Center for Biofilm Engineering
Abstract:
"Comparison of antimicrobial effect on biofilm of chlorine, silver ion
and tobramycin"
08-003
The systematic understanding of how various antimicrobial agents are involved
in controlling biofilm is essential in order to establish an effective strategy
for biofilm control, since many antimicrobial agents are effective against
planktonic cells but ineffective when used against the same bacteria growing in
a biofilm state. Three different antimicrobial agents (chlorine, silver, and
tobramycin) and three different measures of efficacy were selected to examine
antimicrobial activity on biofilm in a comparative way: plate counts,
measurement of respiratory activity with CTC staining, and BacLight Live/Dead
stain for measuring membrane integrity were used along with CLSM and
epifluorescence microscopy. The three methods of determining antimicrobial
activity gave very different results for each antimicrobial agent. Tobramycin
appears to be the most effective in reducing the respiratory activity of biofilm
cells compared to chlorine and silver, based upon CTC staining. In contrast,
tobramycin-treated biofilm cells maintained membrane integrity better than
chlorine or silver treated ones, evidenced by both CLSM and epifluorescence
microscope imaging. Combined and sequential treatments with silver and
tobramycin showed an enhanced antimicrobial efficiency of more than 200%, while
the antimicrobial activity of either chlorine or tobramycin was antagonized when
the agents were used in combination. This observation makes sense when the
differing oxidative reactivities of chlorine, silver and tobramycin are
considered. Kim J., B. Pitts, P.S. Stewart, A. Camper, and J. Yoon, "Comparison
of antimicrobial effect on biofilm of chlorine, silver ion and tobramycin,"
Antimicrob. Agents. Chemother., Jan 2008; Epub ahead of print
Abstract 08-003
|