have been recognized as important virulence factors of this pathogen in relation to periodontitis [6]. These vesicles contained specific proteases, termed gingipains (Arg-gingipain [Rgp] and Lys-gingipain [Kgp]) [5] associated with the capacity of P. gingivalis to invade host epithelial cells [27,28]. This transcriptomic study has revealed four genes, which codify proteins located in the OMVs of P. gingivalis being over-expressed (OmpH-1 and OmpH-2, PG_0448, and PG_0987). This finding was already described by 30] using proteomic technology studied P. gingivalis in biofilm growth and reported significantly increased cell envelope proteins, such as OmpH protein PGN_0301, whose encoding gene has been shown over expressed in this investigation.
The up-regulation of these proteins in biofilm versus planktonic state has also been reported in others studies demonstrating that OMVs and related genes play an important role in bacterial co-aggregation [31] and attachment to epithelial cells [32]. Although differential expression of genes has been shown at in vivo polymicrobial biofilms (Díaz and Kolenbrander [33], this study has confirmed that up-regulation could also occur when growing in an in vitro mono-species P. gingivalis biofilm. Fimbriae of P. gingivalis have also been recognized as a major virulence factor, since they mediate in cell adhesion and may facilitate their capacity to invade periodontal tissues [34][35][36][37][38]. Only one gene, fim D, was found down-regulated in this study. This gene is a minor component of a seven gene cluster, fimX, pgmA and fim ABCDE, which encode type 1 fimbriae, and it is characterized by mannose-sensitive hemagglutination and being assembled via the chaperone/usher pathway [39,40]. These genes participate in the biogenesis of the fimbriae, regulating their number and length, as well as their adherence function [41,42]. Nevertheless, Krogfelt and Klemm (1988) observed that a clone of E. coli, not containing the genes encoding the minor component proteins, still produced fimbriae consisting of pure Fim A protein, (main structural component of the fimbriae type I), indicating that, at least in the case of E. coli, the minor components were not necessary for the structural integrity of the fimbriae, although these fimbriae were non-adhesive and did not confer hemaglutination [42][43][44][45]. Similarly, Whiteley et al. (2001) suggested that these appendages may not be required at the later stages of biofilm formation for maintenance of a mature biofilm, since fimbria, pili or flagella were only involved at initial steps of attachment [10,15].
The lipoprotein-related gene PGN_0151 was over-expressed in biofilm. Hirano et al. (2013) reported that a mutant of this gene was reduced in its ability to form biofilms compared to wild type [46] what suggests that these genes were significantly involved in the biofilm lifestyles of P.gingivalis. In regards to those genes involved in the adaptation to new local environmental conditions, this investigation showed a differential expression of those genes involved in the transposition system (PGN_0219, PGN_0575, PGN 1216, PGN_1420, PGN_0579, PGN_0478 and PGN_0578), some of them codifying insertion sequences (IS). Since transposition is generally known to be triggered by cellular stress [47][48][49], this finding suggests that these transposable elements, moving from one site within the genome to another, could have an important role in the genomic re-arrangement and recombination in P. gingivalis growing in biofilm. This adaptation to stressful local environmental conditions has been previously reported [7,[50][51][52][53]. Furthermore, the CRISPR-Cas and associated CAS proteins system represents a unique system that provides prokaryotic cells, as P. gingivalis, adaption and protection from host defenses [54,55]. Down-regulation of the genes PGN_1924-Cas2, PGN_1925-Cas1 may suggest a decrease in the defensive capability of P. gingivalis ATCC 33277 when growing as single-species biofilm in vitro or its adaptation to an environment without competing species.
Gene PG_2213, encoding a putative nitrite reductase-related protein and implicated in nitric oxide (NO) stress resistance was repressed in P. gingivalis biofilm growth [56,57]. The ability to down-regulate nitrite reduction [58], involves the expression of several genes known to be induced by nitrogen oxides and low oxygen tension [59,60]. Whether P. gingivalis PG_2213 has a similar role is unknown. Boutrin et al. (2012) suggested that NO stress resistance in P.gingivalis was facilitated by a complex and tightly regulated network of genes involved in multiple pathways, including, energy metabolism, gene regulation, detoxification, and virulence [56].
Furthermore, although P. gingivalis seems to lack a protective NADH oxidase, Alkyl hydroperoxide reductase (genes PG_0618, PGN_0660, PG_0619 and PGN_0661), C subunit (AhpC), have been reported to be involved in P. gingivalis aero-tolerance processes. The upregulation of genes related to NADPH-NAD transhydrogenases (PGN_1120, PGN_1122, pntB) suggests that P. gingivalis growing in biofilm has elevated metabolic activities, as shown with C. acetobutylicum, by Liu et al. (2016) [9]. In this investigation, several genes related to ribosome function (rpmH, rpsF, rpII and KsgA) were over expressed in the biofilm, what may indicate that the metabolic increase was associated to ribosome function, that may require up to 40% of the cell's energy in growing bacteria [52].
The observed differential up regulated expression of sigma factors in biofilm cells (PG_0214, PG_0985, PGN_0450, PGN_0970, PGN_0319) might indicate that these genes are important regulators of P. gingivalis during biofilm growth [8]. Similar results have been reported for E.coli [61]. Besides, members of the AraC family of transcriptional regulators (PGN_0082), with decreased expression in the biofilm, have been shown to be important in carbon metabolism (degradation of sugars such as arabinose), stress response to virulence in other species [62], and in the regulation of quorum sensing signaling in P. aeruginosa [63]. Also, related to quorum sensing signaling, the up regulated gene PGN_0643, has been involved in the biosynthesis of riboflavin, a substance associated in a number of extracellular processes by bacteria, especially Gram-negative organisms [64][65][66].
There are, however, important limitations associated to this study, since the biofilm used was an in vitro single-species model. The obtained results, however, may serve as a resource for future studies in oral biofilms aimed to further understand the genetic basis of the regulatory mechanisms of P.gingivalis and other pathogenic bacteria involved in subgingival biofilm growth and maturation.

Conclusions
By means of transcriptomic analysis, this study has shown that 4.8% of the P. gingivalis ATCC 33277 genome exhibited differential expression profiles when grown in biofilm. In such biofilm growth, the up-regulated genes were mainly those related to the cell envelope, as the genes encoding for the cationic OMPs or gene PGN_0151, which appear as a novel P. gingivalis gene that seems to have a role in the biofilm state. Also, the genes implicated in PorSS system and RNA polymerase sigma factors of the σ70 family, which are genes related to virulence/proliferation factors were up-regulated. On the contrary, the expression of most of the genes involved in oxidative stress or CRISPRs system were suppressed.
Therefore the adaptive response of P. gingivalis in biofilm growth demonstrated changes in gene expression profiles.