Individual-based Biophysical Modeling of Spatial Dynamics of Chemotactic Microbial Populations
ORAL
Abstract
One important direction of synthetic biology is to establish desired spatial structures from microbial populations. Underlying this structural development process are different driving factors, among which bacterial motility and chemotaxis serve as a major force. Here, we present an individual-based, biophysical computational framework for mechanistic and multiscale simulation of the spatiotemporal dynamics of motile and chemotactic microbial populations. The framework integrates cellular movement with spatial population growth, mechanical and chemical cellular interactions, and intracellular molecular kinetics. It is validated by a statistical comparison of single-cell chemotaxis simulations with reported experiments. The framework successfully captures colony range expansion of growing isogenic populations, and also reveals chemotaxismodulated, spatial patterns of a two-species amensal community. Partial differential equation-based models subsequently validate these simulation findings. The study provides a versatile computational tool to uncover the fundamentals of microbial spatial ecology as well as to facilitate the design of synthetic consortia for desired spatial patterns.
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Publication: C. Ni and T. Lu (2022) Individual-based modeling of spatial dynamics of chemotactic microbial populations. ACS Synthetic Biology, doi: 10.1021/acssynbio.2c00322.
Presenters
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Congjian Ni
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Authors
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Congjian Ni
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign