PFASs (perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances) are highly fluorinated, aliphatic, synthetic compounds with high thermal and chemical stability as well as unique amphiphilic properties which make them ingredients in a range of industrial processes. PFASs have attracted consideration due to their persistence, toxicity and bioaccumulation tendency in the environment. Recently, attention has begun to be addressed to shorter-chain PFASs, such as perfluorohexane sulfonate [PFHxS], apparently less toxic to and more easily eliminated from lab animals. However, short-chain PFASs represent end-products from the transformation of fluorotelomers whose biotic breakdown reactions have not been identified to date. This means that such emergent pollutants will tend to accumulate and persist in ecosystems. Since we are just learning about the interaction between short-chain PFASs and microorganisms, this study reports on the response to PFHxS of two Pseudomonas sp. strains isolated from environmental matrices contaminated by PFASs. The PFHxS bioaccumulation potential of these strains was unveiled by exploiting different physiological conditions as either axenic or mixed cultures under alkanothrofic settings. Moreover, electron microscopy revealed nonorthodox features of the bacterial cells, as a consequence of the stress caused by both organic solvents and PFHxS in the culturing substrate.
Although careful donor selection reduces tissue contamination, close microbiological control of harvested allografts remains a key task of tissue banks. To guarantee the safety of human tissues for allograft transplantation, a decontamination regimen must be adopted which, as recommended by European guidelines, is active against the majority of microorganisms isolated in tissues. Antibiotic decontamination methods differ from one tissue bank to another in terms of antimicrobial agents, temperature and length of exposure. After identifying the most effective antibiotics against the bacterial strains most commonly isolated in allografts, Treviso Tissue Bank Foundation demonstrated the efficacy of an antibiotic cocktail for tissue decontamination containing Gentamicin, Vancomycin and Meropenem. The aim of this study was to analyse the degradation kinetics of the three antibiotics according to preparation method and use. The results show that only Meropenem is unstable at + 4 °C, while Gentamicin and Vancomycin are valid for over 10 days. We thus established to add Meropenem before the start of the tissue decontamination phase.
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