4.7 Article

Inhibiting P-fluorescens biofilms with fluoropolymer-embedded silver nanoparticles: an in-situ spectroscopic study

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-12088-x

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Funding

  1. ABS Trust at Ulm University
  2. Italian MIUR [PONa3 00369]
  3. German Research Foundation [CRC1149/project A04]

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Surface colonization by microorganisms leads to the formation of biofilms, i.e. aggregates of bacteria embedded within a matrix of extracellular polymeric substance. This promotes adhesion to the surface and protects bacterial community, providing an antimicrobial-resistant environment. The inhibition of biofilm growth is a crucial issue for preventing bacterial infections. Inorganic nanoparticle/Teflonlike (CFx) composites deposited via ion beam sputtering demonstrated very efficient antimicrobial activity. In this study, we developed Ag-CFx thin films with tuneable metal loadings and exceptional in-plane morphological and chemical homogeneity. Ag-CFx antimicrobial activity was studied via mid-infrared attenuated total reflection spectroscopy utilizing specifically adapted multi-reflection waveguides. Biofilm was sampled by carefully depositing the Ag-CFx film on IR inactive regions of the waveguide. Real-time infrared spectroscopy was used to monitor Pseudomonas fluorescens biofilm growth inhibition induced by the bioactive silver ions released from the nanoantimicrobial coating. Few hours of Ag-CFx action were sufficient to affect significantly biofilm growth. These findings were corroborated by atomic force microscopy (AFM) studies on living bacteria exposed to the same nanoantimicrobial. Morphological analyses showed a severe bacterial stress, leading to membrane leakage/collapse or to extended cell lysis as a function of incubation time.

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