Laboratory for Biointerfaces, Empa, Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology, 9014, St. Gallen, Switzerland.
Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of Zürich, 8008, Zürich, Switzerland.
J Nanobiotechnology. 2020 Nov 11;18(1):166. doi: 10.1186/s12951-020-00724-0.
Studying bacterial adhesion and early biofilm development is crucial for understanding the physiology of sessile bacteria and forms the basis for the development of novel antimicrobial biomaterials. Microfluidics technologies can be applied in such studies since they permit dynamic real-time analysis and a more precise control of relevant parameters compared to traditional static and flow chamber assays. In this work, we aimed to establish a microfluidic platform that permits real-time observation of bacterial adhesion and biofilm formation under precisely controlled homogeneous laminar flow conditions.
Using Escherichia coli as the model bacterial strain, a microfluidic platform was developed to overcome several limitations of conventional microfluidics such as the lack of spatial control over bacterial colonization and allow label-free observation of bacterial proliferation at single-cell resolution. This platform was applied to demonstrate the influence of culture media on bacterial colonization and the consequent eradication of sessile bacteria by antibiotic. As expected, the nutrient-poor medium (modified M9 minimal medium) was found to promote bacterial adhesion and to enable a higher adhesion rate compared to the nutrient-rich medium (tryptic soy broth rich medium ). However, in rich medium the adhered cells colonized the glass surface faster than those in poor medium under otherwise identical conditions. For the first time, this effect was demonstrated to be caused by a higher retention of newly generated bacteria in the rich medium, rather than faster growth especially during the initial adhesion phase. These results also indicate that higher adhesion rate does not necessarily lead to faster biofilm formation. Antibiotic treatment of sessile bacteria with colistin was further monitored by fluorescence microscopy at single-cell resolution, allowing in situ analysis of killing efficacy of antimicrobials.
The platform established here represents a powerful and versatile tool for studying environmental effects such as medium composition on bacterial adhesion and biofilm formation. Our microfluidic setup shows great potential for the in vitro assessment of new antimicrobials and antifouling agents under flow conditions.
研究细菌黏附与早期生物膜的形成对于理解浮游细菌的生理学至关重要,并且为新型抗菌生物材料的开发奠定了基础。与传统的静态和流动腔实验相比,微流控技术可用于此类研究,因为它可以实现动态实时分析和对相关参数的更精确控制。在这项工作中,我们旨在建立一个微流控平台,该平台可在精确控制的均匀层流条件下实时观察细菌黏附和生物膜的形成。
使用大肠杆菌作为模型细菌菌株,开发了一种微流控平台,该平台克服了传统微流控技术的几个局限性,例如缺乏对细菌定植的空间控制,并且可以在单细胞分辨率下对细菌增殖进行无标记观察。该平台用于证明培养基对细菌定植的影响以及抗生素对定殖细菌的后续清除。不出所料,贫营养培养基(改良 M9 最小培养基)被发现可促进细菌黏附,并且与富营养培养基(胰蛋白酶大豆肉汤丰富培养基)相比,其黏附率更高。然而,在富营养培养基中,在其他条件相同的情况下,附着的细胞在玻璃表面上的定植速度比贫营养培养基中的更快。首次证明这种效应是由于在富营养培养基中,新生成的细菌滞留率更高,而不是生长速度更快,特别是在初始黏附阶段。这些结果还表明,较高的黏附率不一定会导致更快的生物膜形成。通过荧光显微镜以单细胞分辨率进一步监测粘菌素对定殖细菌的治疗作用,从而可以原位分析抗菌剂的杀菌效果。
这里建立的平台代表了一种强大而通用的工具,可用于研究环境影响(例如培养基组成)对细菌黏附和生物膜形成的影响。我们的微流控装置在流动条件下对新型抗菌剂和抗污剂的体外评估具有很大的潜力。