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Public and Environmental Health Microbiology

Formulation of Biocides Increases Antimicrobial Potency and Mitigates the Enrichment of Nonsusceptible Bacteria in Multispecies Biofilms

Sarah Forbes, Nicola Cowley, Gavin Humphreys, Hitesh Mistry, Alejandro Amézquita, Andrew J. McBain
Harold L. Drake, Editor
Sarah Forbes
Biomolecular Sciences Research Centre, Sheffield Hallam University, Sheffield, United Kingdom
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Nicola Cowley
School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, The University of Manchester, United Kingdom
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Gavin Humphreys
School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, The University of Manchester, United Kingdom
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Hitesh Mistry
School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, The University of Manchester, United Kingdom
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Alejandro Amézquita
Unilever, Safety and Environmental Assurance Centre, Colworth Science Park, Sharnbrook, Bedfordshire, United Kingdom
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Andrew J. McBain
School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, The University of Manchester, United Kingdom
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Harold L. Drake
University of Bayreuth
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DOI: 10.1128/AEM.03054-16
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ABSTRACT

The current investigation aimed to generate data to inform the development of risk assessments of biocide usage. Stabilized domestic drain biofilm microcosms were exposed daily over 6 months to increasing concentrations (0.01% to 1%) of the biocide benzalkonium chloride (BAC) in a simple aqueous solution (BAC-s) or in a complex formulation (BAC-f) representative of a domestic cleaning agent. Biofilms were analyzed by culture, differentiating by bacterial functional group and by BAC or antibiotic susceptibility. Bacterial isolates were identified by 16S rRNA sequencing, and changes in biofilm composition were assessed by high-throughput sequencing. Exposure to BAC-f resulted in significantly larger reductions in levels of viable bacteria than exposure to BAC-s, while bacterial diversity greatly decreased during exposure to both BAC-s and BAC-f, as evidenced by sequencing and viable counts. Increases in the abundance of bacteria exhibiting reduced antibiotic or BAC susceptibility following exposure to BAC at 0.1% were significantly greater for BAC-s than BAC-f. Bacteria with reduced BAC and antibiotic susceptibility were generally suppressed by higher BAC concentrations, and formulation significantly enhanced this effect. Significant decreases in the antimicrobial susceptibility of bacteria isolated from the systems before and after long-term BAC exposure were not detected. In summary, dose-dependent suppression of bacterial viability by BAC was enhanced by formulation. Biocide exposure decreased bacterial diversity and transiently enriched populations of organisms with lower antimicrobial susceptibility, and the effects were subsequently suppressed by exposure to 1% BAC-f, the concentration most closely reflecting deployment in formulated products.

IMPORTANCE Assessment of the risks of biocide use has been based mainly on the exposure of axenic cultures of bacteria to biocides in simple aqueous solutions. The current investigation aimed to assess the effects of formulation on the outcome of biocide exposure in multispecies biofilms. Formulation of the cationic biocide BAC significantly increased antimicrobial potency. Bacteria with lower antimicrobial susceptibility whose populations were enriched after low-level biocide exposure were more effectively suppressed by the biocide at in-use concentrations (1% [wt/vol]) in a formulation than in a simple aqueous solution. These observations underline the importance of simulating normal deployment conditions in considering the risks and benefits of biocide use.

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Formulation of Biocides Increases Antimicrobial Potency and Mitigates the Enrichment of Nonsusceptible Bacteria in Multispecies Biofilms
Sarah Forbes, Nicola Cowley, Gavin Humphreys, Hitesh Mistry, Alejandro Amézquita, Andrew J. McBain
Appl. Environ. Microbiol. Mar 2017, 83 (7) e03054-16; DOI: 10.1128/AEM.03054-16

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Formulation of Biocides Increases Antimicrobial Potency and Mitigates the Enrichment of Nonsusceptible Bacteria in Multispecies Biofilms
Sarah Forbes, Nicola Cowley, Gavin Humphreys, Hitesh Mistry, Alejandro Amézquita, Andrew J. McBain
Appl. Environ. Microbiol. Mar 2017, 83 (7) e03054-16; DOI: 10.1128/AEM.03054-16
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KEYWORDS

biocides
antibiotics
susceptibility
resistance
formulation
CDFF
microbicides

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