Quan, Kecheng; Hou, Jiapeng; Zhang, Zexin; Ren, Yijin; Peterson, Brandon W.; Flemming, Hans-Curt; Mayer, Christian; Busscher, Henk J.; van der Mei, Henny C.:
Water in bacterial biofilms : pores and channels, storage and transport functions
In: Critical Reviews in Microbiology, Jg. 48 (2022), Heft 3, S. 283 - 302
2022Artikel/Aufsatz in ZeitschriftOA Hybrid
ChemieFakultät für Chemie » Biofilm CenterFakultät für Chemie » Physikalische Chemie
Damit verbunden: 1 Publikation(en)
Titel in Englisch:
Water in bacterial biofilms : pores and channels, storage and transport functions
Autor*in:
Quan, Kecheng
;
Hou, Jiapeng
;
Zhang, Zexin
Sonstiges
korrespondierende*r Autor*in
;
Ren, Yijin
;
Peterson, Brandon W.
;
Flemming, Hans-CurtUDE
LSF ID
11401
ORCID
0000-0002-3670-9236ORCID iD
Sonstiges
der Hochschule zugeordnete*r Autor*in
;
Mayer, ChristianUDE
GND
100307078
LSF ID
501
ORCID
0000-0003-1681-0553ORCID iD
Sonstiges
der Hochschule zugeordnete*r Autor*in
;
Busscher, Henk J.
;
van der Mei, Henny C.
Sonstiges
korrespondierende*r Autor*in
Erscheinungsjahr:
2022
Open Access?:
OA Hybrid
Web of Science ID
PubMed ID
Scopus ID
Sprache des Textes:
Englisch
Schlagwort, Thema:
bound water ; channels in biofilms ; diffusion ; extracellular polymeric substances ; free water ; Pores in biofilms ; transport in a biofilm

Abstract in Englisch:

Bacterial biofilms occur in many natural and industrial environments. Besides bacteria, biofilms comprise over 70 wt% water. Water in biofilms occurs as bound- or free-water. Bound-water is adsorbed to bacterial surfaces or biofilm (matrix) structures and possesses different Infra-red and Nuclear-Magnetic-Resonance signatures than free-water. Bound-water is different from intra-cellularly confined-water or water confined within biofilm structures and bacteria are actively involved in building water-filled structures by bacterial swimmers, dispersion or lytic self-sacrifice. Water-filled structures can be transient due to blocking, resulting from bacterial growth, compression or additional matrix formation and are generally referred to as “channels and pores.” Channels and pores can be distinguished based on mechanism of formation, function and dimension. Channels allow transport of nutrients, waste-products, signalling molecules and antibiotics through a biofilm provided the cargo does not adsorb to channel walls and channels have a large length/width ratio. Pores serve a storage function for nutrients and dilute waste-products or antimicrobials and thus should have a length/width ratio close to unity. The understanding provided here on the role of water in biofilms, can be employed to artificially engineer by-pass channels or additional pores in industrial and environmental biofilms to increase production yields or enhance antimicrobial penetration in infectious biofilms.