Invasion of Bacteria Swimming Upstream in Structured Microchannels

ORAL

Abstract

Bacteria can swim upstream in narrow channels, causing the contamination of biomedical devices and urinary tract infections (UTIs). Despite these implications for human health, this reorientation against flows remains underexplored in structured environments. Here, we investigate experimentally and theoretically how E. coli bacteria invade microfluidic channels with different architectures. By tracking single cells under different flow conditions, we reveal the three-stage dynamics of bacterial invasion: entering microchannels, propagating upstream, and escaping to enter the next one. Our results show how the channel size and shape significantly influence each of these contamination stages. Additionally, we explore how these processes affect bacterial collective motion and biofilm formation upstream. Our research guides the design of anti-invasion strategies for biomedical devices and sets the foundation for understanding microbial navigation in environmental flow networks.

*The authors acknowledge funding from the Charles E. Kaufman Foundation (Early Investigator Research Award KA2022-129523), the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA-NIFA AFRI grants 2020-67017-30776 and 2020-67015-32330), the Simons Foundation (Math + X grant), and the University of Pennsylvania (University Research Foundation Grant and Klein Family Social Justice Award).

Presenters

  • Ran Tao

    • University of Pennsylvania

Authors

  • Ran Tao

    • University of Pennsylvania
  • Suya Que

    • University of Pennsylvania
  • Albane Théry

    • Department of Mathematics, University of Pennsylvania
  • Arnold JTM Mathijssen

    • University of Pennsylvania