Abstract

Bacterial habitats are often associated with fluid flow environments. Bacterial twitching is important for initial bacterial colonization and biofilm formation. The existing research about bacteria twitching is largely experimental orientated. There is a lack of models of twitching motility of bacteria in shear flows, which could provide fundamental understanding about how bacterial twitching would be affected by bacteria associated properties such as number of pili and their distribution on the cell body and environmental factors such as flow and surface patterns. In this work, a three-dimensional modelling approach of Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) coupled with the Discrete Element Method (DEM) proposed to study bacterial twitching on flat and groove surfaces under shear flow conditions. Rod-shaped bacteria are modelled as groups of spherical particles and Type IV pili attached to bacteria are modelled as dynamic springs which can elongate, retract, attach and detach. The CFD-DEM model of rod-shape bacteria is validated against orbiting of immotile bacteria in shear flows. The effects of fluid flow rate and surface topography on twitching motility are studied. The model can successfully predict upstream twitching motility of rod-shaped bacteria in shear flows. Our model can predict that there would be an optimal range of wall shear stress in which bacterial upstream twitching is most efficient. The results also indicate that when bacteria twitch on groove surfaces, they are likely to accumulate around the downstream side of the groove walls.

Highlights

  • Bacterial habitats are often associated with fluid flow environments

  • Three-dimensional Computational Fluid Dynamics coupled with Discrete Element Method (CFD-DEM) is used to model rod-shaped bacterial twitching on flat and groove surfaces under various shear flow conditions

  • The novelty of our model is the use of a three-way coupled CFD-DEM model together with pili dynamics to study bacterial twitching on flat and groove surfaces with fluid flowing over the surfaces

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Summary

Introduction

Bacterial habitats are often associated with fluid flow environments. Bacterial twitching is important for initial bacterial colonization and biofilm formation. A three-dimensional modelling approach of Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) coupled with the Discrete Element Method (DEM) proposed to study bacterial twitching on flat and groove surfaces under shear flow conditions. If a pilus detaches while all the pili are in high tension and anti-parallel configuration, the bacterium will suddenly align along the resultant direction of the remaining bounded-pili causing a sudden change of the twitching direction This is the so called slingshot motion and bacteria may use this mechanism to change crawling direction[3,4]. Three-dimensional Computational Fluid Dynamics coupled with Discrete Element Method (CFD-DEM) is used to model rod-shaped bacterial twitching on flat and groove surfaces under various shear flow conditions. The model is generic in nature, but the parameters are chosen such that they are relevant to the Pseudomonas aeruginosa

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