"In the world that I study, everybody's trying to kill the
biofilm," said Goeres, a research professor in the Department of
Chemical and Biological Engineering. "But there's not a concrete
answer for that, and that's why you need to understand methods."
Earlier this year, Goeres was awarded a five-year, $1.7 million
contract from the Environmental Protection Agency to work on new
ways to measure how well antimicrobial products perform against
biofilms.
"The EPA contract provides a solid basis of support," Goeres said.
"That's why we can be one of the few labs in the world that can
focus on methods development."
Goeres works in the Standardized Biofilms Methods Laboratory at
MSU's Center for Biofilm Engineering. There, she develops
standards for growing, treating and sampling biofilms.
All biofilms are unique. They are composed of varying numbers of
different bacteria, and the conditions under which these bacteria
form a biofilm can make a big difference in the resulting slime.
So a product designed to kill one biofilm might not work on any
others, which makes proving the effectiveness of antibacterial
cleaning products tricky.
"Every time a person buys a product with an EPA-approved efficacy
claim, such as 'kills 99 percent of bacteria,' the public trusts
the validity of the process used to prove that claim," Goeres
said.
However, the method a company uses to prove its product's
effectiveness can make a big difference in the test results. Until
recently, most methods for testing products involved growing
bacteria in a way that's not consistent with the real world,
Goeres said.
"Our goal is to grow bacteria in a way that's relevant to how the
bacteria exist where the product is used," she said. "That way, we
can have more confidence in the product's actual effectiveness,
and so can the public."
The EPA contract will allow Goeres to hire two additional
undergraduate students for her lab, where they will receive
training and experience that will help them continue into graduate
school or biofilms jobs. The lab normally hires four to six
undergraduates each year.
Goeres said her biofilm methods work, which can seem detached from
the real world, is ultimately about making sure people can trust
the products they're using to keep their homes clean.
"So many results depend on the process a person uses," Goeres
said. "To have only one way to grow a biofilm isn't going to cut
it."
Contact: Darla Goeres, assistant research professor at the Center
for Biofilm Engineering, at 406-994-2440 or at
darla_g(AT)bioilm.montana.edu
_____________________
Related reading:
Development
of Latest Proposed Biofilm Standard Launched
ASTM Standardization News, May/June 2008
ASTM International Committee on Pesticides Approves Second Biofilm
Standard
Learn more about
Standardized Biofilm Methods at Montana State University's Center
for Biofilm Engineering.
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