Publication | Closed Access
How do plasma-generated OH radicals react with biofilm components? Insights from atomic scale simulations
27
Citations
39
References
2014
Year
Radical EmissionBioorganic ChemistryEngineeringChemistryRedox BiologyBiofilmsPlasma SpeciesEnvironmental MicrobiologyMolecular KineticsNonthermal PlasmaBiophysicsBiochemistryRadical (Chemistry)Plasma-generated Oh RadicalsAtomic PhysicsBiological SystemsAntimicrobial CompoundBiofilm ComponentsCold Atmospheric PlasmaAtomic Scale SimulationsMicrobiologyOh RadicalsMedicineChemical Kinetics
The application of nonthermal atmospheric pressure plasma is emerging as an alternative and efficient technique for the inactivation of bacterial biofilms. In this study, reactive molecular dynamics simulations were used to examine the reaction mechanisms of hydroxyl radicals, as key reactive oxygen plasma species in biological systems, with several organic molecules (i.e., alkane, alcohol, carboxylic acid, and amine), as prototypical components of biomolecules in the biofilm. Our results demonstrate that organic molecules containing hydroxyl and carboxyl groups may act as trapping agents for the OH radicals. Moreover, the impact of OH radicals on N-acetyl-glucosamine, as constituent component of staphylococcus epidermidis biofilms, was investigated. The results show how impacts of OH radicals lead to hydrogen abstraction and subsequent molecular damage. This study thus provides new data on the reaction mechanisms of plasma species, and particularly the OH radicals, with fundamental components of bacterial biofilms.
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