Abstract

Biofilms are communities of microorganisms enclosed in a self-generated matrix of extracellular polymeric substances. While biofilm recalcitrance and persistence are caused by several factors, a reduction in antimicrobial susceptibility has been closely associated with the generation of pH gradients within the biofilm structure. Cells embedded within the biofilm create a localized acidic microenvironment, which is unaffected by the external pH. Therefore, pH monitoring is a promising approach for understanding the complexities of a three-dimensional heterogeneous biofilm. A fluorescent pH nanosensor was designed through the synthesis of mesoporous silica nanoparticles (47 ± 5 nm diameter) conjugated to a pH-sensitive dye (fluorescein) and a pH-insensitive dye (rhodamine B) as an internal standard (dye-MSNs). The fluorescence intensity of fluorescein (IF) reduced significantly as the pH was decreased from 8.5 to 3.5. In contrast, the fluorescence intensity of rhodamine B (IR) remained constant at any pH. The ratio of IF/IR produced a sigmoidal curve with respect to the pH, in a working pH range between 4.5 and 7.5. Dye-MSNs enabled the measurement of pH gradients within Pseudomonas fluorescens WCS 365 biofilm microcolonies. The biofilms showed spatially distinct low-pH regions that were enclosed into large clusters corresponding to high-cell-density areas. Also present were small low-pH areas that spread indistinctly throughout the microcolony caused by the mass transfer effect. The lowest detected pH within the inner core of the microcolonies was 5.1, gradually increasing to a neutral pH toward the exterior of the microcolonies. The dye-MSNs were able to fully penetrate the biofilm matrix and allowed a quantitative ratiometric analysis of pH gradients and distribution throughout the biofilm, which was independent of the nanoparticle concentration.

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