Abstract

Several species of bacteria are able to modify their swimming behavior in response to chemical attractants or repellents. Methods for the quantitative analysis of bacterial chemotaxis such as quantitative capillary assays are tedious and time-consuming. Computer-based video analysis of swimming bacteria represents a valuable method to directly assess their chemotactic response. Even though multiple studies have used this approach to elucidate various aspects of bacterial chemotaxis, to date, no computer software for such analyses is freely available. Here, we introduce TaxisPy, a Python-based software for the quantitative analysis of bacterial chemotaxis. The software comes with an intuitive graphical user interface and can be accessed easily through Docker on any operating system. Using a video of freely swimming cells as input, TaxisPy estimates the culture's average tumbling frequency over time. We demonstrate the utility of the software by assessing the effect of different concentrations of the attractant shikimate on the swimming behavior of Pseudomonas putida F1 and by capturing the adaptation process that Escherichia coli undergoes after being exposed to l-aspartate.

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