Heavy tailed bacterial motor switching statistics define macroscopic transport properties during upstream contamination by E. coli
ORAL
Abstract
The motility of E. Coli bacteria is described as a run and tumble process. Changes of direction correspond to a switch in the flagellar motor rotation. The run time distribution is described as an exponential decay of characteristic time close to 1s. Remarkably, it has been demonstrated that the generic response for the distribution of run times is not exponential, but a heavy tailed power law decay, which is at odds with the motility findings. We investigate the consequences of the motor statistics in the macroscopic bacterial transport. During upstream contamination processes in very confined channels, we have identified very long contamination tongues. Using a stochastic model considering bacterial dwelling times on the surfaces related to the run times, we are able to reproduce qualitatively and quantitatively the evolution of the contamination profiles when considering the power law run time distribution. However, the model fails to reproduce the qualitative dynamics when the classical exponential run and tumble distribution is considered. Moreover, we have corroborated the existence of a power law run time distribution by means of 3D Lagrangian tracking. We then argue that the macroscopic transport of bacteria is essentially determined by the motor rotation statistics.
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Authors
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N. Figueroa-Morales
PMMH-ESPCI, CNRS
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A. Rivera
IMRE, UH
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E. Altshuler
FF, U. of Havana
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T. Darnige
PMMH, U. Paris
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C. Douarche
LPS, CNRS, U. Paris-Sud
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R. Soto
DF, U. de Chile
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A. Lindner
PMMH, U. Paris
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Eric Clement
PMMH, U. Paris, PMMH-ESPCI-University Pierre et Marie Curie