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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Mar 1995, 920-925, Vol 61, No. 3
MA Ascon-Cabrera, D Thomas and JM Lebeault
The maintenance of a steady-state biofilm in a continuous-flow fixed- bed
reactor, as a consequence of the reproduction-detachment of cells (an
interfacial cell physiology phenomenon of steady-state biofilm) during the
biodegradation of 2,4,6-trichlorophenol by Pseudomonas cells, was
determined. After cell adhesion on an open-pore glass support, the biofilm
was formed in a packed-bed recirculated reactor. After the steady-state
biofilm was reached, the mechanisms of the interfacial cell detachment (at
the biofilm-liquid interface) were determined. It was established that (i)
the hydrophobicity of immobilized sessile cells (parent cells) increased
(from 50 to 80%) as the dilution rate increased, while the hydrophobicity
of detached suspended cells (daughter cells) remained constant (about 45%);
and (ii) the immediately detached suspended cells showed a synchronized
growth in about three generations. These results indicate that (i) the
immobilized sessile and suspended detached cells grew synchronically at the
end and at the beginning of the cell cycle, respectively; and (ii) the
hydrophobicity difference of immobilized sessile and suspended detached
cells permitted the cells detachment. Therefore, it is probable that
independent of shear stress (due to recirculated flow), the synchronized
growth and hydrophobicity of cells (which vary during the cell cycle) are
the main factors permitting the maintenance of a steady-state
xenobiotic-degrading biofilm reactor (in which the overall accumulation of
biofilm is determined by the average growth rate of the biofilm cells minus
the rate of detachment of cells from the biofilm).
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Activity of synchronized cells of a steady-state biofilm recirculated reactor during xenobiotic biodegradation
Departement Genie Chimique, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Compiegne, France.
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