Abstract

Bacteria often adhere to surfaces, where they form communities known as biofilms. Recently, it has been shown that biofilm formation initiates with the microscopically heterogeneous deposition of a skeleton of extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) by individual cells crawling on the surface, followed by growth of the biofilm into a surface-covering continuum. Here we report microfluidic experiments with Pseudomonas aeruginosa biofilms showing that their “hidden” heterogeneity can affect the later dynamics of their disruption. Using controlled air bubbles as a model for mechanical insult, we demonstrate that biofilm disruption is strongly dependent on biofilm age, and that disruption to early-stage biofilms can take the shape of a semi-regular pattern of ~15 µm diameter holes from which bacteria have been removed. We explain hole formation in terms of the rupture and retreat of the thin liquid layer created by the long bubble, which scrapes bacteria off the surface and rearranges their distribution. We find that the resulting pattern correlates with the spatial distribution of EPS: holes form where there is less EPS, whereas regions with more EPS act as strongholds against the scraping liquid front. These results show that heterogeneity in the microscale EPS skeleton of biofilms has profound consequences for later dynamics, including disruption. Because few attached cells suffice to regrow a biofilm, these results point to the importance of considering microscale heterogeneity when designing and assessing the effectiveness of biofilm removal strategies by mechanical forces.

Highlights

  • Biofilms are surface-associated microbial communities encased in a self-secreted matrix of extracellular polymeric substances (EPS)

  • The air bubble traveled over each patch in approximately 10 s, causing a dramatic and highly characteristic disruption of the original biofilm patch: the resulting biofilms were in the shape of a semi-regular pattern of holes, from which bacteria had been entirely removed, separated by ‘bacterial levees’, consisting of a concentrated monolayer of cells (Fig. 1b)

  • We have demonstrated that mechanical insults can result in partial removal of biofilms, depending on biofilm age, with the emergence of characteristically heterogeneous patterns

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Biofilms are surface-associated microbial communities encased in a self-secreted matrix of extracellular polymeric substances (EPS). For early-stage biofilms (when bacterial colonies are organized as monolayers), insult by mechanical forces results in a new phenomenon, whereby the passage of a long bubble opens regular holes in the biofilm but fails to completely remove it. We rationalize this finding in terms of the competition between dislodging shear forces and the spatially varying adhesion strength resulting from intrinsic heterogeneity in EPS distribution within the biofilm

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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CONCLUSIONS
METHODS
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