Center for Biofilm Engineering
News Update:
May, 2005
Volume 8, Issue 5
__________________________________________
Research Highlights
Paper Spotlight by Kevin Grealish
Biofilm exists on fresh produce and household surfaces
Food-borne illness affects millions of people and causes thousands
of deaths every year in the United States. Food contamination is not
limited to large-scale facilities such as cafeterias, but it is a
problem associated with household surfaces as well. Most household
surface cleaners are tested for killing efficiency against
free-living or “planktonic” bacteria, but these products may be
ineffective at removing surface-attached microbes protected by the
extracellular polymeric (EPS) matrix of a biofilm. The purpose of
recent experiments at the CBE was to image a range of household
surfaces, including food, laundry and kitchen items, using cryostage
scanning electron microscopy (CSEM) and light microscopy to assess
the prevalence of biofilms/EPS on these surfaces under normal
storage, processing and wear conditions. The study results indicated
that biofilms were present on all of the surfaces tested. This
information suggests that there is a need to develop sanitizer test
systems that specifically target effects on biofilm-associated
bacteria in order to accurately assess product efficacy. Presently,
there are no such methods that have been approved or endorsed by
regulatory agencies in this regard.
Prevalence of Microbial Biofilms on Selected Fresh Produce and
Household Surfaces
Rayner, J., R. Veeh and J. Flood
Int. J. Food Microbiol. 2004; 95:29-39
_______
NSF Grant Announcement
Christine Foreman and John Priscu were awarded a $254,827 grant from the
National Science Foundation for a project titled "Paleo Records of
Biotic & Abiotic Particles in Polar Ice Cores." The group is studying
life in ice cores and studying the surfaces with the assumption that
life could be found as a biofilm attached to particles. The grant runs
from June 1, 2005 through May 31, 2007.
_______
Drinking Water Research Activities
An Award
A team of consultants, researchers, and drinking water utilities was
awarded the American Academy of Environmental Engineer’s Excellence
in Environmental Engineering Grand Prize in Research and the
American Council of Engineering Companies of Massachusetts’ Grand
Conceptor Award for the project “Evaluation of Ozone and Ultraviolet
Light.” The project confirmed that a combination of ozone and UV can
yield a high degree of disinfection, lower levels of harmful
byproducts and minimize unfavorable distributed-water effects. Anne
Camper was one of the research participants on the project lead by
the consulting company Black & Veatch.
National Academies of Science and Engineering Meeting
Anne Camper attended the third meeting in a series for the Committee
on Public Water Supply Distribution Systems for the Water Science
and Technology Board of the National Academies of Science and
Engineering in Washington, D.C. on April 18th and 19th. The group is
charged with producing a document that provides recommendations on
the management and possible regulation of drinking water
distribution systems.
_______
Recent CBE Publications
"Monitoring of Microbial Souring in Chemically Treated,
Produced-water Biofilm Systems using Molecular Techniques"
Kjellerup, B.V., R.H. Veeh, P. Sumithraratne, T.R. Thomsen, K.
Buckingham-Meyer, B. Frølund and P. Sturman
J. Industrial Microbiol. Biotech. [Epub ahead of print] April 21,
2005.
To read these paper abstracts or to order paper copies see:
http://www.erc.montana.edu/Res-Lib99-SW/pubs/Database/PD_DisplayScript.asp
_________________________________________
Education
Microbes Course at MSU
A new course titled "Microbes in the Environment" will be offered at
Montana State University–Bozeman for the Fall 2005 semester. It will
be taught by CBE staff member Al Cunningham and CBE graduate
students Ben Klayman, William Davison, and Stewart Clark. The course
is designed for underclass non-science majors and is intended to
introduce students to the various roles microbes play in the world
around us; this will be done with environmental, medical, and
industrial teaching modules.
_________________________________________
Outreach
Expanding Your Horizons
Linda Loetterle, Anne Camper, Darla Goeres, Rafaella Pulcini and
Shannon Goeres conducted a workshop titled, "Hot Tubs: Much more
than a relaxing soak," during the 2005 Expanding Your Horizons in
Science and Mathematics event at MSU campus on April 16, 2005. The
workshop was conducted at the CBE Education Laboratory.
The goal of the program is to offer young women in grades 6, 7 and 8
the chance to interact with women engaged in math- and
science-related careers. Through this interaction, the young women
are exposed to positive role models and are encouraged to continue
taking math and science courses throughout high school and into
college. During the laboratory sessions, students were able to
perform water chemistry analyses and learn how to keep hot tub water
clean and safe while also exploring career options in microbiology,
biotechnology and engineering.
_______
Visitors
David Yonge and Brent Peyton from Washington State University
brought Russian scientists Andrei Filonov and Irina Kosheleva to
visit the CBE on April 26, 2005. Andrei and Irina are engaged in
environmental biotechnology research and in biodegradation of
aromatic compounds in particular.
_________________________________________
Biofilm Education Resources
Upcoming CBE Workshops
“Biofilm Methods Workshop,” organized by the CBE in partnership
with the Biofilm Institute at Montana State University, July 5, 2005
See the tentative agenda at:
http://www.erc.montana.edu/CBEssentials-SW/whats_new/sTAC05_Wrkshp.pdf
For more information about the Biofilm Methods Workshops go to
http://www.erc.montana.edu/Ind-Col99-SW/Workshops/index.htm
“Biofilm Structure Quantification and Image Analysis,” sponsored
by the CBE Structure-Function Research Group, Center for Biofilm
Engineering, Montana State University, July 21–22, 2005
“Microsensors: Manufacture and Applications,” sponsored by the CBE
Structure-Function Research Group, Center for Biofilm Engineering,
Montana State University, August 8–12, 2005
“Bioelectrochemistry: Microbially Influenced Corrosion and Microbial
Fuel Cells,” sponsored by the CBE Structure-Function Research Group,
Center for Biofilm Engineering, Montana State University, August
24–27, 2005
For more information on the workshops go to
http://www.erc.montana.edu/CBEssentials-SW/research/workshops/default.htm
__________________________________________
Web Watch
BiofilmsOnline.com
See the BiofilmsOnline.com May issue at
http://www.BiofilmsOnline.com.
Subscribe to the bi-weekly newsletter by registering at:
http://www.biofilmsonline.com/cgi-bin/biofilmsonline/newsletter_signup.html
_________________________________________
Newsletter Listserve
The CBE News Update is a listserve newsletter. If you wish
to subscribe or unsubscribe from the listserve, follow the
directions at the following CBE website.
http://www.erc.montana.edu/Res-Lib99-SW/newsarchives/subscribe.htm
An alternative to subscribing to the listserve is to view the CBE
News Update on our web page at
http://www.erc.montana.edu/Ind-Col99-SW/Current_Newsletter/default.htm.
Newsletter archives can be found at http://www.erc.montana.edu/Res-Lib99-SW/newsarchives/index.htm.
__________________________________________
Diane Williams (editor)
and Kevin Grealish
(assistant editor) of the CBE News Update
|