Accumulation of swimming bacteria near a solid surface.

Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys

Physics Department, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island 02912, USA.

Published: October 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers studied how a strain of Caulobacter crescentus, a type of bacteria, swims near a surface using advanced microscopy.
  • They found that the bacteria tend to clump together a micrometer from the surface due to collisions that make them align parallel to it.
  • Simulations based on their model confirmed the findings and showed that faster, longer bacteria accumulate more near surfaces compared to slower, shorter ones.

Article Abstract

We measured the distribution of a forward swimming strain of Caulobacter crescentus near a surface using a three-dimensional tracking technique based on dark field microscopy and found that the swimming bacteria accumulate heavily within a micrometer from the surface. We attribute this accumulation to frequent collisions of the swimming cells with the surface, causing them to align parallel to the surface as they continually move forward. The extent of accumulation at the steady state is accounted for by balancing alignment caused by these collisions with the rotational Brownian motion of the micrometer-sized bacteria. We performed a simulation based on this model, which reproduced the measured results. Additional simulations demonstrate the dependence of accumulation on swimming speed and cell size, showing that longer and faster cells accumulate more near a surface than shorter and slower ones do.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.84.041932DOI Listing

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