Journal of Applied Microbiology, Vol.110, No.5, 1307-1313, 2011
Effects of chelating agent and environmental stresses on microbial biofilms: relevance to clinical microbiology
Aims: To determine the effect of pH, temperature, desiccation, ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) and desferrioxamine B (DFO) on Panton-Valentine leukocidin-positive community acquired methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus (PVL +ve CA-MSSA) biofilm formation. Methods and Results: Biofilms from PVL +ve CA-MSSA (clinical isolate) were subjected to pH, temperature, desiccation, EDTA and DFO. PVL +ve CA-MSSA were more resistant to pH and heat than their planktonic equivalents. Desiccation studies demonstrated that PVL +ve CA-MSSA biofilms were more refractory to the treatment than planktonic cells. Significant inhibition of PVL +ve CA-MSSA biofilm formation was observed in the presence of 1 mmol l-1 EDTA. Low concentrations (2 center dot 5 mu mol l-1) of DFO enhanced the growth of PVL +ve CA-MSSA biofilms. At higher concentrations (1 mmol l-1), DFO did inhibit the growth but not as much as EDTA. A combination of EDTA and DFO inhibited PVL +ve CA-MSSA biofilm formation at lower concentrations than either alone. Conclusions: This study demonstrates that PVL +ve CA-MSSA biofilms are resistant to environmental stress but their growth can inhibited effectively by a mixture of EDTA and DFO. Significance and Impact of the Study: The inhibition of biofilm formation by PVL +ve CA-MSSA using chelating agents has not been previously reported and provides a practical approach to achieve the disruption of these potentially important biofilms formed by an emerging pathogen.