Issue 4, 2011

An image-based 384-well high-throughput screening method for the discovery of biofilm inhibitors in Vibrio cholerae

Abstract

Bacterial biofilms are assemblages of bacterial cells and extracellular matrix that result in the creation of surface-associated macrocolony formation. Most bacteria are capable of forming biofilms under suitable conditions. Biofilm formation by pathogenic bacteria on medical implant devices has been linked to implant rejection in up to 10% of cases, due to biofilm-related secondary infections. In addition, biofilm formation has been implicated in both bacterial persistence and antibiotic resistance. In this study, a method has been developed for the discovery of small molecule inhibitors of biofilm formation in Vibrio cholerae, through the use of high-throughput epifluorescence microscopy imaging. Adaptation of a strategy for the growth of bacterial biofilms in wellplates, and the subsequent quantification of biofilm coverage within these wells, provides the first example of an image-based 384-well format system for the evaluation of biofilm inhibition in V. cholerae. Application of this method to the high-throughput screening of small molecule libraries has lead to the discovery of 29 biofilm lead structures, many of which eliminate biofilm formation without altering bacterial cell viability.

Graphical abstract: An image-based 384-well high-throughput screening method for the discovery of biofilm inhibitors in Vibrio cholerae

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
11 Nov 2010
Accepted
16 Dec 2010
First published
18 Jan 2011

Mol. BioSyst., 2011,7, 1176-1184

An image-based 384-well high-throughput screening method for the discovery of biofilm inhibitors in Vibrio cholerae

K. C. Peach, W. M. Bray, N. J. Shikuma, N. C. Gassner, R. S. Lokey, F. H. Yildiz and R. G. Linington, Mol. BioSyst., 2011, 7, 1176 DOI: 10.1039/C0MB00276C

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