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Disturbance Frequency Determines Morphology and Community Development in Multi-Species Biofilm at the Landscape Scale

Many natural and engineered biofilm systems periodically face disturbances. Here we present how the recovery time of a biofilm between disturbances (expressed as disturbance frequency) shapes the development of morphology and community structure in a multi-species biofilm at the landscape scale. It...

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Autores principales: Milferstedt, Kim, Santa-Catalina, Gaëlle, Godon, Jean-Jacques, Escudié, Renaud, Bernet, Nicolas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3841191/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24303024
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0080692
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author Milferstedt, Kim
Santa-Catalina, Gaëlle
Godon, Jean-Jacques
Escudié, Renaud
Bernet, Nicolas
author_facet Milferstedt, Kim
Santa-Catalina, Gaëlle
Godon, Jean-Jacques
Escudié, Renaud
Bernet, Nicolas
author_sort Milferstedt, Kim
collection PubMed
description Many natural and engineered biofilm systems periodically face disturbances. Here we present how the recovery time of a biofilm between disturbances (expressed as disturbance frequency) shapes the development of morphology and community structure in a multi-species biofilm at the landscape scale. It was hypothesized that a high disturbance frequency favors the development of a stable adapted biofilm system while a low disturbance frequency promotes a dynamic biofilm response. Biofilms were grown in laboratory-scale reactors over a period of 55-70 days and exposed to the biocide monochloramine at two frequencies: daily or weekly pulse injections. One untreated reactor served as control. Biofilm morphology and community structure were followed on comparably large biofilm areas at the landscape scale using automated image analysis (spatial gray level dependence matrices) and community fingerprinting (single-strand conformation polymorphisms). We demonstrated that a weekly disturbed biofilm developed a resilient morphology and community structure. Immediately after the disturbance, the biofilm simplified but recovered its initial complex morphology and community structure between two biocide pulses. In the daily treated reactor, one organism largely dominated a morphologically simple and stable biofilm. Disturbances primarily affected the abundance distribution of already present bacterial taxa but did not promote growth of previously undetected organisms. Our work indicates that disturbances can be used as lever to engineer biofilms by maintaining a biofilm between two developmental states.
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spelling pubmed-38411912013-12-03 Disturbance Frequency Determines Morphology and Community Development in Multi-Species Biofilm at the Landscape Scale Milferstedt, Kim Santa-Catalina, Gaëlle Godon, Jean-Jacques Escudié, Renaud Bernet, Nicolas PLoS One Research Article Many natural and engineered biofilm systems periodically face disturbances. Here we present how the recovery time of a biofilm between disturbances (expressed as disturbance frequency) shapes the development of morphology and community structure in a multi-species biofilm at the landscape scale. It was hypothesized that a high disturbance frequency favors the development of a stable adapted biofilm system while a low disturbance frequency promotes a dynamic biofilm response. Biofilms were grown in laboratory-scale reactors over a period of 55-70 days and exposed to the biocide monochloramine at two frequencies: daily or weekly pulse injections. One untreated reactor served as control. Biofilm morphology and community structure were followed on comparably large biofilm areas at the landscape scale using automated image analysis (spatial gray level dependence matrices) and community fingerprinting (single-strand conformation polymorphisms). We demonstrated that a weekly disturbed biofilm developed a resilient morphology and community structure. Immediately after the disturbance, the biofilm simplified but recovered its initial complex morphology and community structure between two biocide pulses. In the daily treated reactor, one organism largely dominated a morphologically simple and stable biofilm. Disturbances primarily affected the abundance distribution of already present bacterial taxa but did not promote growth of previously undetected organisms. Our work indicates that disturbances can be used as lever to engineer biofilms by maintaining a biofilm between two developmental states. Public Library of Science 2013-11-26 /pmc/articles/PMC3841191/ /pubmed/24303024 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0080692 Text en © 2013 Milferstedt et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Milferstedt, Kim
Santa-Catalina, Gaëlle
Godon, Jean-Jacques
Escudié, Renaud
Bernet, Nicolas
Disturbance Frequency Determines Morphology and Community Development in Multi-Species Biofilm at the Landscape Scale
title Disturbance Frequency Determines Morphology and Community Development in Multi-Species Biofilm at the Landscape Scale
title_full Disturbance Frequency Determines Morphology and Community Development in Multi-Species Biofilm at the Landscape Scale
title_fullStr Disturbance Frequency Determines Morphology and Community Development in Multi-Species Biofilm at the Landscape Scale
title_full_unstemmed Disturbance Frequency Determines Morphology and Community Development in Multi-Species Biofilm at the Landscape Scale
title_short Disturbance Frequency Determines Morphology and Community Development in Multi-Species Biofilm at the Landscape Scale
title_sort disturbance frequency determines morphology and community development in multi-species biofilm at the landscape scale
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3841191/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24303024
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0080692
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