Center for Biofilm Engineering
Thesis Abstract:
"Spatial and temporal patterns of antimicrobial action against
Staphylococcus epidermidis biofilms"
This study investigated the spatio-temporal
patterns of antimicrobial action against Staphylococcus epidermidis
planktonic and biofilm bacteria. Bacteria were stained with a fluorogenic
esterase substrate, Calcein-AM, which allowed for the visualization of cells
that possessed intact cell membranes. Four different antimicrobial agents
were tested for their effect upon cell viability as associated with membrane
integrity. The four biocides were Barquat®, glutaraldehyde, chlorine, and
nisin.
Planktonic bacteria were analyzed with flow cytometry,
observing fluorescence loss during 1 h antimicrobial treatment. Treatment
with Barquat resulted in initial fluorescence loss, which increased during
the treatment period to levels which were present prior to the introduction
of biocide, along with a decrease in cell density. Treatments with
glutaraldehyde and chlorine resulted in increased average fluorescence
intensity for the cell population, accompanied by decreased cell density for
chlorine and increased cell density for glutaraldehyde. Nisin treatment
resulted in a decrease in CAM fluorescence with an increase in cell density.
Viable cell plate counts showed average log reductions in CFU/mL of 3.61,
3.83, 4.12, 4.26, and 4.67 for Barquat, glutaraldehyde, high and low
concentrations of chlorine, and nisin treatments, respectively. There was no
apparent correlation between plate counts and flow cytometry data.
Biofilm bacteria were analyzed with time-lapse confocal
scanning laser microscopy, observing fluorescence loss during biocide
treatment. Biofilms treated with Barquat lost an average of 91.5% of their
initial fluorescence, and clusters decreased in areal coverage by 9%.
Fluorescence loss during Barquat treatment suggested the presence of a
tolerant subpopulation of bacteria in the interior regions of the biofilm.
Glutaraldehyde treatment reduced the average fluorescence by 16%, and
cluster area did not change. There was CTC staining after glutaraldehyde
treatment only. The high and low concentrations of chlorine treatment showed
averages of 100% and 79% reductions in CAM staining, with liquefaction of
biomass causing erosion events which reduced areal coverage by 90% and 43%,
respectively. Nisin treatment reduced CAM staining by an average of 100%,
while shrinking the cluster area by 8%. Corner biofilms showed qualitative
differences during treatment than isolated clusters.
Mathematically-predicted biocide diffusion times were
much faster than experimentally observed fluorescence loss in biofilms.
Spatial and temporal patterns of antimicrobial action against
Staphylococcus epidermidis biofilms, Thesis Defense
by William Marshall Davison, PhD Candidate in Chemical and Biological
Engineering, Montana State University, January 2008
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