Research@Lincoln
    • Login
     
    View Item 
    •   Research@Lincoln Home
    • Faculty of Agriculture and Life Sciences
    • Department of Wine, Food and Molecular Biosciences
    • View Item
    •   Research@Lincoln Home
    • Faculty of Agriculture and Life Sciences
    • Department of Wine, Food and Molecular Biosciences
    • View Item
    JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

    Antimicrobial peptide AMPNT-6 from Bacillus subtilis inhibits biofilm formation by Shewanella putrefaciens and disrupts its preformed biofilms on both abiotic and shrimp shell surfaces

    Deng, Q.; Pu, Y.; Sun, L.; Wang, Yaling; Liu, Yang; Wang, R.; Liao, J.; Xu, D.; Liu, Y.; Ye, Riying; Fang, Z.; Gooneratne, Sarojith R.
    Abstract
    Shewanella putrefaciens biofilm formation is of great concern for the shrimp industry because it adheres easily to food and food-contact surfaces and is a source of persistent and unseen contamination that causes shrimp spoilage and economic losses to the shrimp industry. Different concentrations of an antimicrobial lipopeptide, the fermentation product of Bacillus subtilis, AMPNT-6, were tested for the ability to reduce adhesion and disrupt S. putrefaciens preformed biofilms on two different contact surfaces (shrimp shell, stainless steel sheet). AMPNT-6 displayed a marked dose- and time-dependent anti-adhesive effect > biofilm removal. 3MIC AMPNT-6 was able both to remove biofilm and prevent bacteria from forming biofilm in a 96-well polystyrene microplate used as the model surface. 2MIC AMPNT-6 prevented bacteria from adhering to the microplate surface to form biofilm for 3 h and removed already existing biofilm within 24 h. Secretion of extracellular polymeric substances incubated in LB broth for 24 h by S. putrefaciens was minimal at 3 × MIC AMPNT-6. Scanning electron microscopy showed that damage to S. putrefaciens bacteria by AMPNT-6 possibly contributed to the non-adherence to the surfaces. Disruption of the mature biofilm structure by AMPNT-6 contributed to biofilm removal. It is concluded that AMPNT-6 can be used effectively to prevent attachment and also detach S. putrefaciens biofilms from shrimp shells, stainless steel sheets and polystyrene surfaces.... [Show full abstract]
    Keywords
    Bacillus subtilis; antimicrobial lipopeptide; Shewanella putrefaciens; anti-adhesion; biofilm removal; Food Science; Animals; Penaeidae; Biofilms; Stainless Steel; Polystyrenes; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Microscopy, Electron, Scanning; Food Microbiology; Bacterial Adhesion; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Surface Properties; Time Factors; Food Preservation; Seafood; Microbial Viability; Animal Shells
    Fields of Research
    0605 Microbiology; 070707 Veterinary Microbiology (excl. Virology)
    Date
    2017-12
    Type
    Journal Article
    Collections
    • Department of Wine, Food and Molecular Biosciences [721]
    Thumbnail
    View/Open
    Deng et al 2017- AM.pdf
    Share this

    on Twitter on Facebook on LinkedIn on Reddit on Tumblr by Email

    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodres.2017.09.057
    Metadata
     Expand record
    © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
    Citation
    Deng et al. (2017). Antimicrobial peptide AMPNT-6 from Bacillus subtilis inhibits biofilm formation by Shewanella putrefaciens and disrupts its preformed biofilms on both abiotic and shrimp shell surfaces. Food Research International, 102, 8-13. doi:10.1016/j.foodres.2017.09.057
    This service is maintained by Learning, Teaching and Library
    • Archive Policy
    • Copyright and Reuse
    • Deposit Guidelines and FAQ
    • Contact Us
     

     

    Browse

    All of Research@LincolnCommunities & CollectionsTitlesAuthorsKeywordsBy Issue DateThis CollectionTitlesAuthorsKeywordsBy Issue Date

    My Account

    LoginRegister

    Statistics

    View Usage Statistics
    This service is maintained by Learning, Teaching and Library
    • Archive Policy
    • Copyright and Reuse
    • Deposit Guidelines and FAQ
    • Contact Us