J. Rewak-Soroczynska, E. Paluch, A. Siebert
Sep 1, 2019
Citations
0
Influential Citations
13
Citations
Quality indicators
Journal
Letters in Applied Microbiology
Abstract
Quaternary ammonium salts (QASs) are commonly used in medicine, agriculture and industry and their wide usage caused the development of microbial resistance, thus there is still a need for new effective antimicrobial agents. Present work describes the biological activity of alanine‐ (DMALM‐n) and glycine‐derived (DMGM‐n) QASs against planktonic and biofilm forms of micro‐organisms. The antimicrobial activity was dependent mainly on the hydrocarbon chain length and surfactants with 12–16 atoms of carbon in the alkyl chain were the most active ones. The lowest MIC value was determined for DMALM‐14 against Rhodotorula rubra and Saccharomyces cerevisiae (2·5 µmol l−1). Generally, alanine derivatives showed stronger effects against micro‐organisms than glycine‐derived QASs. Alanine‐derived surfactants with 12–16 carbons in the alkyl chain had antiadhesive properties on the polystyrene surface, preventing cell attachment (about 70% of inhibition for C. albicans and 40% for S. epidermidis). Strong adhesion reduction was also observed on the stainless steel surface and the highest reduction was observed for C. albicans cells incubated on surface pretreated with DMGM‐16. Moreover, DMGM‐16 and DMALM‐16 prevented C. albicans filamentation, one of the determinants of cell adhesion. Surfactants with C16 alkyl chain (DMGM‐16 and DMALM‐16) eradicated bacterial and yeast biofilm (from 60 to 90% of reduction observed after incubation of the previously grown biofilm in the presence of the highest tested concentration of the surfactant – 400 µmol l−1) and reduced its viability. Strong antimicrobial activity as well as antiadhesive properties make alanine‐ and glycine‐derived QASs the potential candidates for future application as disinfectants.