Photoinactivation of Legionella rubrilucens by visible light

  • Schmid J
  • Hoenes K
  • Rath M
  • et al.
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Abstract

In this study, the photoinactivation of Legionella by visible light is investigated. The success of this approach would offer new prospects for technical water disinfection and maybe even for therapeutic measures in cases of Legionella infections. Therefore, Legionella rubrilucens was dispensed on buffered charcoal yeast extract medium agar plates and illuminated with different doses of violet light generated by 405 nm light-emitting diodes (LEDs). A strong photoinactivation effect was observed. A dose of 125 J/ cm 2 reduced the bacterial concentration by more than 5 orders of magnitude compared to Legionella on unirradiated agar plates. The necessary dose for a one log-level reduction was about 24 J/cm 2 . These results were obtained for extracellular L. rubrilucens , but other Legionella species may exhibit a similar behavior.

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Schmid, J., Hoenes, K., Rath, M., Vatter, P., Spellerberg, B., & Hessling, M. (2017). Photoinactivation of Legionella rubrilucens by visible light. European Journal of Microbiology and Immunology, 7(2), 146–149. https://doi.org/10.1556/1886.2017.00006

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