| Literature DB >> 31052271 |
Tania F Bahamondez-Canas1, Lara A Heersema2, Hugh D C Smyth3,4.
Abstract
Biofilm infections have gained recognition as an important therapeutic challenge in the last several decades due to their relationship with the chronicity of <span class="Disease">infectious diseases. Studies of novel therapeutic treatments targeting infections require the development and use of models to mimic the formation and characteristics of biofilms within host tissues. Due to the diversity of reported in vitro models and lack of consensus, this review aims to provide a summary of in vitro models currently used in research. In particular, we review the various reported in vitro models of <span class="Species">Pseudomonas aeruginosa biofilms due to its high clinical impact in chronic wounds and in other chronic infections. We assess advances in in vitro models that incorporate relevant multispecies biofilms found in infected wounds, such as P. aeruginosa with Staphylococcus aureus, and additional elements such as mammalian cells, simulating fluids, and tissue explants in an attempt to better represent the physiological conditions found at an infection site. It is hoped this review will aid researchers in the field to make appropriate choices in their proposed studies with regards to in vitro models and methods.Entities:
Keywords: biofilms; chronic infections; in vitro models; viability assays
Year: 2019 PMID: 31052271 PMCID: PMC6630351 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines7020034
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059
Figure 1Number of publications per year with the word biofilms in the title of the article searched by Google Scholar. The labels indicate the dates where the evidence of biofilms in new tissues was published.
Figure 2Stages of biofilm development: (1) Reversible attachment, (2) Irreversible attachment, (3) Maturation 1, (4) Maturation 2, and (5) Dispersion [76].
Figure 3The heterogeneous susceptibility of bacterial biofilms to antibiotics [88].
Figure 4Different systems for static growth of biofilm. (A) Colony biofilm model, (B) Calgary device lid, and (C) round bottom 96-well plate.
Figure 5General schematics of the components of flow cell systems for biofilm formation.
Figure 6General schematics of the components of biofilm reactors.
Advances in models to study Pseudomonas aeruginosa biofilms in vitro.
| Model | Strains | Support | Surface | Media | Incubation | Application | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chronic Wound Infection Models | |||||||
| Germ carrier model | PA ATCC 27317 | Petri dish | Polyurethane sponge | TSB | 4, 7, and 24 h | Biofilm susceptibility in in vitro to semisolid formulations | Martineau, 2006 [ |
| Poloxamer biofilm | PA NCIMB 8626 | Petri dish | Poloxamer hydrogel | MHB | 24 h | Biofilm formation and susceptibility testing of different commercial silver-containing dressings. | Percival, 2007 [ |
| Lubbock chronic wound pathogenic biofilm (LCWPB) | PAO1, | Microtiter plate | Polystyrene 96-well plate | WLM media: 45% Bolton broth, 50% bovine plasma, and 5% freeze-thaw laked horse red blood cells | Anaerobic for 24 h | Definition of media composition for multispecies biofilm formation and susceptibility testing | Sun, 2008 [ |
| Porcine explant wound biofilm model | PAO1 and | TSA plate | Partial thickness wound beds in fresh porcine skin explants | TSB | Up to 5 days | Biofilm susceptibility testing | Wolcott, 2010 [ |
| Collagen wound biofilm | PAO1 and | Culture slides | Collagen matrices | 50% fetal calf serum and 50% physiological NaCl in 0.1% Peptone | 48 h | Biofilm formation within collagen matrices and susceptibility testing | Werthen, 2010 [ |
| Polymicrobial colony-DFR wound biofilm | PA, MRSA, and | DFR | Polycarbonate membrane | 100% BHI with 5% adult bovine serum | 3 days | Biofilm formation and susceptibility testing of dressings | Woods, 2012 [ |
| Cellulose interkingdom biofilm wound model | PA14, | N/D | Cellulose matrices on top of hydrogel | PBS | 24 h | Biofilm formation within cellulose matrices and susceptibility testing | Townsend, 2016 [ |
| Artificial wound model | PAO1 and clinical isolates | Microtiter plate | Hyaluronic acid and collagen scaffold | Bolton broth with 50% bovine plasma and 5% freeze-thaw laked horse blood | 16 h | Biofilm formation and susceptibility testing of antimicrobial peptides | Grassi, 2019 [ |
N/D: Not described; LCWPB: Lubbock chronic wound pathogenic biofilm model; PA: Pseudomonas aeruginosa; TSB: tryptic soy broth; MHB: Mueller–Hinton broth, WLM: wound-like media, TSA: tryptic soy agar, BHI: brain heart infusion media; DFR: drip flow reactor; MRSA: methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus; PBS: phosphate saline buffer.
Methods for Biofilm Analysis used with P. aeruginosa and S. aureus biofilms in vitro.
| Category of Evaluation | Principle/Target | Method Overview | Detection Method | Example Detection Settings | Example Model Systems | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Colony counting | Viable cells are able to form colonies when plated on appropriate agar substrates | Dispersions of cells are spread or drop-plated. Colonies formed counted after appropriate growth period | Visual | Agar plate | [ | |
| SYTO 9 | All Cells | Nucleic acids stained and visualized (M) or dispersed by vortexing in appropriate media (S) | FS, FM | Ex: 485 nm | Microtiter plate | [ |
| SYTO 9/PI | All cells (SYTO9) | Nucleic acids stained and visualized (M) or dispersed by vortexing in appropriate media (S) | FS, FM | Ex: 485 nm | Microtiter plate, flow cell, collagen model | [ |
| Acridine orange | All cells (nucleic acids) | Nucleic acids stained and dispersed by vortexing in appropriate media | FS | Ex: 485 nm | Microtiter plate | [ |
| Ethidium bromide | DNA | DNA stained and visualized. Appears orange when excited | FS, FM | Ex: 210 or 285 nm | Constant depth film fermenter (CDFF) and glass microscopy slide | [ |
| Ziehl carbol fuchsin | Bacterial cells | Stains bacterial cells red/purple | LM | CDFF and glass microscopy slide | [ | |
| DAPI | DNA | DNA stained and visualized. | FM, LM | Ex: 350 nm | Microtiter plate and glass slide | [ |
|
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| Tetrazolium Salts (INT, TTC, CTC, XTT, and MTT) | Reduction of Tetrazolium to formazan | Dissolved dye from stained biofilms recovered and quantified | AS | INT: 470 nm | Microtiter plate, modified agar plate | [ |
| Resazurin (Alamar Blue, PrestoBlue, CellTiter-Blue) | Reduction of Resazurin to resorufin | Reagent incubated with media and biofilms | FS, AS | Ex: 560 nm | Microtiter plate | [ |
| Bioluminescent Assay (BacTiter) | Catalysis of ATP and luciferin by luciferase | D-luciferin is used in these assays as it undergoes conversion by luciferase to oxyluciferin a light generating compound when in the presence of ATP | L*S | Microtiter plate | [ | |
| Fluorescein diacetate (FDA) | Cleavage of acetate by intracellular esterases | FDA converted to yellow fluorescent fluorescein | FS | Ex: 494 nm | Microtiter plate | [ |
|
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| Crystal violet | Stains negatively-charged molecules and polymers. All biomass (live, dead, and matrix) | Stained biofilms dissolved in appropriate solvent | AS | 550 - 600 nm | Microtiter plate | [ |
| Congo red | Polysaccharides and cell membranes | Stained biofilms dissolved in appropriate solvent | AS | 500nm | Microtiter plate | [ |
| Safranin | Nuclei and mucin red | Stained biofilms dissolved in appropriate solvent | AS | ~535 nm | Microtiter plate | [ |
| Calcofluor white | beta-polysaccharides in matrix | Biofilms stained and visualized (M) or dispersed by vortexing in appropriate media (S) | FS, AS | Ex: 360, 365, or 400 nm | Microtiter plate | [ |
| SYPRO Ruby | proteins | Biofilms stained and dispersed by vortexing in appropriate media | FS | Ex: 450 or 460 nm | Microtiter plate | [ |
| FITC | proteins and amino-sugars | Biofilms stained and visualized (M) or dispersed by vortexing in appropriate media (S) | FS, FM | Ex: ~488 nm | Microtiter plate | [ |
| Concanavalin A (Con A) conjugates | alpha-Mannopyranosyl and alpha-glucopyranosyl sugars | Biofilms stained and visualized (M) or dispersed by vortexing in appropriate media (S) | FS, FM | Ex: 543 nm | [ | |
| FITC-Con A | polysaccharides | Biofilms stained and visualized (M) or dispersed by vortexing in appropriate media (S) | FS, FM | Ex: 485 nm Em: 528 nm | Microtiter plate | [ |
| Con A - Tetramethylrhodamine | Alpha polysaccharides | Biofilms stained and visualized (M) or dispersed by vortexing in appropriate media (S) | FS, FM | Ex: 555 nm | Biofilm reactor | [ |
| Periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) | Stains polysaccharides | LM | Microtiter plate and glass slide | [ | ||
| van Gieson | Stains collagen Fibers and Bacterial DNA | LM | Microtiter plate and glass slide | [ | ||
| Vybrant DiD | Lipids and Membranes | Biofilms stained and visualized (M) or dispersed by vortexing in appropriate media (S) | FM | Ex: 644 nm | Biofilm reactor | [ |
|
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| Turbidity threshold method | Quantification of dispersed cells | Measure absorbance of bacterial suspension and bacteria-free media and compare to a known dilution series | AS | 600 nm | Microtiter plate | [ |
| MacFarland standards | Quantification of dispersed cells | Measure absorbance of bacterial suspension and McFarland Standards (mixtures of H2SO4+BaCl2 or latex particles) | AS | 625 nm | Microtiter plate | |
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| Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) | Visualization of morphology and distribution of microorganisms and extracellular matrix (ECM) | Biofilms typically fixed and negatively stained (SEM) | SEM/Cryo-SEM/ESEM | Varies by instrument | Flat-bed perfusion system, collagen model | [ |
| Confocal scanning laser microscopy (CLSM) | Isolation of 3D microbial community | Use applicable stains and dyes listed above to visualize various aspects of the biofilm | FM | Varies by stain/dye | Glass microscopy slide, flow cell | [ |
| Fluorescent in-situ hybridization (FISH/PNA-FISH) | Visualize patterns of microbial colonization | Fluorescently labeled oligonucleotide probes hybridize to ribosomal RNA in cells that have been fixed and permeabilized | FM | Varies by stain/dye | Glass microscopy slide | [ |
| Raman microscopy | Mapping of microorganisms and ECM Raman spectra | RM | Varies by instrument/target | Raman-neutral slide | [ | |
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| Atomic force microscopy (AFM) | Mapping of local and global adhesive and cohesive forces | Measure force-displacement curves | Varies by instrument/target | [ | ||
| Micro-rheology | Measure behavior of isolated bacteria under different physical conditions | FM, LM | Varies by stain/dye | Flow cell | [ | |
| Bulk rheology | Biofilms have viscoelastic properties | Measure viscoelastic properties of ECM matrix with microorganisms | Rheometer | Varies by instrument | Agar plate, colony system | [ |
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| Agar disk/well-diffusion | Zone-of-inhibition of therapies measured | Agar plates inoculated with bacteria are exposed to a therapy within a defined area. Following growth period, area of new growth measured | Visual | Agar plate | [ | |
Analysis: PI: propidium iodide; DAPI: 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole; INT: 2-(p-iodo-phenyl)-3-p-(nitrophenyl)-5 phenyltetrazolium chloride; TTC: 2,3,5-triphenyl-tetrazolium chloride; CTC: 5-cyano-2,3-ditolyl tetrazolium chloride; XTT: 2,3-bis-(2-methoxy-4-nitro-5-sulfophenyl)-2H-tetrazolium-5-carboxanilide; MTT: 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide; FITC: fluorescein isothiocyanate; PNA: peptide nucleic acid. Detection Methods: M: Microscopy; S: Spectroscopy; F: Fluorescence; A: Absorbance, L: Light; L*: Luminescence; R: Raman; Ex: Excitation wavelength; Em: Emission wavelength.