Center for
Biofilm Engineering
Research News
Fall 2007
We Can Heal That
MSU's biofilm research helps a Texas physician revolutionize the treatment
of chronic wounds
Dr. Randy Wolcott walks into a small exam room. Seated
before him is an elderly, balding man with an open wound on his right foot.
"Please don't cut anything off," the man says the moment
Wolcott enters, fear and desperation in his voice.
The patient's right foot is chapped to flaking. Near the
little toe, is a vivid red wound. He winces as Wolcott examines it. Like most of
the patients who visit the Southwest Regional Wound Care Center in Lubbock,
Texas, the man is diabetic.
Read the full story "We
Can Heal That"
09/05/2007
Committee on Pesticides Approves Second Biofilm
Standard
Biofilm, a type of bacteria that forms self-organized communities and
can have both positive and negative effects in a variety of industries,
is the subject of a new ASTM standard developed by Committee E35 on
Pesticides and Alternative Control Agents. The uses and effects of
biofilm are currently being studied by industrial, medical, professional
and regulatory agencies. The new test method, E 2562, is one of only two
standards that address how to grow, sample and analyze biofilm bacteria.
Read the full text
"Committee
on Pesticides Approves Second Biofilm Standard"
07/25/2007
Battling Biofilms Brings Together Academics and
Industry at Conference
Researchers, doctors and business people from across the United
States and the United Kingdom are in Bozeman this week discussing how to
battle sticky masses of bacteria known as biofilms at what may be the
largest industrial conference on the subject anywhere.
Read the full text "Battling
Biofilms Brings Together Academics and Industry at Conference"
02/27/2007
Magnetic Resonance Microscopy Research Lands
Professor an NSF Award
Sarah Codd, a Montana State University professor has won a
prestigious $400,000 Career Award from the National Science Foundation
for her work in magnetic resonance microscopy, a technique that allows
researchers to see the inner workings of devices as small as one-tenth
of a millimeter in size.
Read the full text "Magnetic
Resonance Microscopy Research Lands Professor NSF Award"
10/06/2006
Research into Herpes Vaccine Among Seven New
Biotechnologies Available for Licensing
A genetically modified strain of the herpes virus with potential as a
human vaccine is among seven new biotechnologies faculty at Montana
State University have developed.
Interested companies and entrepreneurs can license the new biotechnologies by
contacting Nick Zelver with the MSU Technology Transfer Office at (406)
994-7868,
http://tto.montana.edu
or by e-mail at nzelver@montana.edu. MSU
requests that interest be expressed in writing by Nov. 15.
Read the full text "Research
into Herpes Vaccine Among Seven New Biotechnologies Available for Licensing"
09/10/2006
'Crabby' Compound that Skewers Bacteria Could Prevent
Medical Implant Infections
A chemical compound found in crabs and shrimp that has long been
known to have certain medicinal value also can act like a "bed of
nails," fending off microbes seeking to colonize wound dressings,
catheters and other implantable medical devices, according to Montana
State University researchers. Using the compound to coat these medical
devices, they say, could help prevent thousands of bacterial and yeast
infections annually.
Read the full text
'Crabby' Compound
that Skewers Bacteria Could Prevent Medical Implant Infections
07/19/2006
MSU Wins Millions to Find Treatments for Slow-Healing
Wounds
The National Institutes of Health has awarded Montana State
University's Center for Biofilm Engineering a $2.9 million grant to find
new ways to heal chronic wounds.
Read the full text "MSU
wins millions to find treatments for slow-healing wounds"
07/11/2006
MSU Offers Four New Technologies for Licensing to
Entrepreneurs
A way to precisely place an electrode in the brain, a microscope
small enough to fit inside a needle and a way to distinguish live from
dead bacterial cells are among four new technologies developed by
faculty at Montana State University.
The technologies are available for licensing by interested companies and
entrepreneurs.
Read the full text "MSU
offers four new technologies for licensing to entrepreneurs"
5/15/2006
MSU Grad's Research Takes Him to Nation's Capital
A recent Montana State University graduate's innovative research into
a treatment for groundwater contaminants was presented on Capitol Hill
in Washington, D.C., in late April.
Read the full text "MSU
grad's research takes him to nation's capital "
01/26/2006
CBE Team Designs and Tests Microbial Fuel Cells
Imagine if you could drop a sensor in a stream, collect data from it
and transfer the data via satellite connection to your laboratory for 10
years without returning to the site. Zbigniew Lewandowski, a civil
engineer specializing in environmental engineering, and Haluk Beyenal, a
chemical engineer, oversee a multidisciplinary team working to make this
possible.
Read the full text "CBE
Team Designs and Tests Microbial Fuel Cells"
11/29/2005
Slimy Bacteria Leads to
List of Discoveries
Call it a social experiment, if you will, but bacteria like to live communally. They grab onto a surface and build an entire neighborhood. They cover themselves with a protective slime, called biofilm, that acts like a force field. Bacteria-killing antibiotics can't get through.
Read the full text "Slimy
Bacteria Leads to List of Discoveries"
06/2005
Medical Biofilm Laboratory is Making a Difference
The CBE’s Medical Biofilm Laboratory has been creating news because its work is
leading to different treatments for patients at the Southwest Regional Wound
Care Center in Lubbock, Texas, which treats up to 100 patients a day. CBE
undergraduate, Ellen Swogger, has been featured for her contribution to this
research in a recent MSU news story.
See the full story “Student-doctor
Team Wages War on Wounds”
06/2005
2004–05 Annual Report
We are delighted to share this past year’s activities with you through our
annual report, which documents our accomplishments in postcard pictures and
text. You can find downloadable pdf versions of the full-color report with
photos and the text-only format on the CBE home page:
http://www.biofilm.montana.edu
04/2004
Molasses and Whey Mix with Mine Tailings
In Montana, about 20,000 abandoned mine sites leach acids into waterways,
damaging an estimated 1,000 miles of streams. Researchers from Montana State
University have set out to lessen the toxic effects of mine waste -- using
cheese whey and molasses.
Paul Sturman, an engineer with MSU's Center for Biofilm
Engineering, has collected toxic mine waste from four sites: the
Golden Sunlight Mine near Whitehall, the Mammoth Mine in the
northern Tobacco Root Mountains and two sites in Canada. With a
$50,000 grant from the Environmental Protection Agency and a
subcontract from MSE Technology Applications of Butte, Sturman
will spend the next two years testing tailings.
See
full press release and contact info.
02/2004
A Digest: ASM Biofilms 2003 Themes
The American Society for Microbiology meeting “Biofilms 2003,” held in
Victoria, British Columbia in early November 2003, was the largest biofilm
meeting ever held. Seventy-six oral presentations and 369 posters were presented
over five days. This selective summary of the meeting (which is derived from a
presentation made at the Center for Biofilm Engineering Technical Advisory
Conference on February 5, 2004), focuses on five themes that especially stood
out: 1) the expanding world of biofilm research and technology, 2) advances in
characterizing microbial ecology in biofilms, 3) the occurrence of phenotypic
variants in biofilms, 4) dispersal (detachment) from biofilms, and 5)
interactions between microbial biofilms and higher organisms.
More about each theme. Image, contact information, and
researcher names included.
11/2003
Biofilm Antibiotic Resistance
A Genetic Basis for Pseudomonas aeruginosa Biofilm Antibiotic
Resistance
Mah T-F, Pitts B, Pellock B, Walker GC, Stewart PS, OToole GA
Nature Nov 2003; 426(6964):306-310
See press releases at:
http://www.biofilm.montana.edu/Res-Lib99-SW/newsarchives/html/2003/Nature_News.htm
http://www.biofilmsonline.com/cgi-bin/biofilmsonline/00194
GLUCANS mediate biofilm resistance
Biomedcentral.com, UK
http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20031120/02/
NATURE Press Release for 20 November Issue
Newswise (press release)
Medicine: Biofilm barrier (pp306-310)
http://www.newswise.com/articles/view/502055/
Biofilm Antibiotic Resistance May Be Susceptible to Genetic Approach
Public Release Date: 19 NOVEMBER 2003
Contact: Andy Nordhoff
DMS.Communications@Dartmouth.edu
603-650-1492
Dartmouth Medical School
http://www.biofilmsonline.com/cgi-bin/biofilmsonline/00194
MSU slimy bacteria study appears in major journal
November 19, 2003 -- by Annette Trinity-Stevens, MSU research editor
http://www.montana.edu/commserv/csnews/nwview.php?article=1389
Contact: Dr. Phil Stewart,
phil_s@erc.montana.edu, 406 994-2890
Multicellular Strategies
An interactive web interface survey of biofilm microbial activities and CBE
research. See
http://www.biofilm.montana.edu/MultiCellStrat/default.html
CBE Publications
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