Scholarly Work - Center for Biofilm Engineering
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://scholarworks.montana.edu/handle/1/9335
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Item Experimental Designs to Study the Aggregation and Colonization of Biofilms by Video Microscopy With Statistical Confidenc(Frontiers Media SA, 2022-01) Pettygrove, Brian A.; Smith, Heidi J.; Pallister, Kyler B.; Voyich, Jovanka M.; Stewart, Philip S.; Parker, Albert E.The goal of this study was to quantify the variability of confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) time-lapse images of early colonizing biofilms to aid in the design of future imaging experiments. To accomplish this a large imaging dataset consisting of 16 independent CLSM microscopy experiments was leveraged. These experiments were designed to study interactions between human neutrophils and single cells or aggregates of Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) during the initial stages of biofilm formation. Results suggest that in untreated control experiments, variability differed substantially between growth phases (i.e., lag or exponential). When studying the effect of an antimicrobial treatment (in this case, neutrophil challenge), regardless of the inoculation level or of growth phase, variability changed as a frown-shaped function of treatment efficacy (i.e., the reduction in biofilm surface coverage). These findings were used to predict the best experimental designs for future imaging studies of early biofilms by considering differing (i) numbers of independent experiments; (ii) numbers of fields of view (FOV) per experiment; and (iii) frame capture rates per hour. A spreadsheet capable of assessing any user-specified design is included that requires the expected mean log reduction and variance components from user-generated experimental results. The methodology outlined in this study can assist researchers in designing their CLSM studies of antimicrobial treatments with a high level of statistical confidence.Item Sulfenate Esters of Simple Phenols Exhibit Enhanced Activity against Biofilms(American Chemical Society, 2020-03) Walsh, Danica J.; Livinghouse, Tom; Durling, Greg M.; Chase-Bayless, Yenny; Arnold, Adrienne D.; Stewart, Philip S.The recalcitrance exhibited by microbial biofilms to conventional disinfectants has motivated the development of new chemical strategies to control and eradicate biofilms. The activities of several small phenolic compounds and their trichloromethylsulfenyl ester derivatives were evaluated against planktonic cells and mature biofilms of Staphylococcus epidermidis and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Some of the phenolic parent compounds are well-studied constituents of plant essential oils, for example, eugenol, menthol, carvacrol, and thymol. The potency of sulfenate ester derivatives was markedly and consistently increased toward both planktonic cells and biofilms. The mean fold difference between the parent and derivative minimum inhibitory concentration against planktonic cells was 44 for S. epidermidis and 16 for P. aeruginosa. The mean fold difference between the parent and derivative biofilm eradication concentration for 22 tested compounds against both S. epidermidis and P. aeruginosa was 3. This work demonstrates the possibilities of a new class of biofilm-targeting disinfectants deploying a sulfenate ester functional group to increase the antimicrobial potency toward microorganisms in biofilms.Item Novel phenolic antimicrobials enhanced activity of iminodiacetate prodrugs against biofilm and planktonic bacteria(Wiley, 2020-09) Walsh, Danica J.; Livinghouse, Tom; Durling, Greg M.; Arnold, Adrienne D.; Brasier, Whitney; Berry, Luke; Goeres, Darla M.; Stewart, Philip S.Prodrugs are pharmacologically attenuated derivatives of drugs that undergo bioconversion into the active compound once reaching the targeted site, thereby maximizing their efficiency. This strategy has been implemented in pharmaceuticals to overcome obstacles related to absorption, distribution, and metabolism, as well as with intracellular dyes to ensure concentration within cells. In this study, we provide the first examples of a prodrug strategy that can be applied to simple phenolic antimicrobials to increase their potency against mature biofilms. The addition of (acetoxy)methyl iminodiacetate groups increases the otherwise modest potency of simple phenols. Biofilm-forming bacteria exhibit a heightened tolerance toward antimicrobial agents, thereby accentuating the need for new antibiotics as well as those, which incorporate novel delivery strategies to enhance activity toward biofilms.Item Delayed neutrophil recruitment allows nascent Staphylococcus aureus biofilm formation and immune evasion(Elsevier BV, 2021-08) Pettygrove, Brian A.; Kratofil, Rachel M.; Alhede, Maria; Jensen, Peter O.; Newton, MIchelle; Qvortup, Klaus; Pallister, Kyler B.; Bjarnsholt, Thomas; Kubes, Paul; Voyich, Jovanka M.; Stewart, Philip S.Biofilms that form on implanted medical devices cause recalcitrant infections. The early events enabling contaminating bacteria to evade immune clearance, before a mature biofilm is established, are poorly understood. Live imaging in vitro demonstrated that Staphylococcus aureus sparsely inoculated on an abiotic surface can go undiscovered by human neutrophils, grow, and form aggregates. Small (~50 μm2) aggregates of attached bacteria resisted killing by human neutrophils, resulting in neutrophil lysis and bacterial persistence. In vivo, neutrophil recruitment to a peritoneal implant was spatially heterogenous, with some bacterial aggregates remaining undiscovered by neutrophils after 24 hours. Intravital imaging in mouse skin revealed that attached S. aureus aggregates grew and remained undiscovered by neutrophils for up to three hours. These results suggest a model in which delayed recruitment of neutrophils to an abiotic implant presents a critical window in which bacteria establish a nascent biofilm and acquire tolerance to neutrophil killing.