biofilm Flashcards
What is a biofilm
A biofilm is a layer of micro organism such as bacteria or alien that are surrounded by self produced mucus attached to a surface. The different micro organism are held together by an extracellular matrix.
It is marked by the excretion of extracellular polymeric substances (EPS° and they can exist as multiple or single microbial species.
mixed biofilms are predominantly found in environmental settings and single biofilms are most of the time found in infection related biofilm
where are biofilms found
they can be formed on solid substrates in contact with moisture, on tissues of living organism and at liquid air interfaced.
These can then be found anywhere from the aquatic environment such as on algae, rocks ships, in industry setting such as pipelines or plastics and in medicines on catheters, wounds, teeth etc.
beneficial biofilms
for waste water treatment, for bioremediation of contaminated soils (bacteria degrade it), for microbial leaching (use of bacteria to remove compounds such as copper).
In public health it is beneficial in human ear for protection against infection, in vagina as protective role, in the digestive tract for protection against opportunistic pathogens.
step by step of biofilm formation
pseudomonas adhere to the surface (reversible) (MICROBIAL conditioning)
Microbial attachement
after a while, the adhesion becomes irreversible and
Biofilm development
from micro colonies you can see EPS formation. Once the colonies are covered with EPS, there is an irreversible binding and part of the
detachment
biofilm can be sheared and adhere somewhere else.
which factors are involved In biofilm formation
Conditioning of substrate
microbial attachement
microbial accumulation
biofilm growth and maturation
dispersal and reattachment
conditionnant of substrate
Environmental conditions are important for initial adhesion.
It is dependent on hydrodynamic flow, shearing force and the surface characteristic such as roughness, topography etc.
Microbial attachement
the surface chemistry is also important such as the charges, the electrostatic interactions, acid base interactions
on conditionnied materials or tissues, ligand receptor binding I relevant aswell, ph too
For exemples, the coating the coating of titanium with human serum albumin decrease adhesion of a staphylococcus
some bacteria can be ore hydrophobic than others. Some MO can attach to hydrophobic surfaces through a process called van Der Waals forces which are attractive forces between molecules.
microbial accumulation
depends on cell division
the production of EPS aching the bacteria to each other and the substrate
the formation of the complex 3D communities.
The EPS is secreted by the bacteria and is made of plenty of different glycans, poluglutamic acid, eDNA (bacteria that are dead and their DNA which is free)
biofilm maturation
is dictated by environmental conditions (different forms of biofilms depending on the environment and varying morphology are seen)
depends on nutrients available (if less nutrients, is takes more times to form biofilms and the final structure will e very different. If sufficient supply, the biofilm is very compact)
the presence of other organism
physics chemical properties of the surface
the process related by the organism
hydrodynamics of surrounding bulk phases
the mature biofilms has a structural heterogeneity with interstitial spaces, with the ability of internal mass transports. It makes it protective against many other microbial agents and hots defense mechanism.
Dispersal and reattachement
the bacteria can feel good if it is a good or bad biofilm maturation. It can go out of the biofilms and disperse again if not good.
It can disperse in different way: it can be fluid associated though swarming (use of flagella) and clumping (clumps together to get away)
it can be surface associated by twitching (go to the surface and use type 4 vili to move over the substrat), it can rot (micol acid) and it can slide
the detachment can occurs passively or indices by the bacteria which produce product to stimulate detachment
bacterial communication
they use quorum sensing
the cells can sense their own population density. It can be intra or interspecies and they perceived other cell in the community through signal molecules secreted by the bacteria
it regulates gene expression that affect various physiological process such as biofilm formation, virulence factors expression, antibiotics productions,exo enzyme etc
when there is an increase in cells density - there is more signal molecule = autoinducers
the level of signal molecules trigger the gene expression required to a minimum bacterial populations (= quorum)
quorum sensing
Quorum sensing is the regulation of gene expression in response to fluctuations in cell-population density. Quorum sensing bacteria produce and release chemical signal molecules called autoinducers that increase in concentration as a function of cell density.
a signal molecule can be homoserine lactone (HSL)
it is a type of small molecule that is produced by many different bacteria and is used to coordinate a variety of behavior such as biofilm, virulence and antibiotic production
when it reaches a certain threshold, it activated specific genes In bacteria that responds to the signals. This can results in changes in the gene expression and the production of various proteins and enzymes that allow them to coordinate together (eg luciferace in vibrio fisher)
QS in virbrio fisheri
i is a gram negative bacterium that leaves in symbiont with fish, jellyfish or squid.
They are present in the light organs with is a nutrient rich environment for the bacteria. At a high bacterial concentration, they start to produce Luciferase and therefore luminescence.
Once the light organ emptied, the bacteria start to grow again until they reach the quorum
the signal molecules bind to the regulators which is an activator of the luciferase
signal molecules in gram negative
HSL is the signal peptide - acyl homoserine lactones more specifically.
it diffuses through the ells membraned through envelope or assisted by transporter.
signal molecules in gram positive
they use oligopeptide which creates cysteine bridges. they are auto inducing peptides.
Gram positive bacteria have an additional layer, they therefore need to use active transport through the ABC transporter to get the oligo peptide out.
they can then bind to sensors kinase which phosphorylate a response regulator that leads to the transcription of target genes. (this is a two component signal transduction system (TCSTS)