Abstract

Bioluminescence images of nutrient rich liquid cultures of lux-gene reporter Escherichia coli were recorded for several hours after being placed into small diameter cylindrical containers (glass tubes and microtiter plate wells). It was found that luminous cells distribute near the three-phase contact line forming an irregular array of clumps, channels and plumes at the solid–liquid interface. The experimentally observed quasi-2-dimensional spatiotemporal patterns (‘venation patterns’) were simulated fairly well by the mean field Keller–Segel equations of chemotactic aggregation. The equations use a logistic cell growth term whose carrying capacity depends on oxygen concentration. The experimental and numerical results are interpreted as follows: (1) the patterns of bioluminescence form due to arrested phase separation in the culture; (2) the luminous phase formed along the upper part of the solid–liquid interface is a weak gel-like network of metabolically active bacteria which exhibit ligand–receptor type cell–cell adhesion and high rates of oxidative phosphorylation; (3) active bacteria in this gel can be viewed as self-generated Janus particles, i.e., polarized particles whose surface is divided into two chemically varying regions, the adhering region and the non-adhering region; (4) the life-time of the metabolically active bacterium (living Janus particle) in the weak gel phase is estimated to be ∼25 s; (5) the observed network of luminous bacteria can be viewed as a biofilm, in which bacteria move due to self-phoresis by generating pH gradients via metabolic reactions; and (6) the reversible clustering of cells near interfaces is attributed to the bacterial energy-taxis phenomenon.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call