Publication | Closed Access
Resistance of artificial biofilms of Pseudomonas aeruginosa to imipenem and tobramycin
62
Citations
23
References
1998
Year
Antibiotic ResistanceDrug ResistanceBiofilmsAntimicrobial TherapyViable CellsAntimicrobial ResistanceHealth SciencesAntibacterial AgentPseudomonas AeruginosaAntimicrobial CompoundArtificial BiofilmsClinical MicrobiologyGram-negative BacteriologyAntimicrobial SusceptibilityAntimicrobial Resistance GeneAntibioticsMicrobiologySessile-like BacteriaMedicineAlginate Gel Layers
Viable cells of Pseudomonas aeruginosa were entrapped in alginate gel layers and incubated in a minimal glucose (15 g/L)-yeast extract (2 g/L)-salt medium to form artificial biofilm-like structures. After cultivation for 2 days, the biomass distribution inside the polymer was highly heterogeneous. The cell number reached approximately 1011 cells/g gel in the outer regions of the gel structures whereas the inner areas were less colonized (c. 10(8) cells g/gel). Killing of immobilized organisms by imipenem and tobramycin were compared with free-cell experiments (inoculum c. 10(9) cells/mL). Sessile-like bacteria displayed a higher resistance to the two antibiotics used alone or in combination than did suspended cells. Exposure for 10 h to 20 x MIC imipenem and 15 x MIC tobramycin reduced the number of viable immobilized bacteria to 0.3% and 3%, respectively, of the initial cell population, whereas these antibiotic concentrations were much more efficient (bactericidal) against free-cell cultures (5 log kill in 6 h). A synergic effect of tobramycin and imipenem was detected on bacterial suspensions but not on biofilm-like structures. Effective diffusivity measurements showed that the diffusion of imipenem in the alginate layer was not hindered. A slight but significant enhancement of beta-lactamase induction in immobilized cells as compared with their suspended counterparts was insufficient to explain the high resistance of sessile-like bacteria.
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