Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8289055 | Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2016 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Atmospheric pressure plasma (APP) has been shown effective in sterilization by reducing the number of viable microbes during surface cleaning, food processing, or human tissue treatment. For safe conduct, the majority of previous research focused on complete abolition of microbes, which may require severe treatments. Our aim is to investigate the minimal treatment conditions necessary for effective inactivation of bacteria in such a manner that the APP treated bacteria would not be able to harm the host cells. For this, we ought to identify the objective criteria to make the bacteria dysfunctional. We choose the motile properties and the host-cell invasion capability as two measures to quantify the pathogenic state of bacteria. In this paper, we investigated how the APP treatment in a minimal dosage affects the activity of Salmonella Typhimurium. At 100Â W and 15Â kHz for 20Â s, the APP treatment effectively suppressed active “run and tumble” type motility and induced formation of abnormally long structures. With 20Â s exposure, the bacterial cells failed to cause pyroptosis in the host cells with >90% survival after 12Â h of co-incubation. Our results suggest novel measures to evaluate the functional pathogenic state for identifying safe APP treatment conditions.
Keywords
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Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Biochemistry
Authors
Jin-Sung Park, Kijung Kim, Je-Hyun Han, Bomi Gweon, Ung Hyun Ko, Suk Jae Yoo, Wonho Choe, Jennifer H. Shin,