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    Study of the Resistance of Staphylococcus aureus Biofilm, Biofilm-Detached Cells, and Planktonic Cells to Microencapsulated Carvacrol Used Alone or Combined with Low-pH Treatment

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    ijms-25-07222-v3.pdf (1.879Mb)
    Date
    2024-07-01
    Author
    Mechmechani, Samah
    Yammine, Jina
    Alhuthali, Sakhr
    EL Mouzawak, Majededdine
    Charvourou, Georgia
    Ghasrsallaoui, Adem
    Chihib, Nour Eddine
    Doulgeraki, Agapi
    Karam, Layal
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    Abstract
    Microbial biofilms pose severe problems in the medical field and food industry, as they are the cause of many serious infections and food-borne diseases. The extreme biofilms’ resistance to conventional anti-microbial treatments presents a major challenge to their elimination. In this study, the difference in resistance between Staphylococcus aureus DSMZ 12463 biofilms, biofilm-detached cells, and planktonic cells against microcapsules containing carvacrol was assessed. The antimicrobial/antibiofilm activity of low pH disinfection medium containing the microencapsulated carvacrol was also studied. In addition, the effect of low pH on the in vitro carvacrol release from microcapsules was investigated. The minimum inhibitory concentration of microencapsulated carvacrol was 0.625 mg mL−1. The results showed that biofilms exhibited greater resistance to microencapsulated carvacrol than the biofilm-detached cells and planktonic cells. Low pH treatment alone, by hydrochloric acid addition, showed no bactericidal effect on any of the three states of S. aureus strain. However, microencapsulated carvacrol was able to significantly reduce the planktonic cells and biofilm-detached cells below the detection limit (no bacterial counts), and the biofilm by approximatively 3 log CFU mL−1. In addition, results showed that microencapsulated carvacrol combined with low pH treatment reduced biofilm by more than 5 log CFU mL−1. Thus, the use of microencapsulated carvacrol in acidic environment could be a promising approach to combat biofilms from abiotic surfaces.
    URI
    https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85198477669&origin=inward
    DOI/handle
    http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms25137222
    http://hdl.handle.net/10576/59268
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    • Human Nutrition [‎435‎ items ]

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