Pattern engineering of living bacterial colonies using meniscus-driven fluidic channels
ORAL
Abstract
Engineering spatially organized biofilms for creating adaptive and sustainable biomaterials is a forthcoming mission of synthetic biology. Existing technologies of patterning biofilm materials suffer limitations associated with the high technical barrier and the requirements of special equipment. Here we present controlled meniscus-driven fluidics, MeniFluidics; an easily implementable technique for patterning living bacterial populations. We demonstrate multiscale patterning of living-colony and biofilm formation with submillimetre resolution. Relying on fast bacterial spreading in liquid channels, MeniFluidics allows controlled anisotropic bacterial colonies expansion both in space and time. The technique has also been applied for studying collective phenomena in confined bacterial swarming and organizing different fluorescently labelled Bacillus subtilis strains into a converged pattern. We believe that the robustness and low technical barrier of MeniFluidics offer a tool for developing living functional materials, bioengineering and bio-art, and adding to fundamental research of microbial interactions.
–
Presenters
-
Maria Chiara Roffin
Physics, University of Warwick, UK
Authors
-
Vasily Kantsler
Physics, University of Warwick, UK
-
Elena Ontañón-McDonald
School of Life Sciences, University of Warwick, UK
-
Cansu Kuey
School of Life Sciences, University of Warwick, UK
-
Manjari J Ghanshyam
School of Life Sciences, University of Warwick, UK
-
Maria Chiara Roffin
Physics, University of Warwick, UK
-
Munehiro Asally
School of Life Sciences, University of Warwick, UK