| Literature DB >> 23203046 |
Uchechukwu U Nwodo1, Ezekiel Green, Anthony I Okoh.
Abstract
Diverse structural, functional and valuable polysaccharides are synthesized by bacteria of all taxa and secreted into the external environment. These polysaccharides are referred to as exopolysaccharides and they may either be homopolymeric or heteropolymeric in composition and of diverse high molecular weights (10 to 1000 kDa). The material properties of exopolysaccharides have revolutionized the industrial and medical sectors due to their retinue of functional applications and prospects. These applications have been extensive in areas such as pharmacological, nutraceutical, functional food, cosmeceutical, herbicides and insecticides among others, while prospects includes uses as anticoagulant, antithrombotic, immunomodulation, anticancer and as bioflocculants. Due to the extensive applications of bacterial exopolysaccharides, this overview provides basic information on their physiologic and morphologic functions as well as their applications and prospects in the medical and industrial sectors.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23203046 PMCID: PMC3509562 DOI: 10.3390/ijms131114002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Some of the roles ascribed to exopolysaccharides in biofilms.
| Process | Functional Relevance of Exopolysaccharides to Biofilms |
|---|---|
| Adhesion | Exopolysaccharides makes provision for the initial steps in the colonization of surfaces (abiotic and biotic) and long-term attachment of biofilms. |
| Bacterial cell aggregation | The bridging between cells is enabled by exopolysaccharides, thus temporarily immobilizing bacterial population thus, the subsequent development of high cell densities and cell–cell recognition. |
| Water retention | Hydrophilic exopolysaccharides have high water retention ability thus maintaining a hydrated microenvironment around biofilm and this leading to the survival of desiccation in water-deficient environments. |
| Cohesion of biofilms | Neutral and charged exopolysaccharides forms a hydrated polymer network (the biofilm matrix), mediating the mechanical stability of biofilms (often in conjunction with multivalent cations), determining biofilm architecture, as well as allowing cell-cell communication. |
| Nutrient source | Exopolysaccharides serves as source of carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus containing compounds for utilization by the biofilm community. |
| Protective barrier | Exopolysaccharides confers resistance to non specific and specific host defences during infection, confers tolerance to various antimicrobial agents, protects cyanobacterial nitrogenase from the harmful effects of oxygen and offers protection against some phagocytic protozoa. |
| Sorption of organic Compounds and inorganic ions | Charged and hydrophobic exopolysaccharides mediates the accumulation of nutrients from the environment, sorption of xenobiotics and recalcitrant materials. They promote polysaccharide gel formation resulting in ion exchange, mineral formation and the accumulation of toxic metal ions (thus collectively contributing to environmental detoxification). |
| Binding of enzymes | Non glycolytic extracellular enzyme interaction with exopolysaccharides leads to retention stabilization and accumulation. |
| Export of cell components | Lipopolysaccharides (isoprenoid glycosyl carrier lipids), which lipo-glyco conjugate, mediates the releases cellular material as a result of metabolic turnover. |
| Sink for excess energy | Exopolysaccharides stores excess carbon under unbalanced carbon to nitrogen ratios. |
Some human disease associated with bacteria biofilms.
| Human Disease | Biofilm Bacteria |
|---|---|
| Cystic fibrosis pneumonia | |
| Otitis media | |
| Periodontitis | Gram negative anaerobic oral bacteria |
| Dental caries | |
| Musculoskeletal infections | |
| Necrotizing fasciitis | Group A |
| Bacterial prostatitis | |
| Urinary catheter cystitis | |
| Biliary tract infection | |
| Meloidosis |
Some clinically important bacteria with its pathogenic serogrouping sequel to their capsule.
| Bacteria Species | Pathogenic Serotypes | Capsular Antigen Nomenclature | Associated Clinical Disease |
|---|---|---|---|
| >80 | Diarrhoea, Neonatal meningitis and Urinary tract infection. | ||
| >6 | (a–f) | Meningitis, Epiglottitis, Septicaemia and Pneumonia. | |
| >10 | Meningitis, Meningococcemia. | ||
| >80 | Pneumonia, Bacteremia, Thrombophlebitis, Urinary tract infection (UTI), Cholecystitis, Diarrhea, Upper respiratory tract infection, Wound infection, Osteomyelitis, Meningitis and Pyogenic liver abscess. | ||
| >96 | CPS | Otitis media, Bronchopneumonia and Meningitis. | |
| >11 | CP | Furuncles and carbuncles, Staphylococcal scalded skin syndrome, Septic arthritis, Staphylococcal endocarditis and Atopic dermatitis. |
Properties and functional attributes of some bacterial exopolysaccharides.
| Bacteria Exopolysaccharide | Polysaccharide Component | Molecular Weight (Da) | Properties | Applications | Bacteria strains |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dextran | Glucose | 106–109 | Non-ionic, good stability Newtonian, fluid behavior | Foods, Pharmaceutical industry (Blood volume expander) and Chromatographic media | |
| Alginate | Guluronic acid and mannuronic acid | (0.3–1.3) × 106 | Gelling capacity, film forming | Food hydrocolloid and medicine (surgical dressings, wound management and controlled drug release) | |
| Xanthan | Glucose, mannose and glucuronic acid | (2.0–50) × 106 | High viscosity, Stable over a wide temperature, pH and salt concentrations ranges | Foods, petroleum industry, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics and personal care products | |
| Curdlan | Glucose | 5 × 104–2 × 106 | Gel-forming ability, water insolubility, edible and non-toxic has biological activity | Foods, pharmaceutical industry, heavy metal removal and concrete additive | |
| Cellulose | Glucose | ~106 | Not soluble in most solvents and high tensile strength | Foods (indigestible fiber), biomedical (wound healing, tissue engineered blood vessels) and audio speaker diaphragms | |
| Succinoglycan | Glucose and galactose | 5 × 103–1 × 106 | High viscosity and acid stability | Food and oil recovery | |
| Glucuronan | Glucuronic acid | 6 × 104–6 × 105 | Gelling and thickening capacity | Food and cosmetics products | |
| Colanic acid | Fucose, glucose, glucoronate, and galactose | 2 × 104–6 × 105 | Gelling capacity | Cosmetics and personal care products |