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Community-specific diffusion characteristics determine resistance of biofilms to oxidative stress.

Yuzhen ZhangYumin CaiZhaoyuan Chen
Published in: Science advances (2023)
Biofilms are multicellular communities with a spatial structure. Different from single-cell scale diffusion in planktonic systems, the diffusion distance becomes the dimension of multicellular clusters in a biofilm. Such differences in diffusion behavior affect the tolerance and response to exogenous stress. Here, we found that at the same doses of exogenous hydrogen peroxide (H 2 O 2 ), planktonic Escherichia coli were completely killed within two hours, whereas the biofilm resumed growth in six hours by building a catalase barrier to block H 2 O 2 penetration, despite the growth burden. Unexpectedly, when we changed the carbon source from glucose to glycerol, H 2 O 2 instantly counterintuitively boosted biofilm growth due to supplemental oxygen, which was the growth-limiting factor. We further demonstrated that the energy metabolism modes determined the growth-limiting factor, which then determined the two patterns of biofilms resistances to H 2 O 2 .
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