| Literature DB >> 33239659 |
Branden S J Gregorchuk1, Shelby L Reimer1, Daniel R Beniac2, Shannon L Hiebert2, Timothy F Booth2, Michelle Wuzinski1, Brielle E Funk1, Kieran A Milner1, Nicola H Cartwright1, Ali N Doucet1, Michael R Mulvey2, Mazdak Khajehpour3, George G Zhanel1, Denice C Bay4.
Abstract
Biocides such as quaternary ammonium compounds (Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33239659 PMCID: PMC7689532 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-77446-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
A summary of mean BZK and CET MIC and 30MBC values of all bacterial isolates tested in this study based on a twofold (log2) dilution series from three bacterial bioreplicates measured in technical triplicate.
| Bacterial isolate tested in this study; isolate abbreviation | MIC (μg/mL) (n = 9)* | 30MBC (μg/mL) (n = 9)* | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BZK | CET | BZK | CET | |
| 18.8 | 37.5 | 75.0 | 75.0 | |
| 150.0 | 150.0 | 150.0 | 150.0 | |
| 75.0 | 300.0 | 150.0 | 300.0 | |
| 18.8 | 37.5 | 75.0 | 75.0 | |
| 75.0 | 150.0 | 150.0 | 300.0 | |
| 18.8 | – | 37.5 | – | |
| 75.0 | – | 150.0 | – | |
| 9.4 | – | 37.5 | – | |
| 37.5 | – | 75.0 | – | |
*n = 9 refers to 3 biological replicate cultures and 3 technical replicate dilutions used for AST.
aIsolate sourced from the Yale Coli Genetic Stock Centre; CGSC (https://cgsc.biology.yale.edu/).
bBZK-adapted BW25113 isolate, tolerant to 75 µg/mL BZK (BZKR). Refer to reference BioRXIV# 201,814.
cCET-adapted BW25113 isolate, tolerant to 150 µg/mL CET (CETR). Refer to reference BioRXIV# 201,814.
dStrain sourced from the Leibniz Institute DSMZ-German Collection of Microorganisms and Cell Cultures GmbH; DSMZ (https://www.dsmz.de/).
eBZK-adapted DSM 6135 isolate, tolerant to 75 µg/mL BZK.
fBZK-adapted DSM 5570 isolate, tolerant to 37.5 µg/mL BZK.
Figure 1RFDMIA of stationary phase EC, ECBZKT, ECCETT exposed to increasing concentrations of BZK or CET. (A) RFDMIA comparison of EC and ECBZKT isolates exposed to BZK. (B) Shows RFDMIA results for EC and ECCETT exposed to CET. (C) Narrow range RFDMIA of BZK concentrations (10–40 μg/mL). D) RFDMIA of EC versus ECCETT exposed to narrow range of CET concentrations (10–40 μg/mL). All graphs are the mean PI ΔRFUΔ30min at EM 620 nm values from stationary phase bacterial isolate preparations separately exposed to increasing QAC concentrations. Bar outlines are color coordinated to indicate QAC concentrations corresponding to the MIC (red) and 30MBC (blue) values of each isolate every panel (Table 1). For each RFDMIA plot shown, a Student’s two-tailed t test was calculated by comparing every QAC concentration PI ΔRFUΔ30min value to the lowest measured QAC concentration PI ΔRFUΔ30min value shown on the plot. t tests were used to identify the lowest QAC concentration in an assay with a significant increase in PI ΔRFUΔ30min value and are indicated as a double asterisk (**) with P < 0.01. Data represents three bacterial bioreplicates (n = 3) measured from averaged technical triplicate measurements.
Figure 2RFDMIA results of EC, ECBZKT, and ECCETT prepared as stationary phase (A, B), mid-log phase (C, D), and agar colony (E, F) PBS-buffered cell suspensions exposed to increasing concentrations of BZK (A, C, E) and CET (B, D, F). All graphs are show the mean PI ΔRFUΔ30min at EM 620 nm values from bacterial cell preparations at increasing QAC concentrations. Bar outlines are color coordinated to indicate the QAC concentration corresponding to the MIC (red) and 30MBC (blue) values of each isolate every panel as determined by AST on Table 1. For each RFDMIA plot shown, a Student’s two-tailed t test was calculated by comparing every QAC concentration PI ΔRFUΔ30min value to the lowest measured QAC concentration PI ΔRFUΔ30min value shown on the plot. This t test was used to identify the lowest QAC concentration with a significant increase in PI ΔRFUΔ30min value, which is indicated as a double asterisk (**) with P < 0.01. Data represents three bacterial bioreplicates (n = 3) measured from averaged technical triplicate measurements.
Figure 3SEM images of EC and ECBZKT exposed to increasing concentrations of BZK for 30-min. (A, C, E, G, I) show EC isolates and (B, D, F, H, J) show ECBZKT isolates after 30-min exposure to BZK at 0 µg/mL (A, B), 9.4 µg/mL (C, D), 18.8 µg/mL (E, F), 75 µg/mL (G, H) and 150 µg/mL (I, J). All images are representative of five SEM images collected at 5000× magnifications and the white scale bar at the bottom of each panel image indicates 5 µm length.
Figure 4SEM images of EC and ECCETT exposed to increasing concentrations of CET for 30-min. (A, C, E, G, I) show EC isolates and (B, D, F, H, J) show ECCETT isolates after 30-min exposure to CET at 0 µg/mL (A, B), 18.8 µg/mL (C, D), 37.5 µg/mL (E, F), 75 µg/mL (G, H) and 300 µg/mL (I, J). All images are representative of 5 SEM images collected at 5000× magnifications and the white scale bar at the bottom of each panel image indicates 5 µm length.
Figure 5RFDMIA of various Gram-negative species to determine QAC susceptibility. The results of stationary phase RFDMIA of E. coli (EC) (A, B), A. baumannii (AB) (A, B), P. aeruginosa (PA) (A, B), K. pneumoniae (KP; KPBZKT) (C), and S. sonnei (SS; SSBZKT) (D) exposed to increasing concentrations of QAC are shown. For each RFDMIA plot shown, a Student’s two-tailed t test was calculated by comparing every QAC concentration PI ΔRFUΔ30min value to the lowest measured QAC concentration PI ΔRFUΔ30min value shown on the plot. This t test was used to identify the lowest QAC concentration with a significant increase in PI ΔRFUΔ30min value, which are indicated as a double asterisk (**) with P < 0.01. The horizontal lines with asterisks indicate interspecies PI ΔRFUΔ30min value comparisons at the same QAC concentrations. Data represents three bacterial bioreplicates (n = 3) measured from averaged technical triplicate measurements.