Center for Biofilm Engineering
Thesis Abstract:
"The effect of treatments on the mechanical properties of
Staphylococcus epidermidis biofilms under fluid shear and mechanical
indentation"
Biofilms exist on most every wetted surface both in the natural
environment and in industrial and medical settings. The bacterial cells are
surrounded by protective extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) which
provide the mechanical stability for these biofilms. Little is known about
the material properties of attached biofilms, making it difficult to predict
how a biofilm will behave in response to an applied force. The work
presented here measured the force–deflection characteristics of biofilm by
two different techniques. The first method involved time lapse imaging of a
biofilm grown in a capillary flow cell reactor under a constant fluid shear
stress and the second method was based on micro-indentation using an atomic
force microscope.
For the flow cell experiments Staphylococcus epidermidis was grown in
a capillary flow cell reactor. After a day of growth the biofilms received a
pretreatment fluid shear while displacements were measured. The biofilms
were then treated with different agents which alter the structure of the EPS
matrix and thus change the mechanical properties/response of the biofilm.
The four treatments examined in these experiments were FeCl2,
chlorhexidine, DispersinB®, and urea. The same fluid shear was applied after
the fifteen minute treatment soak and the deflections were recorded. These
measurements revealed that i) biofilms behave viscoelastically ii) FeCl2
and chlorhexidine made the biofilm stiffer while urea and DispersinB®
reduced the viscosity of the biofilm.
For the micro-indentation experiments Staphylococcus epidermidis was
grown in a drip-flow reactor. After four hours of growth the biofilms
received a pretreatment indentation (5μm depth) in which force-displacements
were measured. The biofilms were then treated with FeCl2,
chlorhexidine, DispersinB®, and urea. The 5μm indentation was applied after
the fifteen minute treatment soak and force displacements were again
measured. The measurements revealed that again i) biofilms behave
viscoelastically ii) FeCl2 and chlorhexidine made the biofilm
stiffer while urea and DispersinB® reduced the viscosity of the biofilm.
Quantification of biofilm material properties and demonstration that their
properties can be altered by chemical or enzymatic treatments opens the door
to development of new technologies for controlling detrimental biofilm based
on targeting biofim cohesion rather than killing microorganisms.
The effect of treatments on the mechanical properties of
Staphylococcus epidermidis biofilms under fluid shear and mechanical
indentation, Thesis Defense by Eric
Brindle, MS Candidate in Mechanical and Industrial Engineering,
Montana State University, September 2009.
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