Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-1-1998
Published In
Applied And Environmental Microbiology
Abstract
Members of a panel of stress-responsive biosensors have been used to study the effect of megahertz frequency ultrasound onEscherichia coli. Insonification causes acoustic cavitation, the collapse of oscillating microbubbles in solution, which can damage bacterial cells. A focused 1-MHz ultrasound transducer, capable of generating a spatial peak pulse average intensity of 500 W/cm2, was used to treat liquid bacterial cultures. Stress-responsive promoters fused to luxCDABE allowed the continuous measurement of light produced as a result of protein damage, DNA damage, oxidative stress, and membrane perturbation. A promoter responsive to ammonia limitation was not transcriptionally activated under test conditions. In contrast to bacteria in exponentially growing cultures, those in stationary-phase cultures were more resistant to the effects of ultrasound treatment. Quantification of the degree of acoustic cavitation due to symmetric bubble collapse was measured by a 20-MHz passive transducer, the output of which appears to be only partially correlated with cellular damage and survival. The methods and results summarized here provide the basis for further investigation into applications, including the purification of water samples.
Recommended Citation
Amy Cheng Vollmer; Sylvia D. Sakyiama Kwakye , '98; Matthew Evan Halpern , '98; and E. Carr Everbach.
(1998).
"Bacterial Stress Responses To 1-Megahertz Pulsed Ultrasound In The Presence Of Microbubbles".
Applied And Environmental Microbiology.
Volume 64,
Issue 10.
3927-3931.
https://works.swarthmore.edu/fac-engineering/21
Comments
This work is freely available courtesy of the American Society for Microbiology.