Anti-biofilm performance of three natural products against initial bacterial attachment
Anti-biofilm performance of three natural products against initial bacterial attachment
Abstract: Marine bacteria contribute significantly towards the fouling consortium, both directly (modern foul release coatings fail to prevent “slime” attachment) and indirectly (biofilms often excrete chemical cues that attract macrofouling settlement). This study assessed the natural product anti-biofilm performance of an extract of the seaweed, Chondrus crispus, and two isolated compounds from terrestrial sources, (+)-usnic acid and juglone, against two marine biofilm forming bacteria, Cobetia marina and Marinobacter hydrocarbonoclasticus. Bioassays were developed using quantitative imaging and fluorescent labelling to test the natural products over a range of concentrations against initial bacterial attachment. All natural products affected bacterial attachment; however, juglone demonstrated the best anti-biofilm performance against both bacterial species at a concentration range between 5–20 ppm. In addition, for the first time, a dose-dependent inhibition (hormetic) response was observed for natural products against marine biofilm forming bacteria.
21757-21780
Salta, Maria
9d62d115-8e0d-486d-ae46-c61f596aba85
Wharton, Julian
965a38fd-d2bc-4a19-a08c-2d4e036aa96b
Dennington, Simon
6a329a55-8c10-4515-8920-d8f40f302221
Stoodley, Paul
08614665-92a9-4466-806e-20c6daeb483f
Stokes, Keith
5fb4e7f7-2f7e-4e6e-a045-6d7690626695
2013
Salta, Maria
9d62d115-8e0d-486d-ae46-c61f596aba85
Wharton, Julian
965a38fd-d2bc-4a19-a08c-2d4e036aa96b
Dennington, Simon
6a329a55-8c10-4515-8920-d8f40f302221
Stoodley, Paul
08614665-92a9-4466-806e-20c6daeb483f
Stokes, Keith
5fb4e7f7-2f7e-4e6e-a045-6d7690626695
Salta, Maria, Wharton, Julian, Dennington, Simon, Stoodley, Paul and Stokes, Keith
(2013)
Anti-biofilm performance of three natural products against initial bacterial attachment.
International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 14 (11), .
(doi:10.3390/ijms141121757).
Abstract
Abstract: Marine bacteria contribute significantly towards the fouling consortium, both directly (modern foul release coatings fail to prevent “slime” attachment) and indirectly (biofilms often excrete chemical cues that attract macrofouling settlement). This study assessed the natural product anti-biofilm performance of an extract of the seaweed, Chondrus crispus, and two isolated compounds from terrestrial sources, (+)-usnic acid and juglone, against two marine biofilm forming bacteria, Cobetia marina and Marinobacter hydrocarbonoclasticus. Bioassays were developed using quantitative imaging and fluorescent labelling to test the natural products over a range of concentrations against initial bacterial attachment. All natural products affected bacterial attachment; however, juglone demonstrated the best anti-biofilm performance against both bacterial species at a concentration range between 5–20 ppm. In addition, for the first time, a dose-dependent inhibition (hormetic) response was observed for natural products against marine biofilm forming bacteria.
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Published date: 2013
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nCATS Group
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Local EPrints ID: 359590
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/359590
ISSN: 1422-0067
PURE UUID: d8c83d1a-6fa6-4941-b151-f33f778f77c6
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Date deposited: 06 Nov 2013 12:45
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:34
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Maria Salta
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