The measurement of carbon dioxide production rates as an indication of metabolic activity was applied to study biofilm development and response of Pseudomonas sp. biofilms to an environmental disturbance in the form of a moving air-liquid interface (i.e., shear). A differential response in biofilm cohesiveness was observed after bubble perturbation, and the biofilm layers were operationally defined as either shear-susceptible or non-shear-susceptible. Confocal laser scanning microscopy and image analysis showed a significant reduction in biofilm thickness and biomass after the removal of the shear-susceptible biofilm layer, as well as notable changes in the roughness coefficient and surface-to-biovolume ratio. These changes were accompanied by a 72% reduction of whole-biofilm CO 2 production; however, the non-shear-susceptible region of the biofilm responded rapidly after the removal of the overlying cells and extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) along with the associated changes in nutrient and O 2 flux, with CO 2 production rates returning to preperturbation levels within 24 h. The adaptable nature and the ability of bacteria to respond to environmental conditions were further demonstrated by the outer shear-susceptible region of the biofilm; the average CO 2 production rate of cells from this region increased within 0.25 h from 9.45 ؎ 5.40 fmol of CO 2 ⅐ cell ؊1 ⅐ h ؊1 to 22.6 ؎ 7.58 fmol of CO 2 ⅐ cell ؊1 ⅐ h ؊1 when cells were removed from the biofilm and maintained in suspension without an additional nutrient supply. These results also demonstrate the need for sufficient monitoring of biofilm recovery at the solid substratum if mechanical methods are used for biofouling control.
Biofilms are important in aquatic nutrient cycling and microbial proliferation. In these structures, nutrients like carbon are channeled into the production of extracellular polymeric substances or cell division; both are vital for microbial survival and propagation. The aim of this study was to assess carbon channeling into cellular or noncellular fractions in biofilms. Growing in tubular reactors, biofilms of our model strain Pseudomonas sp. strain CT07 produced cells to the planktonic phase from the early stages of biofilm development, reaching pseudo steady state with a consistent yield of ϳ10 7 cells ⅐ cm ؊2 ⅐ h ؊1 within 72 h. Total direct counts and image analysis showed that most of the converted carbon occurred in the noncellular fraction, with the released and sessile cells accounting for <10% and <2% of inflowing carbon, respectively. A CO 2 evolution measurement system (CEMS) that monitored CO 2 in the gas phase was developed to perform a complete carbon balance across the biofilm. The measurement system was able to determine whole-biofilm CO 2 production rates in real time and showed that gaseous CO 2 production accounted for 25% of inflowing carbon. In addition, the CEMS made it possible to measure biofilm response to changing environmental conditions; changes in temperature or inflowing carbon concentration were followed by a rapid response in biofilm metabolism and the establishment of new steady-state conditions.
Aims: To investigate carbon transformation by biofilms and changes in biofilm architecture, metabolic activity and planktonic cell yield in response to fluctuating carbon availability. Methods and Results: Pseudomonas sp. biofilms were cultured under alternating carbon‐replete and carbon‐limited conditions. A shift to medium without added carbon led to a 90% decrease in biofilm respiration rate and a 40% reduction in planktonic cell yield within 1 h. Attached cell division and progeny release were shown to contribute to planktonic cell numbers during carbon limitation. Development of a significantly enlarged biofilm surface area during carbon limitation facilitated a rapid increase in whole‐biofilm metabolic activity, cell yield and biomass upon the re‐introduction of carbon after 8 days of limitation. The cumulative number of planktonic cells (>1010 CFU) released from the biofilm during the cultivation period contained only 1·0% of the total carbon available to the biofilm, with 6·5% of the carbon retained in the biofilm and 54% mineralized to CO2. Conclusions: Biofilm‐derived planktonic cell yield is a proliferation mechanism. The rapid response of biofilms to environmental perturbations facilitates the optimal utilization of resources to promote both proliferation and survival. Biofilms function as efficient catalysts for environmental carbon transformation and mineralization. Significance and Impact of the study: A greater understanding of the relationship between biofilm form and function can inform strategies intended to control and/or promote biofilm formation.
Biofilm formation renders sessile microbial populations growing in continuous-flow systems less susceptible to variation in dilution rate than planktonic cells, where dilution rates exceeding an organism's maximum growth rate ( max ) results in planktonic cell washout. In biofilm-dominated systems, the biofilm's overall max may therefore be more relevant than the organism's max , where the biofilm max is considered as a net process dependent on the adsorption rate, growth rate, and removal rate of cells within the biofilm. Together with lag (acclimation) time, the biofilm's overall max is important wherever biofilm growth is a dominant form, from clinical settings, where the aim is to prevent transition from lag to exponential growth, to industrial bioreactors, where the aim is to shorten the lag and rapidly reach maximum activity. The purpose of this study was to measure CO 2 production as an indicator of biofilm activity to determine the effect of nutrient type and concentration and of the origin of the inoculum on the length of the lag phase, biofilm max , and steady-state metabolic activity of Pseudomonas aeruginosa PA01 (containing gfp), Pseudomonas fluorescens CT07 (containing gfp), and a mixed community. As expected, for different microorganisms the lengths of the lag phase in biofilm development and the biofilm max values differ, whereas different nutrient concentrations result in differences in the lengths of lag phase and steady-state values but not in biofilm max rates. The data further showed that inocula from different phenotypic origins give rise to lag time of different lengths and that this influence persists for a number of generations after inoculation.Microbial growth in batch cultures has been studied for a long time, and the observed phases have been designated the lag phase, the acceleration phase, the exponential phase, the retardation phase, the stationary phase, and the phase of decline although not each culture displays all of the mentioned phases (16). In contrast to batch cultures and static (no flow) biofilms (e.g., those that form in 96-well plates), the increase in biofilm cells in a flowing environment is a net process that is dependent on the irreversible adsorption rate of cells to the surface, the growth rate of the microorganisms, and the removal rate of cells lost to the bulk flow (18). There are numerous benefits for the cells in biofilms, e.g., protection against antimicrobials and the opportunity for and proliferation by continuous cell dispersion. There is also a possible competitive advantage if cells colonize surfaces at multiple sites and grow in such a manner that the resulting three-dimensional architecture exposes the maximum biofilm surface area to surrounding nutrients. The most successful colonizers would therefore be the cells with the ability to adhere to the surface (and stay adhered) and to start multiplying at maximum rate. The process of events from being free-floating cells to the so-called permanently surface-attached phase involves early steps including ...
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