Center for Biofilm Engineering
Abstract:
"A 3D Computer Model Analysis of Three Hypothetical Biofilm Detachment
Mechanisms"
07-001
Three hypothetical mechanisms of detachment were incorporated into a
three-dimensional computer model of biofilm development. The model integrated
processes of substrate utilization, substrate diffusion, growth, cell advection,
and detachment in a cellular automata framework. The purpose of this
investigation was to characterize each of the mechanisms with respect to four
criteria: the resulting biofilm structure, the existence of a steady state, the
propensity for sloughing events, and the dynamics during starvation. The three
detachment mechanisms analyzed represented various physical and biological
influences hypothesized to affect biofilm detachment. The first invoked the
concept of fluid shear removing biomass that protrudes far above the surface and
is therefore subjected to relatively large drag forces. The second pathway
linked detachment to changes in the local availability of a nutrient. The third
pathway simulated an erosive process in which individual cells are lost from the
surface of a biofilm cell cluster. The detachment mechanisms demonstrated
diverse behaviors with respect to the four analysis criteria. The height
dependant mechanism produced flat, steady state biofilms that lacked sloughing
events. Detachment based on substrate limitation produced significant sloughing
events. The resulting biofilm structures included distinct, hollow clusters
separated by channels. The erosion mechanism produced neither a non-zero steady
state nor sloughing events. A mechanism combining all three detachment
mechanisms produced mushroom-like structures. The dynamics of biofilm decay
during starvation were distinct for each detachment mechanism. These results
show that detachment is a critical determinant of biofilm structure and of the
dynamics of biofilm accumulation and loss.
Chambless JD, Stewart PS, "A 3D Computer Model Analysis of Three
Hypothetical Biofilm Detachment Mechanisms," Biotechnol Bioeng 2007; [Epub
ahead of print] Abstract 07-001 |