《 Can photocatalysis inhibit interspecies bacterial cooperation to quench the formation of robust complex bacterial biofilms in water environments? 》
Website: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2024.122137
Graphical Abstract:
Abstract:
Bacterial biofilms pose significant a public health risk as an environmental reservoir for opportunistic aquatic bacterial pathogens. Understanding the interspecies roles of complex bacterial biofilms under different stimuli and regulatory mechanisms of stress responses is the key to controlling their dissemination. Herein, two-species mixture (TSM) biofilms (Staphylococcus aureus and Pseudomonas aeruginosa) were constructed in a flowthrough reactor. Compared with the single-species biofilms, the TSM biofilm had higher growth activity to reach maturity faster, forming a staggered community structure. Moreover, the TSM biofilm exhibited greatly improved resistance to different antibiotics (16−128 times higher), especially to those that act on protein synthesis and cell membrane integrity, when compared to single planktonic microorganisms. In the presence of stimuli, photocatalysis effectively inactivated the TSM biofilm within 10 h, a 4-fold shorter inactivation time compared to UVC irradiation. In addition, photocatalysis effectively depleted the extracellular polymers of the TSM biofilm and inhibited secretion of their interspecies quorum sensing signaling molecule autoinducer-2 (AI-2). However, the expression of AI-2 induced related virulence factors, and biofilm growth-related genes were initially up-regulated 3−10 fold for the TSM biofilm within the first 2−4 h of photocatalysis, followed by significant down-regulation. Furthermore, the addition of the AI-2 precursor 4,5-dihydroxy-2,3-pentanedione effectively delayed the photocatalytic inactivation efficiency of the TSM biofilm compared to the control. These results suggest that photocatalysis can effectively inactivate biofilms by inhibiting interspecies cooperation by quenching AI-2 in the TSM biofilm. This work sheds light on controlling biofilms in public health engineering systems.