Force generation by groups of migrating bacteria.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics, Princeton University, NJ 08544;

Published: July 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • The text explores how bacteria move collectively, comparing two specific mechanisms: twitching and gliding.
  • Using traction force microscopy, it finds that twitching generates local traction forces around 50 pN for individual cells and around 100 pN for groups, with rapid fluctuations.
  • In contrast, gliding shows low traction when isolated but increases about fivefold in groups, with advancing cells pushing in the direction of motion, indicating both mechanisms result in stronger collective forces.

Article Abstract

From colony formation in bacteria to wound healing and embryonic development in multicellular organisms, groups of living cells must often move collectively. Although considerable study has probed the biophysical mechanisms of how eukaryotic cells generate forces during migration, little such study has been devoted to bacteria, in particular with regard to the question of how bacteria generate and coordinate forces during collective motion. This question is addressed here using traction force microscopy. We study two distinct motility mechanisms of , namely, twitching and gliding. For twitching, powered by type-IV pilus retraction, we find that individual cells exert local traction in small hotspots with forces on the order of 50 pN. Twitching bacterial groups also produce traction hotspots, but with forces around 100 pN that fluctuate rapidly on timescales of <1.5 min. Gliding, the second motility mechanism, is driven by lateral transport of substrate adhesions. When cells are isolated, gliding produces low average traction on the order of 1 Pa. However, traction is amplified approximately fivefold in groups. Advancing protrusions of gliding cells push, on average, in the direction of motion. Together, these results show that the forces generated during twitching and gliding have complementary characters, and both forces have higher values when cells are in groups.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5514709PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1621469114DOI Listing

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