Center for Biofilm Engineering
Abstract:
"A method for growing a biofilm under low shear at the air–liquid
interface using the drip flow biofilm reactor"
09-018
This protocol describes how to grow a Pseudomonas aeruginosa biofilm
under low fluid shear close to the air–liquid interface using the drip flow
reactor (DFR). The DFR can model environments such as food-processing conveyor
belts, catheters, lungs with cystic fibrosis and the oral cavity. The biofilm is
established by operating the reactor in batch mode for 6 h. A mature biofilm
forms as the reactor operates for an additional 48 h with a continuous flow of
nutrients. During continuous flow, the biofilm experiences a low shear as the
media drips onto a surface set at a 101 angle. At the end of 54 h, biofilm
accumulation is quantified by removing coupons from the reactor channels,
rinsing the coupons to remove planktonic cells, scraping the biofilm from the
coupon surface, disaggregating the clumps, then diluting and plating for viable
cell enumeration. The entire procedure takes 13 h of active time that is
distributed over 5 d.
Goeres DM, Hamilton MA, Beck NA, Buckingham-Meyer K, Hilyard JD, Loetterle LR,
Lorenz LA, Walker DK, Stewart PS, "A method for growing a biofilm under low
shear at the air–liquid interface using the drip flow biofilm reactor," Nature
Protocols 2009; 4(5):783-788
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