Center for Biofilm Engineering
Abstract:
"Evolving Perspectives of Biofilm Structure"
99-010 The application of confocal scanning laser microscopy (CSLM)
to biofilm research has provided detailed new information on the structural
complexity of fully hydrated living biofilms. Biofilms studied by CSLM are
widely reported to be heterogeneous and consist of micro-colonies or cell
clusters (aggregates of microbial cells in an extracellular polysaccharide
matrix) separated by interstitial voids and channels. CSLM combined with
molecular probing can identify the distribution of individual species within
biofilms, while CSLM combined with microelectrodes and particle tracking has
demonstrated the significance of structural heterogeneity on mass transfer in
biofilms. In this review the contribution that CSLM has made towards the
development of conceptual and mathematical biofilm models over the last decade
is discussed. The significance of biofilm structural heterogeneity to
understanding of mass transfer processes in biofilm systems and the fundamental
significance of hydrodynamics in shaping biofilm structure are also
discussed. Finally, some of the recent findings which suggest that biofilm
structure may be controlled in part by cell signalling, quorum sensing
mechanisms, are briefly discussed.
Stoodley, P., J.D. Boyle, D. DeBeer and H.M. Lappin-Scott,
"Evolving Perspectives of Biofilm Structure," Biofouling,
14(1):75-90 (1999).
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