Vancomycin tolerance and dispersion of dual species biofilms of Clostridioides difficile and Vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium

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Abstract

Objectives Biofilms are the dominant mode of bacterial life. The gut microbiota itself has characteristics of a biofilm that grows on the intestinal mucosa. C. difficile and VRE are commonly co-isolated from patients but biofilm formation has not been studied in a multi-species context. Here we study the interactions between C. difficile and VRE in surface adherent community. Results We found that VRE inhibits C. difficile biofilm formation in dual-species culture in the presence of excess glucose. Robust dual-species biofilms were produced when the carbon source was changed to a non-fermentable sugar such as fucose and xylose. We observed a high level of vancomycin tolerance in C. difficile biofilms that was not affected by the presence of VRE. Finally we also found that a nutrient step-change is sufficient to induce dispersion of single and dual-species biofilms. Conclusions VRE can inhibit the development of C. difficile biofilms in the presence of a fermentable carbon source. VRE does not appear to affect vancomycin tolerance or nutrient-induced dispersion of C. difficile biofilms. Highlights - VRE inhibits C. difficile biofilm formation in the presence of fermentable glucose. - Stable VRE – C. difficile biofilms are formed by managing the available carbon source. - VRE does not affect C. difficile vancomycin tolerance in this model. - A 10-fold increase in available nutrients is sufficient to induce biofilm dispersion in C. difficile and VRE.

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europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00
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License: CC-BY-NC-ND-4.0