Role of biofilms in the survival of to sodium chloride treatment.

Iran J Microbiol

Laboratory of Water Microbiology and Environmental Hygiene, Institut Pasteur du Maroc, Casablanca, Morocco.

Published: August 2021

Background And Objectives: Legionnaires' disease continues to be a public health concern. Colonized water distribution systems are often implicated in transmission, despite the use of various disinfection strategies, the bacterium is capable to persist and survive in water systems. The aim of this study was to investigate the persistence of to sodium chloride over time at different temperatures and analysing the role of biofilms in the survival of this bacteria.

Materials And Methods: serogroup 1 and serogroup 2-15 were used to study the effect of sodium chloride on planktonic and sessile cells. The tested concentrations were: 0.5%, 1%, 2%, 3%, 4%, 6% and 8% (W/V) NaCl. Biofilms were grown on 24-well microplates.

Results: At 20°C, planktonic cells were able to survive in sodium chloride concentrations up to 2%. However, at 37°C, a sodium chloride concentration over 1.5%, reduced systematically the numbers of bacterial cells. Biofilms were grown for 20 days in the absence and presence of sodium chloride. The results show that bacterial strains were able to survive and regrow after the sodium chloride shock (2-3%). Moreover, it seems that this effect is less expressed with the age of the biofilm; old biofilms were more persistent than the young ones.

Conclusion: Results from this study demonstrate that the sodium chloride disinfection strategy was effective on planktonic cells but not on biofilms, which demonstrate the role of biofilms in the persistence and recolonization of in water distribution systems.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8421579PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.18502/ijm.v13i4.6973DOI Listing

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