Chemotaxis in P. Aeruginosa Biofilm Formation

ORAL

Abstract

Pseudomonas biofilms form infections in the lungs of Cystic Fibrosis (CF) patients that damage lung tissue and lead to death. Previous work shows chemotaxis is important for Pseudomonas in CF lungs. The work studied swimming bacteria at high concentrations. In contrast, medically relevant biofilms initiate from sparse populations of surface-bound bacteria. The recent development of software techniques for automated, high-throughput bacteria tracking leaves us well-poised to quantitatively study these chemotactic conditions. We will develop experimental systems for such studies, focusing on L-Arginine (an amino acid), D-Galactose (a sugar present in lungs), and succinate and glucose (carbon sources for bacteria). This suite of chemoattractants will allow us to study how chemoattractant characteristics--size and diffusion behavior--change bacterial response; the interaction of competing chemoattractants; and, differences in bacterial behaviors, like motility modes, in response to different types of chemoattractions and varying neighbor cell density.

Authors

  • Samuel Bienvenu

    UT Austin

  • Shinji Strain

    UT Austin, Center for Nonlinear Dynamics, University of Texas at Austin, Department of Physics, University of Texas at Austin

  • Travis Thatcher

    UT Austin

  • Vernita Gordon

    University of Texas, Austin, UT Austin, Center for Nonlinear Dynamics, University of Texas at Austin