| Literature DB >> 29196015 |
Qi Deng1, Yuehua Pu2, Lijun Sun3, Yaling Wang4, Yang Liu5, Rundong Wang1, Jianmeng Liao6, Defeng Xu1, Ying Liu1, Riying Ye1, Zhijia Fang1, Ravi Gooneratne7.
Abstract
Shewanella putrefaciens biofilm formation is of great concern for the shrimp industry because it adheres easily to food and food-contact surfaces and is a source of persistent and unseen contamination that causes shrimp spoilage and economic losses to the shrimp industry. Different concentrations of an antimicrobial lipopeptide, the fermentation product of Bacillus subtilis, AMPNT-6, were tested for the ability to reduce adhesion and disrupt S. putrefaciens preformed biofilms on two different contact surfaces (shrimp shell, stainless steel sheet). AMPNT-6 displayed a marked dose- and time-dependent anti-adhesive effect>biofilm removal. 3MIC AMPNT-6 was able both to remove biofilm and prevent bacteria from forming biofilm in a 96-well polystyrene microplate used as the model surface. 2MIC AMPNT-6 prevented bacteria from adhering to the microplate surface to form biofilm for 3h and removed already existing biofilm within 24h. Secretion of extracellular polymeric substances incubated in LB broth for 24h by S. putrefaciens was minimal at 3× MIC AMPNT-6. Scanning electron microscopy showed that damage to S. putrefaciens bacteria by AMPNT-6 possibly contributed to the non-adherence to the surfaces. Disruption of the mature biofilm structure by AMPNT-6 contributed to biofilm removal. It is concluded that AMPNT-6 can be used effectively to prevent attachment and also detach S. putrefaciens biofilms from shrimp shells, stainless steel sheets and polystyrene surfaces.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-adhesion; Antimicrobial lipopeptide; Bacillus subtilis; Biofilm removal; Shewanella putrefaciens
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29196015 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodres.2017.09.057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Res Int ISSN: 0963-9969 Impact factor: 6.475