Roughening instability of growing three-dimensional bacterial colonies

ORAL

Abstract

How do growing bacterial colonies get their shape? While this process of morphogenesis is well-studied in 2D, many bacterial colonies inhabit 3D environments, such as gels and tissues in the body, or soils, sediments, and subsurface media. Here, we describe a morphological instability exhibited by dense colonies of non-motile bacteria growing in 3D. Using experiments in transparent 3D media, we show that colonies of Escherichia coli and Vibrio cholerae generically roughen as they consume nutrients and grow, eventually forming branched, finger-like patterns. This behavior reflects a key difference between 2D and 3D colonies: while 2D colonies can more easily access the nutrients needed for growth, the 3D colonies inevitably become nutrient-limited in their interior, driving a transition to rough, branched growth. We elucidate this behavior using linear stability analysis and numerical simulations of a continuum active fluid model, which indeed reveal that when the size of the growing colony far exceeds the nutrient penetration length, nutrient depletion drives a transition to roughening with a characteristic universal shape that can be compared with experiments.

*NSF grants CBET-1941716 and DMR-2011750, the Eric and Wendy Schmidt Transformative Technology Fund at Princeton, the Princeton Center for the Physics of Biological Function through the NSF grant PHY-1734030, the NIH through the grant R01 GM082938, the Princeton Center for Theoretical Science, and the Human Frontier Science Program through the grant LT000035/2021-C.

Presenters

  • Alejandro Martinez-Calvo

    • Princeton
    • Princeton University

Authors

  • Alejandro Martinez-Calvo

    • Princeton
    • Princeton University
  • Tapomoy Bhattacharjee

    • Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
    • Princeton University
    • National Centre for Biological Sciences, Bangalore
    • NCBS Bangalore, Princeton University
  • R. Konane Bay

    • Princeton University
  • Ned S Wingreen

    • Princeton University
  • Sujit S Datta

    • Princeton University