Stress relaxation analysis facilitates a quantitative approach towards antimicrobial penetration into biofilms.

Biofilm-related infections can develop everywhere in the human body and are rarely cleared by the host immune system. Moreover, biofilms are often tolerant to antimicrobials, due to a combination of inherent properties of bacteria in their adhering, biofilm mode of growth and poor physical penetrati...

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Main Authors: Yan He, Brandon W Peterson, Marije A Jongsma, Yijin Ren, Prashant K Sharma, Henk J Busscher, Henny C van der Mei
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3664570?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-e65f06ac21964a0d9721c1ab06f895a92020-11-25T01:14:18ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0185e6375010.1371/journal.pone.0063750Stress relaxation analysis facilitates a quantitative approach towards antimicrobial penetration into biofilms.Yan HeBrandon W PetersonMarije A JongsmaYijin RenPrashant K SharmaHenk J BusscherHenny C van der MeiBiofilm-related infections can develop everywhere in the human body and are rarely cleared by the host immune system. Moreover, biofilms are often tolerant to antimicrobials, due to a combination of inherent properties of bacteria in their adhering, biofilm mode of growth and poor physical penetration of antimicrobials through biofilms. Current understanding of biofilm recalcitrance toward antimicrobial penetration is based on qualitative descriptions of biofilms. Here we hypothesize that stress relaxation of biofilms will relate with antimicrobial penetration. Stress relaxation analysis of single-species oral biofilms grown in vitro identified a fast, intermediate and slow response to an induced deformation, corresponding with outflow of water and extracellular polymeric substances, and bacterial re-arrangement, respectively. Penetration of chlorhexidine into these biofilms increased with increasing relative importance of the slow and decreasing importance of the fast relaxation element. Involvement of slow relaxation elements suggests that biofilm structures allowing extensive bacterial re-arrangement after deformation are more open, allowing better antimicrobial penetration. Involvement of fast relaxation elements suggests that water dilutes the antimicrobial upon penetration to an ineffective concentration in deeper layers of the biofilm. Next, we collected biofilms formed in intra-oral collection devices bonded to the buccal surfaces of the maxillary first molars of human volunteers. Ex situ chlorhexidine penetration into two weeks old in vivo formed biofilms followed a similar dependence on the importance of the fast and slow relaxation elements as observed for in vitro formed biofilms. This study demonstrates that biofilm properties can be derived that quantitatively explain antimicrobial penetration into a biofilm.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3664570?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yan He
Brandon W Peterson
Marije A Jongsma
Yijin Ren
Prashant K Sharma
Henk J Busscher
Henny C van der Mei
spellingShingle Yan He
Brandon W Peterson
Marije A Jongsma
Yijin Ren
Prashant K Sharma
Henk J Busscher
Henny C van der Mei
Stress relaxation analysis facilitates a quantitative approach towards antimicrobial penetration into biofilms.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Yan He
Brandon W Peterson
Marije A Jongsma
Yijin Ren
Prashant K Sharma
Henk J Busscher
Henny C van der Mei
author_sort Yan He
title Stress relaxation analysis facilitates a quantitative approach towards antimicrobial penetration into biofilms.
title_short Stress relaxation analysis facilitates a quantitative approach towards antimicrobial penetration into biofilms.
title_full Stress relaxation analysis facilitates a quantitative approach towards antimicrobial penetration into biofilms.
title_fullStr Stress relaxation analysis facilitates a quantitative approach towards antimicrobial penetration into biofilms.
title_full_unstemmed Stress relaxation analysis facilitates a quantitative approach towards antimicrobial penetration into biofilms.
title_sort stress relaxation analysis facilitates a quantitative approach towards antimicrobial penetration into biofilms.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Biofilm-related infections can develop everywhere in the human body and are rarely cleared by the host immune system. Moreover, biofilms are often tolerant to antimicrobials, due to a combination of inherent properties of bacteria in their adhering, biofilm mode of growth and poor physical penetration of antimicrobials through biofilms. Current understanding of biofilm recalcitrance toward antimicrobial penetration is based on qualitative descriptions of biofilms. Here we hypothesize that stress relaxation of biofilms will relate with antimicrobial penetration. Stress relaxation analysis of single-species oral biofilms grown in vitro identified a fast, intermediate and slow response to an induced deformation, corresponding with outflow of water and extracellular polymeric substances, and bacterial re-arrangement, respectively. Penetration of chlorhexidine into these biofilms increased with increasing relative importance of the slow and decreasing importance of the fast relaxation element. Involvement of slow relaxation elements suggests that biofilm structures allowing extensive bacterial re-arrangement after deformation are more open, allowing better antimicrobial penetration. Involvement of fast relaxation elements suggests that water dilutes the antimicrobial upon penetration to an ineffective concentration in deeper layers of the biofilm. Next, we collected biofilms formed in intra-oral collection devices bonded to the buccal surfaces of the maxillary first molars of human volunteers. Ex situ chlorhexidine penetration into two weeks old in vivo formed biofilms followed a similar dependence on the importance of the fast and slow relaxation elements as observed for in vitro formed biofilms. This study demonstrates that biofilm properties can be derived that quantitatively explain antimicrobial penetration into a biofilm.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3664570?pdf=render
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