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Interaction of <Emphasis Type="Italic">Klebsiella oxytoca</Emphasis> and <Emphasis Type="Italic">Burkholderia cepacia</Emphasis> in Dual-Species Batch Cultures and Biofilms as a Function of Growth Rate and Substrate Concentration
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">J?KomlosEmail author  AB?Cunningham  AK?Camper  RR?Sharp
Institution:(1) Center for Biofilm Engineering, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT 59717-3980, USA;(2) Environmental Engineering Department, Manhattan College, Riverdale, NY 10471, USA;(3) Present address: Civil and Environmental Engineering Department, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA
Abstract:Dual-species microbial interactions have been extensively reported for batch and continuous culture environments. However, little research has been performed on dual-species interaction in a biofilm. This research examined the effects of growth rate and substrate concentration on dual-species population densities in batch and biofilm reactors. In addition, the feasibility of using batch reactor kinetics to describe dual-species biofilm interactions was explored. The scope of the research was directed toward creating a dual-species biofilm for the biodegradation of trichloroethylene, but the findings are a significant contribution to the study of dual-species interactions in general. The two bacterial species used were Burkholderia cepacia PR1-pTOM31c, an aerobic organism capable of constitutively mineralizing trichloroethylene (TCE), and Klebsiella oxytoca, a highly mucoid, facultative anaerobic organism. The substrate concentrations used were different dilutions of a nutrient-rich medium resulting in dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentrations on the order of 30, 70, and 700 mg/L. Presented herein are single- and dual-species population densities and growth rates for these two organisms grown in batch and continuous-flow biofilm reactors. In batch reactors, planktonic growth rates predicted dual-species planktonic species dominance, with the faster-growing organism (K. oxytoca) outcompeting the slower-growing organism (B. cepacia). In a dual-species biofilm, however, dual-species planktonic growth rates did not predict which organism would have the higher dual-species biofilm population density. The relative fraction of each organism in a dual-species biofilm did correlate with substrate concentration, with B. cepacia having a greater proportional density in the dual-species culture with K. oxytoca at low (30 and 70 mg/L DOC) substrate concentrations and K. oxytoca having a greater dual-species population density at a high (700 mg/L DOC) substrate concentration. Results from this research demonstrate the effectiveness of using substrate concentration to control population density in this dual-species biofilm.
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