In this study, a comparison of biofilm formation, extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) production, protein and polysaccharides estimation, and protein profiling through SDS-PAGE, FTIR, GC-MS, ESI-MS, SEM, and AFM analysis were done for EPS from epilithic bacteria Brevundimonas faecalis BC1 obtained from monumental rock under normal room temperature and heat stressed condition. Heat stress (60 ± 2 °C) that simulates hot monumental rock surfaces during the summer season caused bacteria BC1 to produce more EPS (8.56 g/L), biofilm, protein and polysaccharides, extra SDS-PAGE protein bands of different molecular weight than their control counterpart. FTIR and GC-MS analysis showed extra polysaccharide formation in the EPS under heat stress and ESI-MS analysis clearly showed differences in structural components of EPS from two different sources. Consistently, SEM and AFM showed more branching structural components with dentate spikes in the EPS obtained from a heat-stressed source than from its counterpart, suggesting their protective role toward heat stress and adhesive potential for biofilm.
Keywords: AFM; EPS; ESI-MS; FTIR; SEM; protein profiling.