RESULTS: Fifty-six H. pylori isolate from Bangladeshi patients were included in this cross-sectional study. Crystal violet assay was used to quantify biofilm amount, and the strains were classified into high- and low-biofilm formers As a result, strains were classified as 19.6% high- and 81.4% low-biofilm formers. These phenotypes were not related to specific clades in the phylogenetic analysis. The accessories genes associated with biofilm from whole-genome sequences were extracted and analysed, and SNPs among the previously reported biofilm-related genes were analysed. Biofilm formation was significantly associated with SNPs of alpA, alpB, cagE, cgt, csd4, csd5, futB, gluP, homD, and murF (P
OBJECTIVES: Here, the efficacy of graphene oxide (GO), a carbon-based nanomaterial, was tested against the biofilms and intracellular S. aureus invitro. Following that, the mechanism for the intracellular antimicrobial activities and GO toxicities was elucidated.
METHODS: GO antibiofilm properties were evaluated based on the disruption of biofilm structure, and the intracellular antimicrobial activities were determined by the survival of S. aureus in infected bovine mammary cells following GO exposure. The mechanism for GO intracellular antimicrobial activities was investigated using endocytosis inhibitors. GO toxicity towards the host cells was assessed using a resazurin assay.
RESULTS: At 100 ug/mL, GO reduced between 30 and 70% of S. aureus biofilm mass, suggesting GO's ability to disrupt the biofilm structure. At 200 ug/mL, GO killed almost 80% of intracellular S. aureus, and the antimicrobial activities were inhibited when cells were pre-treated with cytochalasin D, suggesting GO intracellular antimicrobial activities were dependent on the actin-polymerization of the cell membrane. At
PURPOSE: The purpose of this in vitro study was to assess the antimicrobial effect of sub 10-nm AgNPs in maxillofacial silicone against Staphylococcus aureus, Candida albicans, and mixed species biofilms containing both and to test the effectiveness of different AgNP concentrations against all 3 biofilms in vitro.
MATERIAL AND METHODS: Silicone disks (M511; Technovent Ltd) containing 0.0% (control), 0.1%, and 0.5% AgNPs were fabricated and treated with S. aureus, C. albicans, and mixed species strains of both in 24-well culture plates containing appropriate media. Each well received a 0.1-mL aliquot of the standardized suspension of microorganisms. The plates were incubated for 21 consecutive days, and colony-forming units per milliliter (CFU/mL) were measured on the first, third, fifth, seventh, fifteenth, and twenty-first day with the Miles and Misra method. Data were analyzed by 2-way ANOVA and the paired t test to evaluate the relationship between AgNP concentration, microbial strain, and time (α=.05). Mean CFU/mL differences for each time and for each biofilm category were assessed by repeated measure ANOVA.
RESULTS: AgNPs decreased the mean CFU/mL in both concentrations compared with the control. The 0.1% concentration showed sustained efficacy throughout the test, while the 0.5% concentration had high efficacy initially with a gradual decrease. However, the results were inconsistent for the mixed biofilm. The paired sample t test at day 3 and 15 and day 3 and 21 showed statistically significantly different results (P