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Biofouling
The Journal of Bioadhesion and Biofilm Research
Volume 23, 2007 - Issue 4
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Original Articles

The effect of hydrodynamic conditions on the phenotype of Pseudomonas fluorescens biofilms

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Pages 249-258 | Received 05 Jan 2007, Accepted 01 Mar 2007, Published online: 23 Jul 2007
 

Abstract

This study investigated the phenotypic characteristics of monoculture P. fluorescens biofilms grown under turbulent and laminar flow, using flow cells reactors with stainless steel substrata. The cellular physiology and the overall biofilm activity, structure and composition were characterized, and compared, within hydrodynamically distinct conditions. The results indicate that turbulent flow-generated biofilm cells were significantly less extensive, with decreased metabolic activity and a lower protein and polysaccharides composition per cell than those from laminar flow-generated biofilms. The effect of flow regime did not cause significantly different outer membrane protein expression. From the analysis of biofilm activity, structure and composition, turbulent flow-generated biofilms were metabolically more active, had twice more mass per cm2, and higher cellular density and protein content (mainly cellular) than laminar flow-generated biofilms. Conversely, laminar flow-generated biofilms presented higher total and matrix polysaccharide contents. Direct visualisation and scanning electron microscopy analysis showed that these different flows generate structurally different biofilms, corroborating the quantitative results. The combination of applied methods provided useful information regarding a broad spectrum of biofilm parameters, which can contribute to control and model biofilm processes.

Acknowledgements

The authors acknowledge the financial support provided by the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (Project CHEMBIO - POCI/BIO/61872/2004, Post-Doc Grant – Manuel Simões). We gratefully acknowledge Dr Andrew J. McBain (School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Manchester, UK) for critically reviewing the manuscript.

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