4.2 Article

Antibacterial Efficiency of Surface-Immobilized Flavobacterium-Infecting Bacteriophage

Journal

ACS APPLIED BIO MATERIALS
Volume 2, Issue 11, Pages 4720-4727

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsabm.9b00242

Keywords

phage therapy; surface adsorbed bacteriophages; antibacterial surfaces; aquaculture; virus material; biomaterial

Funding

  1. Academy of Finland [266879, 314939]
  2. Jane and Aatos Erkko Foundation
  3. Academy of Finland (AKA) [266879, 266879] Funding Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)

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Control of bacterial diseases by bacteriophages (phages) is gaining more interest due to increasing antibiotic resistance. This has led to technologies to attach phages on surfaces to form a biomaterial that can functionally display phages that interact with bacteria, to carry out successful infection cycles. Such a material could be applied in many environments where the target pathogens are expected. Although this approach has been applied successfully in a few studies already, the basis of the antibacterial effect by the immobilized phages is unclear, and the interpretation of the results depends on the study. Here, we studied the phage attachment density, their detachment rate, and infectivity on five different surfaces: silicon, amine-treated silicon, gold, carboxylate-treated gold, and cross-linker-activated carboxylate-treated gold. The density of attached phages varied between the different surfaces and was the highest on the cross-linker-activated carboxylate-treated gold. To understand whether the antibacterial effect is caused by the attached or the detached phages, the strength of the immobilization was analyzed by performing 3-12 washing steps. The detachment rates differed between the materials, with the amine-treated silicon surface generating the highest release of phages and maintaining the highest infectivity, even after extensive washing. However, covalent cross-linking seemed to interfere with the infectivity. Our results suggest that the detachment of the phages from the surface is a possible mechanism for the antibacterial effect. Furthermore, we introduce a measure of the infectivity by comparing the bacterial growth reductions produced by the phage-treated materials to the effect caused by a known number of free phages, resulting in a unit effective PFU/surface area, a comparable standard between different studies.

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