4.4 Article

Pure and Oxidized Copper Materials as Potential Antimicrobial Surfaces for Spaceflight Activities

Journal

ASTROBIOLOGY
Volume 17, Issue 12, Pages 1183-1191

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/ast.2016.1620

Keywords

Contact killing; E. coli; S. cohnii; Antimicrobial copper surfaces; Copper oxide layers; Human health; Planetary protection

Funding

  1. Helmholtz Space Life Sciences Research School (SpaceLife)
  2. German Aerospace Center of the Helmholtz Association [VO-KH-300]
  3. DLR [Teilprogramm 475]
  4. ESA [ESA-HSO-ESR-ILSRA-2014-054, ESA-AO-11-Concordia-022]

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Microbial biofilms can lead to persistent infections and degrade a variety of materials, and they are notorious for their persistence and resistance to eradication. During long-duration space missions, microbial biofilms present a danger to crew health and spacecraft integrity. The use of antimicrobial surfaces provides an alternative strategy for inhibiting microbial growth and biofilm formation to conventional cleaning procedures and the use of disinfectants. Antimicrobial surfaces contain organic or inorganic compounds, such as antimicrobial peptides or copper and silver, that inhibit microbial growth. The efficacy of wetted oxidized copper layers and pure copper surfaces as antimicrobial agents was tested by applying cultures of Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus cohnii to these metallic surfaces. Stainless steel surfaces were used as non-inhibitory control surfaces. The production of reactive oxygen species and membrane damage increased rapidly within 1h of exposure on pure copper surfaces, but the effect on cell survival was negligible even after 2h of exposure. However, longer exposure times of up to 4h led to a rapid decrease in cell survival, whereby the survival of cells was additionally dependent on the exposed cell density. Finally, the release of metal ions was determined to identify a possible correlation between copper ions in suspension and cell survival. These measurements indicated a steady increase of free copper ions, which were released indirectly by cells presumably through excreted complexing agents. These data indicate that the application of antimicrobial surfaces in spaceflight facilities could improve crew health and mitigate material damage caused by microbial contamination and biofilm formation. Furthermore, the results of this study indicate that cuprous oxide layers were superior to pure copper surfaces related to the antimicrobial effect and that cell density is a significant factor that influences the time dependence of antimicrobial activity.

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