4.6 Article

Enhancing Biocide Efficacy: Targeting Extracellular DNA for Marine Biofilm Disruption

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 10, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms10061227

Keywords

extracellular DNA; microbiologically influenced corrosion; biofilm; extracellular polymeric substances; EPS; corrosion inhibitor; biocide enhancement

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council (ARC) [DP180101465]

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Biofilm formation is a global concern, and this research reveals that reducing the concentration of environmentally sustainable biocides and incorporating an eDNA degradation stage can significantly reduce the viability of mature biofilms, leading to biofilm dispersal and antimicrobial enhancement.
Biofilm formation is a global health, safety and economic concern. The extracellular composition of deleterious multispecies biofilms remains uncanvassed, leading to an absence of targeted biofilm mitigation strategies. Besides economic incentives, drive also exists from industry and research to develop and apply environmentally sustainable chemical treatments (biocides); especially in engineered systems associated with the marine environment. Recently, extracellular DNA (eDNA) was implicated as a critical structural polymer in marine biofilms. Additionally, an environmentally sustainable, multi-functional biocide was also introduced to manage corrosion and biofilm formation. To anticipate biofilm tolerance acquisition to chemical treatments and reduce biocide application quantities, the present research investigated eDNA as a target for biofilm dispersal and potential enhancement of biocide function. Results indicate that mature biofilm viability can be reduced by two-fold using reduced concentrations of the biocide alone (1 mM instead of the recommended 10 mM). Importantly, through the incorporation of an eDNA degradation stage, biocide function could be enhanced by a further similar to 90% (one further log reduction in viability). Biofilm architecture analysis post-treatment revealed that endonuclease targeting of the matrix allowed greater biocide penetration, leading to the observed viability reduction. Biofilm matrix eDNA is a promising target for biofilm dispersal and antimicrobial enhancement in clinical and engineered systems.

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