Enhancement of bacterial rheotaxis in non-Newtonian fluids
ORAL
Abstract
Many microorganisms exhibit upstream swimming, which is important to many biological processes and can cause contamination of biomedical devices and the infection of organs. This process, called rheotaxis, has been studied extensively in Newtonian fluids. However, most microorganisms thrive in non-Newtonian fluids that contain suspended polymers such as mucus and biofilms. In this talk, we investigate the rheotactic behavior of Escherichia coli near walls in non-Newtonian fluids. Our experiments demonstrate that bacterial upstream swimming is enhanced by an order of magnitude in shear-thinning polymeric fluids relative to Newtonian fluids. This result is explained by direct numerical simulations, revealing a torque that promotes the alignment of bacteria against the flow. From this analysis, we develop a theoretical model that accurately describes experimental rheotactic data in both Newtonian and ST fluids.
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Publication: https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2417614121
Presenters
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Paulo E. Arratia
University of Pennsylvania, Brown University
Authors
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Paulo E. Arratia
University of Pennsylvania, Brown University
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Albane Théry
Department of Mathematics, University of Pennsylvania
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Bryan O Torres Maldonado
University of Pennsylvania
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Ran Tao
University of Pennsylvania
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Arnold JTM Mathijssen
University of Pennsylvania