123 research outputs found
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Overview of mathematical approaches used to model bacterial chemotaxis II: bacterial populations
We review the application of mathematical modeling to understanding the behavior of populations of chemotactic bacteria. The application of continuum mathematical models, in particular generalized KellerβSegel models, is discussed along with attempts to incorporate the microscale (individual) behavior on the macroscale, modeling the interaction between different species of bacteria, the interaction of bacteria with their environment, and methods used to obtain experimentally verified parameter values. We allude briefly to the role of modeling pattern formation in understanding collective behavior within bacterial populations. Various aspects of each model are discussed and areas for possible future research are postulated
Fluid dynamics and noise in bacterial cell-cell and cell-surface scattering
Bacterial processes ranging from gene expression to motility and biofilm
formation are constantly challenged by internal and external noise. While the
importance of stochastic fluctuations has been appreciated for chemotaxis, it
is currently believed that deterministic long-range fluid dynamical effects
govern cell-cell and cell-surface scattering - the elementary events that lead
to swarming and collective swimming in active suspensions and to the formation
of biofilms. Here, we report the first direct measurements of the bacterial
flow field generated by individual swimming Escherichia coli both far from and
near to a solid surface. These experiments allowed us to examine the relative
importance of fluid dynamics and rotational diffusion for bacteria. For
cell-cell interactions it is shown that thermal and intrinsic stochasticity
drown the effects of long-range fluid dynamics, implying that physical
interactions between bacteria are determined by steric collisions and
near-field lubrication forces. This dominance of short-range forces closely
links collective motion in bacterial suspensions to self-organization in driven
granular systems, assemblages of biofilaments, and animal flocks. For the
scattering of bacteria with surfaces, long-range fluid dynamical interactions
are also shown to be negligible before collisions; however, once the bacterium
swims along the surface within a few microns after an aligning collision,
hydrodynamic effects can contribute to the experimentally observed, long
residence times. As these results are based on purely mechanical properties,
they apply to a wide range of microorganisms.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, http://www.pnas.org/content/108/27/1094
Curved Tails in Polymerization-Based Bacterial Motility
The curved actin ``comet-tail'' of the bacterium Listeria monocytogenes is a
visually striking signature of actin polymerization-based motility. Similar
actin tails are associated with Shigella flexneri, spotted-fever Rickettsiae,
the Vaccinia virus, and vesicles and microspheres in related in vitro systems.
We show that the torque required to produce the curvature in the tail can arise
from randomly placed actin filaments pushing the bacterium or particle. We find
that the curvature magnitude determines the number of actively pushing
filaments, independent of viscosity and of the molecular details of force
generation. The variation of the curvature with time can be used to infer the
dynamics of actin filaments at the bacterial surface.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, Latex2
Cell morphology governs directional control in swimming bacteria
The ability to rapidly detect and track nutrient gradients is key to the ecological success of motile bacteria in aquatic systems. Consequently, bacteria have evolved a number of chemotactic strategies that consist of sequences of straight runs and reorientations. Theoretically, both phases are affected by fluid drag and Brownian motion, which are themselves governed by cell geometry. Here, we experimentally explore the effect of cell length on control of swimming direction. We subjected Escherichia coli to an antibiotic to obtain motile cells of different lengths, and characterized their swimming patterns in a homogeneous medium. As cells elongated, angles between runs became smaller, forcing a change from a run-and-tumble to a run-and-stop/reverse pattern. Our results show that changes in the motility pattern of microorganisms can be induced by simple morphological variation, and raise the possibility that changes in swimming pattern may be triggered by both morphological plasticity and selection on morphology
Quantitative Modeling of Escherichia coli Chemotactic Motion in Environments Varying in Space and Time
Escherichia coli chemotactic motion in spatiotemporally varying environments is studied by using a computational model based on a coarse-grained description of the intracellular signaling pathway dynamics. We find that the cell's chemotaxis drift velocity vd is a constant in an exponential attractant concentration gradient [L]βexp(Gx). vd depends linearly on the exponential gradient G before it saturates when G is larger than a critical value GC. We find that GC is determined by the intracellular adaptation rate kR with a simple scaling law: . The linear dependence of vd on Gβ=βd(ln[L])/dx directly demonstrates E. coli's ability in sensing the derivative of the logarithmic attractant concentration. The existence of the limiting gradient GC and its scaling with kR are explained by the underlying intracellular adaptation dynamics and the flagellar motor response characteristics. For individual cells, we find that the overall average run length in an exponential gradient is longer than that in a homogeneous environment, which is caused by the constant kinase activity shift (decrease). The forward runs (up the gradient) are longer than the backward runs, as expected; and depending on the exact gradient, the (shorter) backward runs can be comparable to runs in a spatially homogeneous environment, consistent with previous experiments. In (spatial) ligand gradients that also vary in time, the chemotaxis motion is damped as the frequency Ο of the time-varying spatial gradient becomes faster than a critical value Οc, which is controlled by the cell's chemotaxis adaptation rate kR. Finally, our model, with no adjustable parameters, agrees quantitatively with the classical capillary assay experiments where the attractant concentration changes both in space and time. Our model can thus be used to study E. coli chemotaxis behavior in arbitrary spatiotemporally varying environments. Further experiments are suggested to test some of the model predictions
Novel Methods for Analysing Bacterial Tracks Reveal Persistence in Rhodobacter sphaeroides
Tracking bacteria using video microscopy is a powerful experimental approach to probe their motile behaviour. The
trajectories obtained contain much information relating to the complex patterns of bacterial motility. However, methods for
the quantitative analysis of such data are limited. Most swimming bacteria move in approximately straight lines,
interspersed with random reorientation phases. It is therefore necessary to segment observed tracks into swimming and
reorientation phases to extract useful statistics. We present novel robust analysis tools to discern these two phases in tracks.
Our methods comprise a simple and effective protocol for removing spurious tracks from tracking datasets, followed by
analysis based on a two-state hidden Markov model, taking advantage of the availability of mutant strains that exhibit
swimming-only or reorientating-only motion to generate an empirical prior distribution. Using simulated tracks with varying
levels of added noise, we validate our methods and compare them with an existing heuristic method. To our knowledge this
is the first example of a systematic assessment of analysis methods in this field. The new methods are substantially more
robust to noise and introduce less systematic bias than the heuristic method. We apply our methods to tracks obtained
from the bacterial species Rhodobacter sphaeroides and Escherichia coli. Our results demonstrate that R. sphaeroides exhibits
persistence over the course of a tumbling event, which is a novel result with important implications in the study of this and
similar species
Voronoi Tessellation Captures Very Early Clustering of Single Primary Cells as Induced by Interactions in Nascent Biofilms
Biofilms dominate microbial life in numerous aquatic ecosystems, and in engineered and medical systems, as well. The formation of biofilms is initiated by single primary cells colonizing surfaces from the bulk liquid. The next steps from primary cells towards the first cell clusters as the initial step of biofilm formation remain relatively poorly studied. Clonal growth and random migration of primary cells are traditionally considered as the dominant processes leading to organized microcolonies in laboratory grown monocultures. Using Voronoi tessellation, we show that the spatial distribution of primary cells colonizing initially sterile surfaces from natural streamwater community deviates from uniform randomness already during the very early colonisation. The deviation from uniform randomness increased with colonisation β despite the absence of cell reproduction β and was even more pronounced when the flow of water above biofilms was multidirectional and shear stress elevated. We propose a simple mechanistic model that captures interactions, such as cell-to-cell signalling or chemical surface conditioning, to simulate the observed distribution patterns. Model predictions match empirical observations reasonably well, highlighting the role of biotic interactions even already during very early biofilm formation despite few and distant cells. The transition from single primary cells to clustering accelerated by biotic interactions rather than by reproduction may be particularly advantageous in harsh environments β the rule rather than the exception outside the laboratory
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Production test IP-750 raw water as a reactor coolant. Final report
Approximately ten years ago single-tube tests demonstrated the feasibility of using unfiltered river water as a reactor coolant from the standpoint of aluminum corrosion and film formation. However, some effluent activity penalty was indicated. Inasmuch as both current water plant operation and the characteristics of Columbia River water have changed, it was deemed appropriate to reinvestigate the use of partially treated water as a reactor coolant. This report summarizes the results of a half-reactor test carried out at F Reactor
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