| Literature DB >> 32370037 |
Muhammad Tanveer Munir1, Hélène Pailhories2,3, Matthieu Eveillard3,4, Mark Irle1, Florence Aviat5, Laurence Dubreil6, Michel Federighi7, Christophe Belloncle1.
Abstract
Some wood species have antimicrobial properties, making them a better choice over inert surfaces in certain circumstances. However, the organic and porous nature of wood raises questions regarding the use of this material in hygienically important places. Therefore, it is reasonable to investigate the microbial survival and the antimicrobial potential of wood via a variety of methods. Based on the available literature, this review classifies previously used methods into two broad categories: one category tests wood material by direct bacterial contact, and the other tests the action of molecules previously extracted from wood on bacteria and fungi. This article discusses the suitability of these methods to wood materials and exposes knowledge gaps that can be used to guide future research. This information is intended to help the researchers and field experts to select suitable methods for testing the hygienic safety and antimicrobial properties of wood materials.Entities:
Keywords: antimicrobial; hygiene; methods; properties; screening; survival; wood surfaces
Year: 2020 PMID: 32370037 PMCID: PMC7277147 DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics9050225
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antibiotics (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6382
Figure 1Flow chart of literature review methodology.
Summary of publications selected for full-text review.
| Material | Microorganism | Objective of the Study | Methods | Main Findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oak and pine |
| Survival of pathogens on wooden surfaces in healthcare facilities | Swabbing, planning, and plate count | Wood surfaces showed antimicrobial properties | [ |
| Oak wood | Isolates of | Oak in hospitals, the worst enemy of Staphylococcus aureus | Direct disc diffusion method | The method was efficient to show the antimicrobial properties of wood | [ |
| Pine and spruce wood-associated polyphenols |
| The antimicrobial effects of wood-associated polyphenols on food pathogens and spoilage organisms | Microbial cell wall permeability and membrane damage | Several stilbenes showed antimicrobial activities against food pathogens and spoilage organisms | [ |
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| Characteristics of antibacterial molecular activities in poplar wood extractives | GC/MS | The molecules were identified that are known to have antimicrobial properties | [ |
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| Direct screening method to assess antimicrobial behavior of untreated wood | Direct disc diffusion method | The method was efficient to show the antimicrobial properties of wood | [ | |
| Larch ( |
| Testing the antimicrobial activities of different wood and their parts against different bacteria | Direct disc diffusion, paper disc diffusion | Antimicrobial activities depended upon the type of wood, part of tree, and type of bacteria | [ |
| Spruce wood ( |
| An assessment of bacterial transfer from wooden ripening shelves to cheeses | Food contact with surface | Wooden shelves had the lowest transfer rate of bacteria compared to other surfaces | [ |
| Wood and other cutting boards | Transfer of bacteria to food after cleaning the surfaces | Swabbing and | Efficacy of cleaning methods was tested | [ | |
| Spruce wood shelves |
| Survival of bacteria after the cleaning and sanitation of cheese preparation boards | Surface contact/blot planning and blending | Bacteria could not be cleaned by brushing and rubbing | [ |
| Wood and other archeological objects | Variety of microbes | Isolation, characterization, and treatment of microbial agents responsible for the deterioration of archaeological objects | Swabbing | All samples were contaminated with various types of surface degrading microbes | [ |
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| Effect of extractives and thermal modification on antibacterial properties | Plate count method | Thermal treatments and extraction influence on the antimicrobial properties of wood | [ |
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| Antibacterial properties of wooden extracts | Direct (extractive) agar diffusion method | Extractive showed antimicrobial properties | [ |
| Oak and Douglas fir wood | Wood degrading microbes | Interaction of bacteria and fungi on wooden surfaces | Scanning electron microscopy and plate contact test | Environmental factors’ influence on the microbial interaction on wooden surfaces | [ |
| Melamine, vinyl chloride, stainless steel, wood, and acrylonitrilebutadiene styrene | Total microbial count | ATP bioluminescence values are significantly different depending upon the material surface properties of the sampling location in hospitals | ATP bioluminescence, SEM, agar stamp/blotting | ATP and colony-forming unit (CFU) were different for wooden surfaces | [ |
| Wood and plastic | Foodborne bacteria | Analysis of microbial community and food-borne bacteria on restaurant cutting boards | Pyrosequencing | Distribution of 32 genera was identified | [ |
| Wood, plastic, vinyl, quarry clay tile |
| Efficacy of sonicating swabs to recover microbes from surfaces | Sonicating swab compared to cotton, sponge, and foam swab | Sonicating swabs recovered significantly higher number of microbes | [ |
| Contact surfaces including wood |
| Evaluation of two surface sampling methods for microbial detection on materials by culture and qPCR | Sponge and swabbing used for sample collection and tested by qPCR and plate count | qPCR is more sensitive than culturing, and swabbing was more efficient than sponge | [ |
| White and brown rot fungus | Evaluation of antimicrobial activity of ethanol and aqueous extracts | Wood mass loss calculation and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry | The wood extracts provided protection against degradation owing to antimicrobial properties | [ | |
| Wood and bamboo cutting boards |
| Efficacy of disinfectant to clean the cutting boards | Stirring method for microbial recovery | More microbes were recovered from plastic as compared to wood and bamboo | [ |
| Wood cutting board and other surfaces |
| Microbial survival on five environmental surfaces | Swabbing | Survival and recovery of microbes depends upon the type of surfaces and moisture conditions | [ |
| Calabrian and Sicilian | Formation and characterization of early bacterial biofilms on different wood typologies | SEM for biofilm observation and paper disc method to determine antimicrobial activities | LAB represent efficient barriers to the adhesion of the main dairy, pathogens, probably due to their acidity and bacteriocin generation | [ | |
| Rubber wood cutting boards, plastic, glass |
| Effectiveness of domestic antibacterial products in decontaminating food contact surfaces | Agar overlay method for microbial recovery | This method gave good results for testing the cleanability of surfaces | [ |
| Pine and plastic |
| Efficacy of electrolyzed water to inactivate different bacteria on cutting boards | Swabbing | Treatment was efficient for reducing microbial contamination | [ |
| Poplar wood |
| Confocal spectral microscopy—An innovative tool for the tracking of pathogen agents on contaminated wooden surfaces | Confocal spectral laser microscopy | The microbes could be located for their distribution by this method | [ |
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| Wood preservation potential of extracts | Direct diffusion method | Antimicrobial properties were observed using the disc diffusion method | [ | |
| Wooden toothpicks | Variety of microbes | Determination of microbial contamination of wood | Wet preparation techniques, concentration techniques, culture, biochemical tests | Wooden samples were found contaminated with a wide range of microorganisms | [ |
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| Extraction of bioactive compounds from biomass of forest management and wood processing | Well diffusion method | Antimicrobial compounds were identified | [ | |
| Spruce wood |
| Comparison of methods for the detection of listeria on porous surfaces | Sponge swabbing | Porosity influences the recovery of microbes | [ |
| Rubber wood and plastic |
| Transmission of bacteria from raw chicken meat to cooked chicken meat through cutting boards | Rinsing with normal saline to remove bacteria and meat contact to study transmission | Surfaces play role in transmission of bacteria | [ |
| Cork wood | Evaluation of antimicrobial properties of cork | Agar dilution method | Cork has antimicrobial properties | [ | |
| Wood of |
| Chemical composition and biological activity of the essential oil from pine wood | GC and GC/MS and Agar dilution method | Antimicrobial activities of pine wood were identified and characterized | [ |
| Hardwood, carpets, vinyl and porcelain tiles |
| Microbial survival on floor materials | Bulk rinsate, agar plate contact, vacuum suction | Microbial survival depends on the recovery method and surface type in hospitals (vet and human) and office buildings | [ |
| Spruce fir boards ( |
| Sanitizing wooden boards used for cheese maturation by means of a steam-mediated heating process | Planning and cotton swabbing and then stomacher | Both recovery methods showed identical results | [ |
| Pine, poplar, spruce |
| Comparative study of 3 methods for recovering microorganisms from wooden surfaces in the food industry | Planning, grinding and brushing | Humidity, type of wood and microbe, and recovery method influenced the recovery rates | [ |
| Sapwood and heartwood of the larch |
| Antimicrobial properties of wood against hygienic microbes | Blotting and vibration | Microbial quantities decreased after contact with wood | [ |
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| Evaluation of anticandidal potential of wood | Thin-layer chromatography, contact bioautography, disc diffusion method, broth microdilution | Chemical constituents were identified and antimicrobial activities were reported | [ |
| Maple and Beech | Aerobic mesophilic | Hygienic aspects of using wooden and plastic cutting boards | Swabbing | Survival of microbes on different cutting boards before and after cleaning | [ |
| Pine, larch, spruce, beech, maple, poplar, oak, polyethylene |
| Studying the survival of pathogenic organisms in contact with wood material | PCR and culture-based recovery methods | Wood material has antimicrobial properties | [ |
| Maple wood, steel, ceramic and carpet |
| Longer contact times increase cross-contamination of | Vortex for microbial recovery plate count method for enumeration | Contact time, food, and surface type all | [ |
| Poplar |
| Assessment of | Grinding/blending | There is a low transmission of microbes from wood to food (apple) as compared to glass and plastic | [ |
| Wood, stainless steel, Formica, polypropylene |
| Recovery and transfer of Salmonella Typhimurium from four different domestic food contact surfaces | Swabbing (vortexting), contact pressing (635 g) and food contact | Number of microbes recovered and their transfer from wood to food was lowest compared to other surfaces | [ |
| Poplar |
| Behavior of bacteria on poplar wood crates by impedance measurements | Direct contact (wood in broth) | Microbes in contact with wood present in broth showed decrease in CFU | [ |
| Poplar and pine | Total microbial counts, | Hygienic properties exhibited by single-use wood and plastic packaging on the microbial stability for fish | Vortexing to recover microbes and enumerated by the TEMPO® system | Microbes decreased fastest on wood | [ |
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| Antimicrobial properties of wood treated with natural extracts | GC-MS, direct diffusion method | Antifungal properties were observed | [ |
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| Antimicrobial properties of bark and wood extracts | GC-MS, microdilution method | The extracts showed antimicrobial properties, minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) was determined | [ |
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| Identification, isolation, and characterization of novel antimicrobial compounds | Disc diffusion method, well diffusion method | Two new compounds were identified with their antimicrobial properties | [ |
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| Antimicrobial characterization combining spectrophotometric analysis of different oak species | Paper disc diffusion method and UV spectrophotometric analysis | Antimicrobial properties and active compounds were identified | [ | |
| Rubber wood |
| Transfer of Campylobacter jejuni from raw to cooked chicken via wood and plastic cutting boards | Rinsing with normal saline and then counting CFU by combined most-probable-number (MPN)-PCR | Transfer during uncooked/cooked meat chopping on unscored and scored cutting boards | [ |
| Heartwood of Scots pine ( |
| Pine heartwood and glass surfaces: easy method to test the fate of bacterial contamination | Plate count and broth turbidity test | Wood does not allow the survival of microbes | [ |
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| Microbial survival on extractive-treated glass cylinders was studied | Vortexting and plate count method | Extractive showed antimicrobial properties | [ | |
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| Antimicrobial properties of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) of wood | Glass chamber and plate count method | VOCs reduced the microbial survival | [ | |
| 30 species of trees |
| Antimicrobial and cytotoxic knotwood extracts and related pure compounds and their effects on food-associated microorganisms | Broth dilution and agar well dilution methods | Antimicrobial properties were observed | [ |
| Beech wood ( |
| Phenolic extractives of wound-associated wood of beech and their fungicidal effect | Spectrophotometrically analyzed and a paper disc screening test | Wood wounds have defensive chemicals to counter fungal invasion | [ |
| Hard maple and plastic cutting boards |
| Bacterial retention and cleanability of cutting boards with commercial food-service maintenance practices | Wet sponge swabbing | Microbial recovery was 0.25% and 0.1% from plastic and wood respectively in dry conditions and was similar in wet conditions | [ |
Figure 2Flow diagram outlining review findings on the classification of methods to study the antimicrobial potential of wood material.
Figure 3An antibiogram showing the results of filter paper discs (6 mm) and different oak tree wood discs (10 × 3 mm) tested against Staphylococcus aureus ATCC 29213 inoculated on a Mueller–Hinton agar plate: (a) negative control inert filter paper disc; (b) oak wood transversal cut; (c–e) oak wood longitudinal cut, and (f) positive control antibiotic (Vancomycin (Oxoid, Basingstoke, United Kingdom); ©Authors.
Figure 4Antibiogram result of the well diffusion method to test the antimicrobial activity of sawdust (1–2 mm particle size), filled in wells (10 mm diameter) created in Mueller–Hinton agar against Acinetobacter baumannii: (a) oak wood showing the zone of inhibition around the well as a positive result; (b) positive control antibiotic disc (Colistin (Oxoid, Basingstoke, United Kingdom)–6mm diameter disc); (c) poplar sawdust with no activity, and (d) ash sawdust with no antimicrobial activity; ©Authors.
Figure 5Flow diagram outlining review findings on the methods to study microbial survival on solid wood material.
Figure 6Methodology to observe DRAQ5-labeled bacteria with confocal spectral laser microscopy [adapted from Dubreil et al. [42]].
Figure 7Antibiogram to test the antimicrobial properties of oak wood (Quercus petraea) against Staphylococcus aureus with the agar diffusion method: (a) an inert filter paper disc (negative control); (b) a wooden disc showing antimicrobial activity by forming a zone of inhibition and (c) a filter paper disc impregnated with wood extractives (10 mg extractive content extracted with methanol) showing antimicrobial activity by forming a zone of inhibition; ©Authors.
Figure 8A 96-well plate showing results of the broth microdilution method for an antimicrobial test and minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC); ©Authors.
Figure 9Schematic presentation of direct bioautographic method: (a) a developed chromatographic plate is placed in a dish; (b) agar is poured into this dish, and later, microbes are inoculated and (c) after the incubation time, the zones of inhibition can be seen on agar around the active antimicrobial compounds (the figure is adapted from [14,128,129,130]).
Figure 10Schematic presentation of the contact bioautographic method: (a) microbes are inoculated on an agar plate; (b) a developed chromatographic plate is flipped over an agar plate to create a chromatographic image and transfer the active compounds, and inoculated plates are incubated for 48 h at 37 °C, and finally, (c) the zones of inhibition can be seen on the agar around the active antimicrobial compounds (adapted from [28,127,128,131]).
Figure 11Schematic presentation of the immersion bioautographic method: (a) a developed chromatographic plate is placed in a dish; (b) agar is poured into this dish, and later, microbes are inoculated; (c) after an incubation time, the zones of inhibition can be seen on agar around the active antimicrobial compounds (adapted from [28,127,128,132]).
Pros and cons of the methods used to study the antimicrobial behavior of wood material.
| Method Name | Procedure | Advantage | Disadvantage | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Direct methods | Direct diffusion method | The wood material is directly placed on microbe-inoculated agar or in a well and incubated for recommended time | 1. Rapid and time saving | 1. Disc preparation time |
| Culture-based microbial survival test | Initial microbial quantity is inoculated on wood samples and after the incubation time, the microbes are recovered, cultured, and viable cells are counted | 1. Can study the structural and chemical role of wood components | 1. Difficulty in recovering all microbes present in pores | |
| Microscopy | The behavior and distribution of inoculated microbes on wooden structures is observed via microscopy | 1. Rapid and time saving | 1. May require the fixation of samples | |
| ATP luminescence | The ATP of microbes on wood is measured | 1. Rapid and easy | 1. Difficult to differentiate the microbial ATP from other organic debris | |
| Molecular biology methods | The quantity and viability of microbes is tested via nucleic acid amplification | Accurately measures the microbial survival | 1. Expensive | |
| Extractive based methods | Extractive-based diffusion and dilution method | Extractives are placed on agar or in agar wells, or in broth, after loading on filter paper discs or directly | 1. Adapted for qualitative and quantitative antimicrobial studies | 1. Involves chemical handling Extra step of extraction |
| Bioautography | Extractives are loaded on a chromatographic layer, and then the diffusion of active chemicals is studied for their antimicrobial properties | 1. Adapted for qualitative antimicrobial studies | 1. Involves chemical handling and extraction | |
| Mass spectrometry | The total profile of microbes is measured | 1. Applicable for a low amount of material | For more specific results, the identified compounds are supposed to be tested by other culture-based methods |