Impacts of biosurfactants on bacterial spreading in soil

ORAL

Abstract

Mechanistic understanding of bacterial spreading in soil, which has both air and water in angular pore space, is critical to control pathogenic contamination of soil and design bioremediation projects. A recent study (Yang et al., PNAS, 2021) shows that Pseudomonas aeruginosa can self-generate flows along sharp corners by producing rhamnolipids, a type of biosurfactants that change the hydrophobicity of solid surfaces. We hypothesize that other types of biosurfactants and biosurfactant-producing bacteria can also generate corner flows. Here, we first demonstrate that rhamnolipids and surfactin, biosurfactants with different chemical structures, can generate corner flows. We identified the critical concentrations of these two biosurfactants to generate corner flow. Second, we demonstrate that two common soil bacteria, P. fluorescens and B. subtilis (which produce rhamnolipids and surfactin, respectively), can generate corner flows along sharp corners at the speed of several millimeters per hour. We further show that a surfactin-deficient mutant of B. subtilis cannot generate corner flow. Third, we show that similar to P. aeruginosa, the critical corner angle for P. fluorescens and B. subtilis to generate corner flows can be predicted from classic corner flow theories. Finally, we show that the height of corner flows is limited by the roundness of corners. Our results suggest that biosurfactant-induced corner flows are prevalent in soil and should be considered in the modeling and prediction of bacterial spreading in soil. The critical biosurfactant concentrations we identify and the mathematical models we propose will provide a theoretical foundation for future predictions of bacterial spreading in soil.

Publication: Y. Li, J. Sanfilippo, D. Kearns, and J. Yang, "Corner flows induced by surfactant-producing bacteria Pseudomonas fluorescens and Bacillus subtilis," Microbiology Spectrum, 2022. (in print)
J. Yang, J. Sanfilippo, N. Abbasia, Z. Gitai, B. Bassler, and H. Stone "Evidence for biosurfactant-induced flow in corners and bacterial spreading in unsaturated porous media," Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, vol. 118, pp. e2111060118, 2021.

Presenters

  • Judy Yang

    University of Minnesota-Twin Cities

Authors

  • Judy Yang

    University of Minnesota-Twin Cities

  • Yuan Li

    University of Minnesota

  • Joe Sanfilippo

    UIUC

  • Daniel Kearns

    Indiana University

  • Howard A Stone

    Princeton University

  • Bonnie L Bassler

    Princeton University

  • Niki Abbasi

    Princeton University

  • Zemer Gitai

    Princeton University