Physical determinants of 3D bacterial biofilm architectures
ORAL
Abstract
In many situations bacteria aggregate to form biofilms: dense, surface-associated, three-dimensional structures populated by cells embedded in matrix. Biofilm architectures are sculpted by mechanical processes including cell growth, cell-cell interactions and external forces. Using single-cell live imaging in combination with simulations we characterize the cell-cell interactions that generate Vibrio cholerae biofilm morphologies. Fluid shear is shown to affect biofilm shape through the growth rate and orientation of cells, despite spatial differences in shear stress being balanced by cell-cell adhesion. Our results demonstrate the importance of cell dynamics mediated by adhesion proteins and matrix generation in determining the global architecture of biofilm structures.
–
Presenters
-
Philip Pearce
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Authors
-
Philip Pearce
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
-
Raimo Hartmann
Max Planck Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology
-
Praveen Singh
Max Planck Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology
-
Rachel Mok
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
-
Boya Song
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
-
Jorn Dunkel
Mathematics, Massachusset Institute of Technology, Mathematics, MIT, Massachusetts Inst of Tech-MIT, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Mathematics, Massachusetts Inst of Tech-MIT
-
Knut Drescher
Max Planck Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology