September 1, 2005
Journal Article

NMR methods for in-situ biofilm metabolism studies

Abstract

Novel procedures and instrumentation are described for nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and imaging studies of live, in situ microbial films. A perfused NMR/optical microscope sample chamber containing a planar biofilm support was integrated into a recirculation/dilution flow loop growth reactor system and used to grow in situ Shewanella oneidensis strain MR-1 biofilms. Localized NMR techniques were developed and used to non-invasively monitor time-resolved metabolite concentrations and to image the biomass volume and distribution. As a first illustration of the feasibility of the methodology an initial 13C-labeled lactate metabolic pathway study was performed, yielding results consistent with existing genomic data for MR-1. These results represent progress toward our ultimate goal of correlating time- and depth-resolved metabolism and mass transport with gene expression in live in situ biofilms using combined NMR/optical microscopy techniques.

Revised: January 23, 2006 | Published: September 1, 2005

Citation

Majors P.D., J.S. Mclean, G.E. Pinchuk, J.K. Fredrickson, Y.A. Gorby, K.R. Minard, and R.A. Wind. 2005. NMR methods for in-situ biofilm metabolism studies. Journal of Microbiological Methods 62, no. 3:337-344. PNNL-SA-43145.