Abstract

The mechanical and adhesive properties as well as the turgor pressure of microbes play an important role in cell growth and aggregation. By applying AFM together with finite element modelling, one can determine the cell wall structural homogeneity, mechanical and cell-to-cell adhesive properties for aggregated Methanosarcina barkeri cells. This also allows a novel approach to determine in-aggregate turgor pressure determination. Analyzing the AFM force–indentation response of the aggregates under loads less than 10nN, our study reveals structural inhomogeneity of the polymeric part of the cell wall material and suggests that the cell wall consists of two layers of methanochondroitin (external: with a thickness of 3±1nm and internal: with a thickness of 169±30nm). On average, the hyperelastic finite element model showed that the internal layer is more rigid (μ=14±4MPa) than the external layer (μ=2.8±0.9MPa). To determine the turgor pressure and adhesiveness of the cells, a specific mode of indentation (under a load of 45nN), aimed towards the centre of the individual aggregate, was performed. By modelling the AFM induced decohesion of the aggregate, the turgor pressure and the cell-to-cell adhesive interface properties could be determined. On average, the turgor pressure is estimated to be 59±22kPa, the interface strength is 78±12kPa and the polymer network extensibility is 2.8±0.9nm. We predict that internal cell wall comprised highly compressed methanochondroitin chains and we are able to identify a conceptual model for stress dependent inner cell wall growth.

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