This document provides an overview of microbial biofilms. It discusses how biofilms form and develop through attraction, adhesion, aggregation and accumulation of cells and extracellular matrix. The architecture and properties of biofilms are described as depending on nutrient levels and forming complex structures with channels. Biofilms provide benefits for microbes like cooperation, gene transfer and protection. They display higher resistance to toxic substances than planktonic microbes. The document traces the history of biofilm research and argues microbiology was previously misled by a focus on planktonic cultures rather than natural biofilm growth.
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04 microbial biofilm_i_2008
1. Institute for Microbiology, Medical Faculty of Masaryk University and St. Anna Faculty Hospital in Brno Miroslav Votava, Vladana Woznicová MICROBIAL BIOFILM – I Lecture for 2nd-year students March 9 , 200 9
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18. Architecture of biofilm – II Low concentrations of nutrients (0.1 – 10 mg/L – mountain streams, lakes, open sea) Heterogeneous mosaic = thin layer of individual cells above which columned microcolonies rise here and there
19. Architecture of biofilm – III Medium concentration of nutrients (10 – 1000 mg/L – eutrophic water environment) System with channels = mushroom-shaped microcolonies partially merging together, interwoven with water channels
22. Architecture of biofilm – VI High concentrations of nutrients (>1000 mg/L – in the macroorganism) compact biofilm = closely interconnected numerous microcolonies almost without traces of possible channels b) monomicrobial = e.g. chronic osteomyelitis biofilm on inert surfaces of medical devices
23. Architecture of biofilm – VII Candida albicans biofilm . Alcian blue has coloured extracellular polysaccharides . Photo: Veronika Holá
24. Architecture of biofilm – VIII Candida albicans biofilm . Toluidin blue. At the photo mushroom-like structure of the biofilm is obvious . Photo: Veronika Holá