AI Article Synopsis

  • Bacterial chemotaxis helps cells locate food, but not all attractants are nutrients and vice versa.
  • Microfluidic experiments reveal that cells initially cluster around a strong chemoattractant but then form an "escape band" to move toward a richer nutrient source after reaching a critical density.
  • The study identifies the competition between different receptors as a key mechanism behind this behavior and develops a mathematical model to explain the findings and predict relationships in the experimental setup.

Article Abstract

It is commonly believed that bacterial chemotaxis helps cells find food. However, not all attractants are nutrients, and not all nutrients are strong attractants. Here, by using microfluidic experiments, we studied chemotaxis behavior in the presence of a strong chemoattractant (e.g., aspartate or methylaspartate) gradient and an opposing gradient of diluted tryptone broth (TB) growth medium. Our experiments showed that cells initially accumulate near the strong attractant source. However, after the peak cell density (h) reaches a critical value [Formula: see text], the cells form a "escape band" (EB) that moves toward the chemotactically weaker but metabolically richer nutrient source. By using various mutant strains and varying experimental conditions, we showed that the competition between Tap and Tar receptors is the key molecular mechanism underlying the formation of the escape band. A mathematical model combining chemotaxis signaling and cell growth was developed to explain the experiments quantitatively. The model also predicted that the width w and the peak position [Formula: see text] of EB satisfy two scaling relations: [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text], where l is the channel length. Both scaling relations were verified by experiments. Our study shows that the combination of nutrient consumption, population growth, and chemotaxis with multiple receptors allows cells to search for optimal growth condition in complex environments with conflicting sources.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6369777PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1808200116DOI Listing

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