Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces 23 (2002) 213 – 230
Atomic force microscopy and theoretical considerations of
surface properties and turgor pressures of bacteria
X. Yao
a
, J. Walter
a
, S. Burke
a
, S. Stewart
a
, M.H. Jericho
a,
*, D. Pink
b
,
R. Hunter
c
, T.J. Beveridge
c
a
Physics Department, Dalhousie Uniersity, Halifax, NS, Canada B3H 3J5
b
Physics Department, St. Francis Xaier Uniersity, Antigonish, NS, Canada B2G 2W 5
c
Department of Microbiology Uniersity of Guelph, Guelph, Ont., Canada N1G 2W 1
Received 20 November 2000; received in revised form 2 April 2001; accepted 30 May 2001
Abstract
The properties of viable bacteria were investigated with the Atomic Force Microscope (AFM). By depositing
bacteria on aluminum oxide filters, the adhesion of Si
3
N
4
tips to the surfaces of Gram-negative bacterial strains
possessing different lipopolysacharides (LPS) (i.e. Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1 and its isogenic mutants) was
investigated without the use of surface modifying or bonding agents to adhere cells to the filter. Our measurements
suggest that adhesion forces for Si
3
N
4
to these bacteria were below our detection limit of 50–100 pN. Turgor
pressures were also investigated for a spherical Gram-positive bacterium (Enterococcus hirae ) as well as the
rod-shaped Gram-negative P. aeruginosa. A simple relationship between bacterial indentation depth and turgor
pressure for the spherical bacterium was first derived and gave a turgor pressure for E. hirae in deionized water of
4–6 ×10
5
Pa. This is the first such measurement for a spherical Gram-positive bacterium. AFM deformations of the
cell envelope of P. aeruginosa gave turgor pressures in the range 0.1–0.2 ×10
5
Pa in growth medium and 1.5–4 ×10
5
Pa in distilled water. These pressure ranges compared well with previously published values derived by other means
for Gram-negative rods. The imaging of bacteria under growth medium was only possible on aluminum-oxide filters.
It is proposed that the 20 nm diameter pores of these filters might facilitate the attachment of bacteria. A
Monte-Carlo study was carried out which showed that bacterial adhesion will be both encouraged and stronger if
hydrogen bonding takes place between LPS O-sidechains and the inside surface of the filter’s pores. © 2002 Elsevier
Science B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords: AFM; Bacteria; LPS adhesion; Turgor pressure; Monte-Carlo hydrogen bonds
www.elsevier.com/locate/colsurfb
1. Introduction
Bacteria are extremely small cells possessing a
relatively simple design so that elaborate intracel-
lular eukaryotic-like cytoskeletal scaffoldings
composed of tubulin and actin are not necessary
* Corresponding author.
E-mail address: jericho@fizz.phys.dal.ca (M.H. Jericho).
0927-7765/02/$ - see front matter © 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
PII:S0927-7765(01)00249-1