Evaluation of different culture media to support in vitro growth and biofilm formation of bacterial vaginosis-associated anaerobes

Background Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is one of the most common vaginal infections worldwide. It is associated with the presence of a dense polymicrobial biofilm on the vaginal epithelium, formed mainly by Gardnerella species. The biofilm also contains other anaerobic species, but little is known abou...

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Main Authors: Aliona S. Rosca, Joana Castro, Nuno Cerca
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2020-09-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/9917.pdf
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spelling doaj-20a3f389f1964b2da2a43338f0f2f2032020-11-25T01:21:54ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592020-09-018e991710.7717/peerj.9917Evaluation of different culture media to support in vitro growth and biofilm formation of bacterial vaginosis-associated anaerobesAliona S. RoscaJoana CastroNuno CercaBackground Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is one of the most common vaginal infections worldwide. It is associated with the presence of a dense polymicrobial biofilm on the vaginal epithelium, formed mainly by Gardnerella species. The biofilm also contains other anaerobic species, but little is known about their role in BV development. Aim To evaluate the influence of different culture media on the planktonic and biofilm growth of six cultivable anaerobes frequently associated with BV, namely Gardnerella sp., Atopobium vaginae, Lactobacillus iners, Mobiluncus curtisii, Peptostreptococcus anaerobius and Prevotella bivia. Methods A total of nine different culture media compositions, including commercially available and chemically defined media simulating genital tract secretions, were tested in this study. Planktonic cultures and biofilms were grown under anaerobic conditions (10% carbon dioxide, 10% helium and 80% nitrogen). Planktonic growth was assessed by optical density measurements, and biofilm formation was quantified by crystal violet staining. Results Significant planktonic growth was observed for Gardnerella sp., A. vaginae and L. iners in New York City III broth, with or without ascorbic acid supplementation. Biofilm quantification showed high in vitro biofilm growth for Gardnerella sp., P. anaerobius and P. bivia in almost all culture media excluding Brucella broth. Contrary, only New York City III broth was able to promote biofilm formation for A. vaginae, L. iners and M. curtisii. Conclusions Our data demonstrate that New York City III broth relative to the other tested media is the most conducive for future studies addressing polymicrobial biofilms development as this culture medium allowed the formation of significant levels of single-species biofilms.https://peerj.com/articles/9917.pdfBacterial vaginosisBV-associated anaerobesAnaerobic growthBiofilms
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aliona S. Rosca
Joana Castro
Nuno Cerca
spellingShingle Aliona S. Rosca
Joana Castro
Nuno Cerca
Evaluation of different culture media to support in vitro growth and biofilm formation of bacterial vaginosis-associated anaerobes
PeerJ
Bacterial vaginosis
BV-associated anaerobes
Anaerobic growth
Biofilms
author_facet Aliona S. Rosca
Joana Castro
Nuno Cerca
author_sort Aliona S. Rosca
title Evaluation of different culture media to support in vitro growth and biofilm formation of bacterial vaginosis-associated anaerobes
title_short Evaluation of different culture media to support in vitro growth and biofilm formation of bacterial vaginosis-associated anaerobes
title_full Evaluation of different culture media to support in vitro growth and biofilm formation of bacterial vaginosis-associated anaerobes
title_fullStr Evaluation of different culture media to support in vitro growth and biofilm formation of bacterial vaginosis-associated anaerobes
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of different culture media to support in vitro growth and biofilm formation of bacterial vaginosis-associated anaerobes
title_sort evaluation of different culture media to support in vitro growth and biofilm formation of bacterial vaginosis-associated anaerobes
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Background Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is one of the most common vaginal infections worldwide. It is associated with the presence of a dense polymicrobial biofilm on the vaginal epithelium, formed mainly by Gardnerella species. The biofilm also contains other anaerobic species, but little is known about their role in BV development. Aim To evaluate the influence of different culture media on the planktonic and biofilm growth of six cultivable anaerobes frequently associated with BV, namely Gardnerella sp., Atopobium vaginae, Lactobacillus iners, Mobiluncus curtisii, Peptostreptococcus anaerobius and Prevotella bivia. Methods A total of nine different culture media compositions, including commercially available and chemically defined media simulating genital tract secretions, were tested in this study. Planktonic cultures and biofilms were grown under anaerobic conditions (10% carbon dioxide, 10% helium and 80% nitrogen). Planktonic growth was assessed by optical density measurements, and biofilm formation was quantified by crystal violet staining. Results Significant planktonic growth was observed for Gardnerella sp., A. vaginae and L. iners in New York City III broth, with or without ascorbic acid supplementation. Biofilm quantification showed high in vitro biofilm growth for Gardnerella sp., P. anaerobius and P. bivia in almost all culture media excluding Brucella broth. Contrary, only New York City III broth was able to promote biofilm formation for A. vaginae, L. iners and M. curtisii. Conclusions Our data demonstrate that New York City III broth relative to the other tested media is the most conducive for future studies addressing polymicrobial biofilms development as this culture medium allowed the formation of significant levels of single-species biofilms.
topic Bacterial vaginosis
BV-associated anaerobes
Anaerobic growth
Biofilms
url https://peerj.com/articles/9917.pdf
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