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Heliyon ; 10(13): e33872, 2024 Jul 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39055850

ABSTRACT

Biofilm-associated wound infections in diabetic and immunocompromised patients are an increasing threat due to rising antibiotic resistance. Various wound models have been used to screen for efficient antiinfection treatments. However, results from in vitro models do not always match in vivo results, and this represents a bottleneck for development of new infection treatments. In this study, a static 2-D microtiter plate-based biofilm model was tested for growing clinically relevant Staphylococcus aureus wound isolates in various operating conditions, seeking to identify an optimal setup that would yield physiologically relevant results. Specifically, the tested variables included wound-mimicking growth media, precoating of surface with different proteins, multiwell plates with various surface properties, and the effect of bacterial pre-attachment step. Our results indicated that protein precoating is a key factor for supporting biofilm growth. The same wound isolate responded with significant differences in biofilm formation to different wound-mimicking media. Biofilm dispersal, as a proxy for effectiveness of antibiofilm treatments, was also investigated in response to proteinase K. The dispersal effect of proteinase K showed that the biofilm dispersal is contingent upon the specific wound isolate, with isolates CCUG 35571 and ATCC 6538 showing considerable dispersal responses. In conclusion, this study observed a higher biofilm formation in isolates when a protein precoating of collagen type I was applied but being dependent on the growth media selected. That is why we recommend to use simulated wound fluid or a wound-mimicking growth media to perform similar studies. Furthermore, proteinase K is suggested as an important factor that could affect biofilm dispersal within such models, since biofilm dispersal was induced in isolates CCUG 35571 and ATCC 6538 in simulated wound fluid on precoated collagen type I plates.

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