History-dependent attachment ofPseudomonas aeruginosato solid-liquid interfaces and the dependence of the bacterial surface density on the residence time distribution.

IF 2 4区 生物学 Q4 BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY Physical biology Pub Date : 2022-12-13 DOI:10.1088/1478-3975/aca6c9
A L Ritter, Yow-Ren Chang, Zachary Benmamoun, William A Ducker
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Abstract

This study investigates how the recent history of bacteria affects their attachment to a solid-liquid interface. We compare the attachment from a flowing suspension of the bacterium,Pseudomonas aeruginosaPAO1, after one of two histories: (a) passage through a tube packed with glass beads or (b) passage through an empty tube. The glass beads were designed to increase the rate of bacterial interactions with solid-liquid surfaces prior to observation in a flow cell. Analysis of time-lapse microscopy of the bacteria in the flow cells shows that the residence time distribution and surface density of bacteria differ for these two histories. In particular, bacteria exiting the bead-filled tube, in contrast to those bacteria exiting the empty tube, are less likely to attach to the subsequent flow cell window and begin surface growth. In contrast, when we compared two histories defined by different lengths of tubing, there was no difference in either the mean residence time or the surface density. In order to provide a framework for understanding these results, we present a phenomenological model in which the rate of bacterial surface density growth,dN(t)/dt, depends on two terms. One term models the initial attachment of bacteria to a surface, and is proportional to the nonprocessive cumulative residence time distribution for bacteria that attach and detach from the surface without cell division. The second term for the rate is proportional to the bacterial surface density and models surface cell division. The model is in surprisingly good agreement with the data even though the surface growth process is a complex interplay between attachment/detachment at the solid-liquid interface and cell division on the surface.

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铜绿假单胞菌在固液界面的历史依赖性附着及细菌表面密度对停留时间分布的依赖性。
这项研究调查了细菌的近期历史如何影响它们对固液界面的附着。我们比较了铜绿假单胞菌(Pseudomonas aeruginosaPAO1)的流动悬浮液在两种情况下的附着情况:(a)通过充满玻璃珠的管或(b)通过空管。设计玻璃微珠是为了增加细菌在流动池中观察之前与固液表面相互作用的速率。流式细胞内细菌的延时显微镜分析表明,在这两种历史中,细菌的停留时间分布和表面密度不同。特别是,与从空管中出来的细菌相比,从充满珠子的管中出来的细菌不太可能附着在随后的流动池窗口上并开始表面生长。相比之下,当我们比较由不同长度的油管定义的两种历史时,平均停留时间和表面密度都没有差异。为了提供一个理解这些结果的框架,我们提出了一个现象模型,其中细菌表面密度的增长率dN(t)/dt取决于两个项。其中一个术语模拟了细菌对表面的初始附着,并与细菌在没有细胞分裂的情况下附着和脱离表面的非进程累积停留时间分布成正比。速率的第二项与细菌表面密度成正比,并模拟表面细胞分裂。尽管表面生长过程是固液界面的附着/脱离与表面细胞分裂之间复杂的相互作用,但该模型与数据的一致性出奇地好。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Physical biology
Physical biology 生物-生物物理
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
50
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Physical Biology publishes articles in the broad interdisciplinary field bridging biology with the physical sciences and engineering. This journal focuses on research in which quantitative approaches – experimental, theoretical and modeling – lead to new insights into biological systems at all scales of space and time, and all levels of organizational complexity. Physical Biology accepts contributions from a wide range of biological sub-fields, including topics such as: molecular biophysics, including single molecule studies, protein-protein and protein-DNA interactions subcellular structures, organelle dynamics, membranes, protein assemblies, chromosome structure intracellular processes, e.g. cytoskeleton dynamics, cellular transport, cell division systems biology, e.g. signaling, gene regulation and metabolic networks cells and their microenvironment, e.g. cell mechanics and motility, chemotaxis, extracellular matrix, biofilms cell-material interactions, e.g. biointerfaces, electrical stimulation and sensing, endocytosis cell-cell interactions, cell aggregates, organoids, tissues and organs developmental dynamics, including pattern formation and morphogenesis physical and evolutionary aspects of disease, e.g. cancer progression, amyloid formation neuronal systems, including information processing by networks, memory and learning population dynamics, ecology, and evolution collective action and emergence of collective phenomena.
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