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International Journal of Oral Science
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Current understanding of multi‐species biofilms
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  • Review
  • Published: 01 April 2011

Current understanding of multi‐species biofilms

  • Liang Yang1,
  • Yang Liu1,
  • Hong Wu2,
  • Niels Høiby2,
  • Søren Molin1 &
  • …
  • Zhi‐jun Song2 

International Journal of Oral Science volume 3, pages 74–81 (2011)Cite this article

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Abstract

Direct observation of a wide range of natural microorganisms has revealed the fact that the majority of microbes persist as surface‐attached communities surrounded by matrix materials, called biofilms. Biofilms can be formed by a single bacterial strain. However, most natural biofilms are actually formed by multiple bacterial species. Conventional methods for bacterial cleaning, such as applications of antibiotics and/or disinfectants are often ineffective for biofilm populations due to their special physiology and physical matrix barrier. It has been estimated that billions of dollars are spent every year worldwide to deal with damage to equipment, contaminations of products, energy losses, and infections in human beings resulted from microbial biofilms. Microorganisms compete, cooperate, and communicate with each other in multi‐species biofilms. Understanding the mechanisms of multi‐species biofilm formation will facilitate the development of methods for combating bacterial biofilms in clinical, environmental, industrial, and agricultural areas. The most recent advances in the understanding of multi‐species biofilms are summarized and discussed in the review.

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Authors and Affiliations

  1. Department of Systems Biology, Technical University of Denmark, Lyngby, DK-2800, Denmark

    Liang Yang, Yang Liu & Søren Molin

  2. Department of Clinical Microbiology, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen N, DK-2100, Denmark

    Hong Wu, Niels Høiby & Zhi‐jun Song

Authors
  1. Liang Yang
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  2. Yang Liu
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  3. Hong Wu
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  4. Niels Høiby
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  5. Søren Molin
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  6. Zhi‐jun Song
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Corresponding author

Correspondence to Zhi‐jun Song.

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Cite this article

Yang, L., Liu, Y., Wu, H. et al. Current understanding of multi‐species biofilms. Int J Oral Sci 3, 74–81 (2011). https://doi.org/10.4248/IJOS11027

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  • Received: 23 January 2011

  • Accepted: 19 February 2011

  • Published: 01 April 2011

  • Issue Date: 01 April 2011

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.4248/IJOS11027

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Keywords

  • biofilms
  • extracellular polymeric substances
  • structure development
  • interactions

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International Journal of Oral Science (Int J Oral Sci) ISSN 2049-3169 (online) ISSN 1674-2818 (print)

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