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1.
A bubble contact angle method was used to determine interfacial free-energy characteristics of polystyrene substrata in the presence and absence of potential surface-conditioning proteins (bovine glycoprotein, bovine serum albumin, fatty acid-free bovine serum albumin), a bacterial culture supernatant, and a bacterial exopolymer. Clean petri dish substrata gave a contact angle of 90°, but tissue culture dish substrata were more hydrophilic, giving an angle of 29° or less. Bubble contact angles at the surfaces exposed to the macromolecular solutions varied with the composition and concentration of the solution. Modification by pronase enzymes of the conditioning effect of proteins depended on the nature of both the substratum and the protein, as well as the time of addition of the enzyme relative to the conditioning of the substratum. The effects of dissolved and substratum-adsorbed proteins on the attachment of Pseudomonas sp. strain NCMB 2021 to petri dishes and tissue culture dishes were consistent with changes in bubble contact angles (except when proteins were adsorbed to tissue culture dishes before attachment) as were alterations in protein-induced inhibition of bacterial attachment to petri dishes by treatment with pronase. Differences between the attachment of pseudomonads to petri dishes and tissue culture dishes suggested that different mechanisms of adhesion are involved at the surfaces of these two substrata.  相似文献   

2.
The attachment of a marine Pseudomonas sp. to a variety of surfaces was investigated, and the number of bacteria which became attached was related to the surface charge and degree of hydrophobicity of the substratum. Large numbers of bacteria attached to hydrophobic plastics with little or no surface charge [Teflon, polyethylene, polystyrene, poly(ethylene terephthalate)]; moderate numbers attached to hydrophilic metals with a positive (platinum) or neutral (germanium) surface charge; and very few attached to hydrophilic, negatively charged substrata (glass, mica, oxidized plastics). The results suggest that both electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions are involved in bacterial attachment.  相似文献   

3.
Initial adhesion of fungi to plasticized polyvinyl chloride (pPVC) may determine subsequent colonization and biodeterioration processes. The deteriogenic fungus Aureobasidium pullulans was used to investigate the physicochemical nature of adhesion to both unplasticized PVC (uPVC) and pPVC containing the plasticizers dioctyl phthalate (DOP) and dioctyl adipate (DOA). A quantitative adhesion assay using image analysis identified fundamental differences in the mechanism of adhesion of A. pullulans blastospores to these substrata. Adhesion to pPVC was greater than that to uPVC by a maximum of 280% after a 4-h incubation with 108 blastospores ml−1. That plasticizers enhance adhesion to PVC was confirmed by incorporating a dispersion of both DOA and DOP into the blastospore suspension. Adhesion to uPVC was increased by up to 308% in the presence of the dispersed plasticizers. Hydrophobic interactions were found to dominate adhesion to uPVC because (i) a strong positive correlation was observed between substratum hydrophobicity (measured by using a dynamic contact angle analyzer) and adhesion to a range of unplasticized polymers including uPVC, and (ii) neither the pH nor the electrolyte concentration of the suspension buffer, both of which influence electrostatic interactions, affected adhesion to uPVC. In contrast, adhesion to pPVC is principally controlled by electrostatic interactions. Enhanced adhesion to pPVC occurred despite a relative reduction of 13° in the water contact angle of pPVC compared to that of uPVC. Furthermore, adhesion to pPVC was strongly dependent on both the pH and electrolyte concentration of the suspension medium, reaching maximum levels at pH 8 and with an electrolyte concentration of 10 mM NaCl. Plasticization with DOP and DOA therefore increases adhesion of A. pullulans blastospores to pPVC through an interaction mediated by electrostatic forces.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract The effect of a range of biological polymers and synthetic surfactants on the adhesion of a marine Pseudomonas sp. strain NCMB2021 to hydrophilic glass and hydrophobic polystyrene has been investigated. Brij 56 (polyethylene oxide (10) cetyl ether) was the only compound that had a significant effect, almost totally inhibiting the adhesion of Pseudomonas sp. NCMB2021 to hydrophobic polystyrene, but having little or no effect on hydrophilic glass. The surfactant was demonstrated to be effective both when present in the bacterial suspension at low concentrations (approx. 5 ppm), and when pre-adsorbed onto the substratum. Brij 56 was shown to prevent the adhesion of a range of marine and fresh-water bacteria to polystyrene.
It is proposed that on a hydrophobic substratum Brij 56 is adsorbed via its hydrophobe in such a way that the polyethylene glycol chains are pointing outwards into the aqueous phase giving a surface with a high density of uncharged, highly hydrated hydrophilic chains, forming a steric barrier which inhibits the adhesion of bacteria.  相似文献   

5.
Adhesion of Biodegradative Anaerobic Bacteria to Solid Surfaces   总被引:4,自引:2,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
In order to exploit the ability of anaerobic bacteria to degrade certain contaminants for bioremediation of polluted subsurface environments, we need to understand the mechanisms by which such bacteria partition between aqueous and solid phases, as well as the environmental conditions that influence partitioning. We studied four strictly anaerobic bacteria, Desulfomonile tiedjei, Syntrophomonas wolfei, Syntrophobacter wolinii, and Desulfovibrio sp. strain G11, which theoretically together can constitute a tetrachloroethylene- and trichloroethylene-dechlorinating consortium. Adhesion of these organisms was evaluated by microscopic determination of the numbers of cells that attached to glass coverslips exposed to cell suspensions under anaerobic conditions. We studied the effects of the growth phase of the organisms on adhesion, as well as the influence of electrostatic and hydrophobic properties of the substratum. Results indicate that S. wolfei adheres in considerably higher numbers to glass surfaces than the other three organisms. Starvation greatly decreases adhesion of S. wolfei and Desulfovibrio sp. strain G11 but seems to have less of an effect on the adhesion of the other bacteria. The presence of Fe3+ on the substratum, which would be electropositive, significantly increased the adhesion of S. wolfei, whereas the presence of silicon hydrophobic groups decreased the numbers of attached cells of all species. Measurements of transport of cells through hydrophobic-interaction and electrostatic-interaction columns indicated that all four species had negatively charged cell surfaces and that D. tiedjei and Desulfovibrio sp. strain G11 possessed some hydrophobic cell surface properties. These findings are an early step toward understanding the dynamic attachment of anaerobic bacteria in anoxic environments.  相似文献   

6.
Neither solutions of salts nor solutions of detergents or of an alcohol at pH 4 are capable of eluting poliovirus adsorbed to membrane filters. However, solutions containing both a salt, such as magnesium chloride or sodium chloride, and a detergent or alcohol at pH 4 were capable of eluting adsorbed virus. The ability of ions to promote elution of virus at low pH in the presence of detergent or alcohol was dependent on the size of the ions and the ionic strength of the medium. These results suggest that both electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions are important in maintaining virus adsorption to membrane filters. Hydrophobic interactions can be disrupted by detergents or alcohols. It appears that electrostatic interactions can be disrupted by raising the pH of a solution or by adding certain salts. Disruption of either electrostatic or hydrophobic interactions alone does not permit efficient elution of the adsorbed virus at low pHs. However, when both interactions are disrupted, most of the poliovirus adsorbed to membrane filters is eluted, even at pH 4.  相似文献   

7.
Neither solutions of salts nor solutions of detergents or of an alcohol at pH 4 are capable of eluting poliovirus adsorbed to membrane filters. However, solutions containing both a salt, such as magnesium chloride or sodium chloride, and a detergent or alcohol at pH 4 were capable of eluting adsorbed virus. The ability of ions to promote elution of virus at low pH in the presence of detergent or alcohol was dependent on the size of the ions and the ionic strength of the medium. These results suggest that both electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions are important in maintaining virus adsorption to membrane filters. Hydrophobic interactions can be disrupted by detergents or alcohols. It appears that electrostatic interactions can be disrupted by raising the pH of a solution or by adding certain salts. Disruption of either electrostatic or hydrophobic interactions alone does not permit efficient elution of the adsorbed virus at low pHs. However, when both interactions are disrupted, most of the poliovirus adsorbed to membrane filters is eluted, even at pH 4.  相似文献   

8.
Bacterial initial adhesion to inert surfaces in aquatic environments is highly dependent on the surface properties of the substratum, which can be altered significantly by the formation of conditioning films. In this study, the impact of conditioning films formed with extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) on bacterial adhesion was investigated. Adhesion of wild type Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1 to slides coated with model EPS components (alginate, humic substances, and bovine serum albumin (BSA)) was examined. Surface roughness of conditioning film coated slides was evaluated by atomic force microscopy (AFM), and its effect on the bacterial initial adhesion was not significant. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) studies were performed to determine the elemental surface compositions of bacterial cells and substrates. Results showed that bacterial adhesion to bare slides and slides coated with alginate and humic substances increased as ionic strength increased. Conversely, BSA coating enhanced bacterial adhesion at low ionic strength but hindered adhesion at higher ionic strength. It was concluded that forces other than hydrophobic and electrostatic interactions were involved in controlling bacterial adhesion to BSA coated surfaces. A steric model for polymer brushes that considers the combined influence of steric effects and DLVO interaction forces was shown to adequately describe the observed bacterial adhesion behaviors.  相似文献   

9.
The proteolytic enzymes pronase, trypsin, and chymotrypsin and the surfactant Triton X-100 inhibited attachment of Vibrio proteolytica to the hydrophobic substratum polystyrene by >97%. These treatments had no effect on attachment to hydrophilic substrata such as glass or tissue culture dishes. Both pronase and Triton X-100 effected the removal of previously attached cells from polystyrene but not from hydrophilic surfaces. Removal of cells from polystyrene by pronase left material (which we have termed footprints) that stained with the protein-specific stain Hoechst 2495 but not with the DNA-specific stain Hoechst 33342. Pronase treatment also caused a significant decrease in cell surface hydrophobicity as determined by phase partitioning in hexane or petroleum ether. Collectively, these results imply the existence of separate mechanisms for the adhesion of V. proteolytica to hydrophilic and hydrophobic substrata and suggest a role for protein in the latter mechanism.  相似文献   

10.
Surface thermodynamics of bacterial adhesion.   总被引:37,自引:23,他引:14       下载免费PDF全文
The adhesion of five strains of bacteria, i.e., Staphylococcus aureus (strain 049), Staphylococcus epidermidis (strain 047), Escherichia coli (strains 055 and 2627), and Listeria monocytogenes, to various polymeric surfaces was studied. The design of the experimental protocol was dictated by thermodynamic considerations. From the thermodynamic model for the adhesion of small particles from a suspension onto a solid substratum, it follows that the extent of adhesion is determined by the surface properties of all three phases involved, i.e., the surface tensions of the adhering particles, of the substrate, and of the suspending liquid medium. In essence, adhesion is more extensive to hydrophilic substrata (i.e., substrata of relatively high surface tension) than to hydrophobic substrata, when the surface tension of the bacteria is larger than that of the suspending medium. When the surface tension of the suspending liquid is larger than that of the bacteria, the opposite pattern of behavior prevails. Suspensions of bacteria at a concentration of 10(8) microorganisms per ml were brought into contact with several polymeric surfaces (Teflon, polyethylene, polystyrene, and acetal and sulfonated polystyrene) for 30 min at 20 degrees C. After rinsing, the number of bacteria adhering per unit surface area was determined by image analysis. The surface tension of the suspending medium. Hanks balanced salt solution, was modified through the addition of various amounts of dimethyl sulfoxide. It was found that the number of bacteria adhering per unit surface area correlates well with the thermodynamic predictions and that these data may be used to determine the surface tension of the different bacterial species. The surface tensions of the bacteria obtained in this fashion are in excellent agreement with those obtained by other methods.  相似文献   

11.
A theoretical analysis of the detachment of bacteria adhering to substratum surfaces upon the passage of an air-liquid interface is given, together with experimental results for bacterial detachment in the absence and presence of a conditioning film on different substratum surfaces. Bacteria (Streptococcus sobrinus HG1025, Streptococcus oralis J22, Actinomyces naeslundii T14V-J1, Bacteroides fragilis 793E, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa 974K) were first allowed to adhere to hydrophilic glass and hydrophobic dimethyldichlorosilane (DDS)-coated glass in a parallel-plate flow chamber until a density of 4 × 106 cells cm−2 was reached. For S. sobrinus HG1025, S. oralis J22, and A. naeslundii T14V-J1, the conditioning film consisted of adsorbed salivary components, while for B. fragilis 793E and P. aeruginosa 974K, the film consisted of adsorbed human plasma components. Subsequently, air bubbles were passed through the flow chamber and the bacterial detachment percentages were measured. For some experimental conditions, like with P. aeruginosa 974K adhering to DDS-coated glass and an air bubble moving at high velocity (i.e., 13.6 mm s−1), no bacteria detached upon passage of an air-liquid interface, while for others, detachment percentages between 80 and 90% were observed. The detachment percentage increased when the velocity of the passing air bubble decreased, regardless of the bacterial strain and substratum surface hydrophobicity involved. However, the variation in percentages of detachment by a passing air bubble depended greatly upon the strain and substratum surface involved. At low air bubble velocities the hydrophobicity of the substratum had no influence on the detachment, but at high air bubble velocities all bacterial strains were more efficiently detached from hydrophilic glass substrata. Furthermore, the presence of a conditioning film could either inhibit or stimulate detachment. The shape of the bacterial cell played a major role in detachment at high air bubble velocities, and spherical strains (i.e., streptococci) detached more efficiently than rod-shaped organisms. The present results demonstrate that methodologies to study bacterial adhesion which include contact with a moving air-liquid interface (i.e., rinsing and dipping) yield detachment of an unpredictable number of adhering microorganisms. Hence, results of studies based on such methodologies should be referred as “bacterial retention” rather than “bacterial adhesion”.  相似文献   

12.
Understanding the mechanism of the bacterial cell adhesion to solid surfaces is of great medical and industrial importance. Bacterial adhesion to inert surfaces, such as a catheter, and other indwelling devices can form biofilm, consequently cause severe morbidity and often fatal infections. Initial bacterial adhesion to the material surfaces is a complicated process that is affected by various physicochemical properties of both bacterial cells and substratum surfaces. The surface properties of the cells were characterized by the sessile drop technique. Moreover, the interfacial free energy of Staphylococcus aureus adhesion to the supporting materials was determined. The results showed that S. aureus examined at different pH levels could be considered hydrophilic. We noted hat the electron-donor character of S. aureus was important at intermediate pH (pH 5, pH 7, and pH 9) and it decreased at both limits acidic and basic conditions. In addition, the adhesion of Staphylococcus aureus ATCC 25923 to the hydrophilic glass and hydrophobic indium tin oxide (ITO)-coated glass surfaces at different pH values (2, 3, 5, 7, 9 and 11) was investigated using atomic force microscopy (AFM) and image analysis was assessed with the Mathlab® program. The data analysis showed that cells (number of adhering cells to glass and ITO-coated glass surface) adhered strongly at acidic pH and weakly at alkaline pH. Also, S. aureus has the ability to attach to both hydrophobic and hydrophilic surfaces, but the adhesion was higher on hydrophobic surface.  相似文献   

13.
The physiological and physicochemical bases for the effect of 5, 10, 50, or 100 micrograms of Cd and Zn ml-1 on the attachment and detachment interactions of Pseudomonas fluorescens H2 with glass substrata were determined. Attachment and detachment varied with the type and concentration of metal and the time at which cells were exposed to the metal. The largely inhibitory effect of the metals on bacterial motility and physiological activity did not directly influence attachment. The amount of Cd or Zn accumulated by the cells increased with metal concentration and was greater for free than for attached cells. The hydrophobicity and negative and positive charges of the bacterial surfaces (measured by hydrophobic and electrostatic interaction chromatography) were increased by cell exposure to the metals, particularly after Cd treatment. Cells exposed to Cd prior to attachment showed increased adhesion. Zinc-treated cells did not. There was a positive correlation between adhesion and Cd concentration in the attachment solution. No such relationship existed for Zn. P. fluorescens H2 exposed to Cd prior to attachment desorbed similarly to untreated controls. Zinc pretreatment resulted in decreased desorption. Cells attached in 5 or 10 micrograms of Cd or Zn ml-1 detached less than those attached in 50 or 100 micrograms of Cd or Zn ml-1. The presence of Cd or Zn during detachment had little effect on desorption. The dominant influence of Cd and Zn on attachment and detachment appears to be through modification of the bacterial surface. In natural ecosystems, heavy metals may influence the distribution of bacteria between the solid and liquid phases.  相似文献   

14.
In order to exploit the ability of anaerobic bacteria to degrade certain contaminants for bioremediation of polluted subsurface environments, we need to understand the mechanisms by which such bacteria partition between aqueous and solid phases, as well as the environmental conditions that influence partitioning. We studied four strictly anaerobic bacteria, Desulfomonile tiedjei, Syntrophomonas wolfei, Syntrophobacter wolinii, and Desulfovibrio sp. strain G11, which theoretically together can constitute a tetrachloroethylene- and trichloroethylene-dechlorinating consortium. Adhesion of these organisms was evaluated by microscopic determination of the numbers of cells that attached to glass coverslips exposed to cell suspensions under anaerobic conditions. We studied the effects of the growth phase of the organisms on adhesion, as well as the influence of electrostatic and hydrophobic properties of the substratum. Results indicate that S. wolfei adheres in considerably higher numbers to glass surfaces than the other three organisms. Starvation greatly decreases adhesion of S. wolfei and Desulfovibrio sp. strain G11 but seems to have less of an effect on the adhesion of the other bacteria. The presence of Fe(3+) on the substratum, which would be electropositive, significantly increased the adhesion of S. wolfei, whereas the presence of silicon hydrophobic groups decreased the numbers of attached cells of all species. Measurements of transport of cells through hydrophobic-interaction and electrostatic-interaction columns indicated that all four species had negatively charged cell surfaces and that D. tiedjei and Desulfovibrio sp. strain G11 possessed some hydrophobic cell surface properties. These findings are an early step toward understanding the dynamic attachment of anaerobic bacteria in anoxic environments.  相似文献   

15.
Microbial adhesion at the oil-water interface is a subject of both basic interest (e.g., as a technique for the measurement of hydrophobicity) and applied interest (e.g., for use in two-phase oil-water mouthwashes for the desorption of oral microorganisms). In general, surfactants inhibit microbial adhesion to oils and other hydrophobic surfaces. In the present study, we demonstrated that the cationic surfactant cetylpyridinium chloride (CPC) significantly enhanced microbial adhesion to hexadecane and various oils, as well as to the solid hydrophobic surface polystyrene. CPC increased adhesion to hexadecane of Escherichia coli, Candida albicans and Acinetobacter calcoaceticus MR-481 and of expectorated oral bacteria from near 0% to over 90%. The CPC concentration required for optimal enhancement of adhesion was a function of the initial cell density. This phenomenon was inhibited by high salt concentrations and, in the case of E. coli, by a low pH. CPC-pretreated cells were able to bind to hexadecane, but CPC-pretreated hexadecane was unable to bind untreated cells. Another cationic, surface-active antimicrobial agent, chlorhexidine gluconate, was similarly able to promote microbial adhesion to hexadecane. The results suggest that (i) CPC enhances microbial adhesion to hexadecane by binding via electrostatic interactions at the cell surface, thus diminishing surface charge and increasing cell surface hydrophobicity, and (ii) this phenomenon may have applications in oral formulations and in the use of hydrocarbon droplets as a support for cell immobilization.  相似文献   

16.
The three-dimensional structure of the extracellular substratum was found to regulate reversibly the morphology, proliferation and collagen synthesis of perisinusoidal stellate cells (lipocytes, i.e. fat-storing ‘Ito’ cells). On non-coated polystyrene and type I collagen-coated culture dishes, the cells spread well and extended their cellular processes. On the surface of type I collagen gels, the cells gathered and formed a mesh-like structure. However, in type I collagen gel where the cells were surrounded by type I collagen three-dimensionally, the cells extended their fine cellular processes and resembled the star-shaped stellate cells seenin vivo. The cell proliferation was more prominent in culture dishes coated with type I collagen or in polystyrene culture dishes than on or in type I collagen gels. The collagen synthesis was affected in the same manner. These data indicate that the nature and the three-dimensional structure of the extracellular matrix (ECM) can regulate morphology, proliferation and functions of the perisinusoidal stellate cells. In order to examine the reversibility of these regulations, we liberated cultured cells with trypsin or with purified bacterial collagenase and re-seeded them onto or into each substratum. The cells changed their shape, rate of proliferation and collagen synthesis according to each new substratum. These results indicate that the three-dimensional structure of ECM reversibly regulates the morphology, proliferation rate and functions of the perisinusoidal stellate cells.  相似文献   

17.
The present work focuses on the role of pili present at the cell surface of Lactococcus lactis in bacterial adhesion to abiotic (hydrophobic polystyrene) and biotic (mucin-coated polystyrene) surfaces. Native pili-displaying strains and isogenic derivatives in which pilins or sortase C structural genes had been modified were used. Surface physico-chemistry, morphology and shear-flow-induced detachment of lactococcal cells were evaluated. The involvement of pili in L. lactis adhesion was clearly demonstrated, irrespective of the surface characteristics (hydrophobic/hydrophilic, presence or not of specific binding sites). The accessory pilin, PilC, and the backbone pilin, PilB, were revealed to play a major role in adhesion, provided that the PilB was present in its polymerized form. Within the population fraction that remained attached to the surface under increasing shear flow, different association behaviors were observed, showing that pili could serve as anchoring sites thus hampering the effect of shear flow on cell orientation and detachment.  相似文献   

18.
A theoretical analysis of the detachment of bacteria adhering to substratum surfaces upon the passage of an air-liquid interface is given, together with experimental results for bacterial detachment in the absence and presence of a conditioning film on different substratum surfaces. Bacteria (Streptococcus sobrinus HG1025, Streptococcus oralis J22, Actinomyces naeslundii T14V-J1, Bacteroides fragilis 793E, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa 974K) were first allowed to adhere to hydrophilic glass and hydrophobic dimethyldichlorosilane (DDS)-coated glass in a parallel-plate flow chamber until a density of 4 x 10(6) cells cm(-2) was reached. For S. sobrinus HG1025, S. oralis J22, and A. naeslundii T14V-J1, the conditioning film consisted of adsorbed salivary components, while for B. fragilis 793E and P. aeruginosa 974K, the film consisted of adsorbed human plasma components. Subsequently, air bubbles were passed through the flow chamber and the bacterial detachment percentages were measured. For some experimental conditions, like with P. aeruginosa 974K adhering to DDS-coated glass and an air bubble moving at high velocity (i.e., 13.6 mm s(-1)), no bacteria detached upon passage of an air-liquid interface, while for others, detachment percentages between 80 and 90% were observed. The detachment percentage increased when the velocity of the passing air bubble decreased, regardless of the bacterial strain and substratum surface hydrophobicity involved. However, the variation in percentages of detachment by a passing air bubble depended greatly upon the strain and substratum surface involved. At low air bubble velocities the hydrophobicity of the substratum had no influence on the detachment, but at high air bubble velocities all bacterial strains were more efficiently detached from hydrophilic glass substrata. Furthermore, the presence of a conditioning film could either inhibit or stimulate detachment. The shape of the bacterial cell played a major role in detachment at high air bubble velocities, and spherical strains (i.e., streptococci) detached more efficiently than rod-shaped organisms. The present results demonstrate that methodologies to study bacterial adhesion which include contact with a moving air-liquid interface (i.e., rinsing and dipping) yield detachment of an unpredictable number of adhering microorganisms. Hence, results of studies based on such methodologies should be referred as "bacterial retention" rather than "bacterial adhesion".  相似文献   

19.
Abstract In this paper, it is suggested that specificity and non-specificity in (oral) microbial adhesion are different expressions for the same phenomena. It is argued that the same basic, physico-chemical forces are responsible for so-called 'non-specific' and 'specific' binding and that from a physico-chemical point of view the distinction between the two is an artificial one. Non-specific interactions arise from Van der Waals and electrostatic forces and hydrogen bonding, and originate from the entire cell. A specific bond consists of a combination of the same type of Van der Waals and electrostatic forces and hydrogen bonding, now originating from highly localized chemical groups, which together form a stereo-chemical combination. The absence or presence of specific receptor sites on microbial cell surfaces must therefore be reflected in the overall, non-specific surface properties of cells as well. This point is illustrated by showing that glucanbinding lectins on mutans streptococcal strains may determine the pH dependence of the zeta potentials of these cells. When studying microbial adhesion, a non-specific approach may be better suited to explain adhesion to inert substrata, whereas a specific approach may be preferred in case of adhesion to adsorbed protein films. Adhesion is, however, not as important in plaque formation in the human oral cavity as is retention, because low shear force periods. during which adhesion presumably occurs, are followed by high shear force periods, during which adhering cells must withstand these detachment forces. Evidence is provided that such detachment will be through cohesive failure in the pellicle mass, the properties of which are conditioned by the overall, non-specific substratum properties. Therefore, in vivo plaque formation may be more readily explained by a non-specific approach.  相似文献   

20.
In this paper, it is suggested that specificity and non-specificity in (oral) microbial adhesion are different expressions for the same phenomena. It is argued that the same basic, physicochemical forces are responsible for so-called 'non-specific' and 'specific' binding and that from a physico-chemical point of view the distinction between the two is an artificial one. Non-specific interactions arise from Van der Waals and electrostatic forces and hydrogen bonding, and originate from the entire cell. A specific bond consists of a combination of the same type of Van der Waals and electrostatic forces and hydrogen bonding, now originating from highly localized chemical groups, which together form a stereochemical combination. The absence or presence of specific receptor sites on microbial cell surfaces must therefore be reflected in the overall, non-specific surface properties of cells as well. This point is illustrated by showing that glucan-binding lectins on mutans streptococcal strains may determine the pH dependence of the zeta potentials of these cells. When studying microbial adhesion, a non-specific approach may be better suited to explain adhesion to inert substrata, whereas a specific approach may be preferred in case of adhesion to adsorbed protein films. Adhesion is, however, not as important in plaque formation in the human oral cavity as is retention, because low shear force periods, during which adhesion presumably occurs, are followed by high shear force periods, during which adhering cells must withstand these detachment forces. Evidence is provided that such detachment will be through cohesive failure in the pellicle mass, the properties of which are conditioned by the overall, non-specific substratum properties. Therefore, in vivo plaque formation may be more readily explained by a non-specific approach.  相似文献   

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