Center for Biofilm Engineering
Abstract:
"Biofilm-Control Strategies Based on Enzymic Disruption of the
Extracellular Polymeric Substance Matrix: A Modeling Study"
05-043 A kinetic model is proposed to assess the feasibility of strategies for the
removal of biofilms by using substances that induce detachment by affecting the
cohesiveness of the matrix of extracellular polymeric substances (EPSs). The
model uses a two-state description of the EPS (natural EPS and compromised EPS)
to provide a unified representation of diverse mechanisms of action of
detachment-promoting agents (DPAs), which include enzymes that degrade the EPS
and other agents described in the literature. A biofilm-cohesiveness factor
describes local increases in detachment rates resultant from losses in cohesive
strength. The kinetic model was implemented in an individual-based
biofilm-modeling framework, including detachment rates dependent on local
cohesiveness. The efficacy of treatments with DPAs was assessed by
three-dimensional model simulations. Changes in treatment efficacy were
evaluated quantitatively by using a Thiele modulus, which quantifies the
relationship between diffusion of the DPA through the biofilm matrix and DPA
decay rate, and a Damköhler number relating the rate of EPS reaction with a DPA
and the rate of EPS production by the micro-organisms in the biofilm. This study
demonstrates the feasibility and limits of implementing biofilm-control
strategies based on attacking the EPS.
Xavier, J.B., C. Picioreanu, S. Abdul Rani, M.C.M. van Loosdrecht, and P.S.
Stewart, "Biofilm-Control Strategies Based on Enzymic Disruption of the
Extracellular Polymeric Substance Matrix - a Modeling Study," Microbiology,
151(12):3817-3832 (2005)
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