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Flow-induced symmetry breaking in growing bacterial biofilms

ORAL

Abstract

Bacterial biofilms represent a major form of microbial life on Earth and serve as a model active nematic system, in which activity results from growth of the rod-shaped bacterial cells. In their natural environments, ranging from human organs to industrial pipelines, biofilms have evolved to grow robustly under significant fluid shear. Despite intense practical and theoretical interest, it is unclear how strong fluid flow alters the local and global architectures of biofilms. Here, we combine highly time-resolved single-cell live imaging with 3D multi-scale modeling to investigate the mechanisms by which flow affects the dynamics of all individual cells in growing biofilms. Our experiments and cell-based simulations reveal three quantitatively different growth phases in strong external flow, and the transitions between them. In the initial stages of biofilm development, flow induces a downstream gradient in cell orientation, causing asymmetrical droplet-like biofilm shapes. In the later developmental stages, when the majority of cells are sheltered from the flow by the surrounding extracellular matrix, buckling-induced cell verticalization in the biofilm core restores radially symmetric biofilm growth, in agreement with predictions of a 3D continuum model.

Presenters

  • Boya Song

    MIT, Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT, Department of Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Authors

  • Philip Pearce

    Harvard Medical School, Department of Systems Biology, Harvard Medical School

  • Boya Song

    MIT, Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT, Department of Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Dominic Skinner

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT, Department of Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Rachel V Mok

    Department of Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Raimo Hartmann

    Max Planck Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology

  • Praveen Singh

    Max Planck Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology

  • Hannah Jeckel

    Max-Planck Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology, Marburg, Max Planck Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology

  • Jeff S Oishi

    Department of Physics, Bates College

  • Knut Drescher

    Max-Planck Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology, Marburg, Max Planck Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology

  • Jorn Dunkel

    Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT, Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT, Department of Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT, Mathematics, MIT, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology