Center for Biofilm Engineering
Abstract:
"Observations of Cell Cluster Hollowing in Staphylococcus
epidermidis Biofilms"
07-007
Microbial biofilm formation appears to involve complex multicellular
behaviours. For example, some bacteria exhibit extensive twitching and swarming
motility after
association with a surface. These forms of motility appear to be coordinated and
to contribute to the spatial organization of biofilm structures (O’Toole and
Kolter 1998; Klausen et al. 2003). Another intriguing phenomenon is the
appearance of hollow interiors in biofilm cell clusters. Such hollowing seems to
occur in the later stages of biofilm development. Hollow biofilm structures have
been described for Pseudomonas aeruginosa (Sauer et al. 2002; Webb et al.
2003; Hunt et al. 2004; Parsek and Fuqua 2004; Stapper et al. 2004),
Pseudomonas putida (Tolker-Nielsen et al. 2000), Pseudoalteromonas
tunicate (Mai-Prochnow et al. 2004) and Actinobacillus
actinomycetemcomitans (Kaplan et al. 2003) biofilms. Particularly, striking
are movies in which motile cells can be seen seething in the centre of a cell
cluster containing many immotile cells (Tolker-Nielsen et al. 2000; Hunt et al.
2004). Here, we report the direct microscopic observation, by a suite of
techniques, of hollow cell clusters in Staphylococcus epidermidis
biofilms.
Stewart PS, Rani SA, Gjersing E, Codd SL, Zheng Z, Pitts B,
"Observations of Cell Cluster Hollowing in Staphylococcus epidermidis
Biofilms," Letters in Applied Microbiology 2007; 44(4): 454-457 Abstract
07-007
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