AI Article Synopsis

  • Bacteria thrive in structured environments like colonies and biofilms, where their interactions can significantly influence health and drug resistance, yet our understanding of these dynamics remains limited.
  • This study introduces a method to create agarose microbeads that simulate natural bacterial conditions, allowing the co-cultivation of two fluorescently labeled bacterial strains at low cell numbers.
  • Results show that as the initial number of bacteria decreases, the final size of their colonies also reduces due to resource limitations, with distinct differences observed in colony shape and fluorescence between monocultures and co-cultures, providing a valuable platform for future research into bacterial interactions, including under antibiotic stress.

Article Abstract

Bacteria primarily live in structured environments, such as colonies and biofilms, attached to surfaces or growing within soft tissues. They are engaged in local competitive and cooperative interactions impacting our health and well-being, for example, by affecting population-level drug resistance. Our knowledge of bacterial competition and cooperation within soft matrices is incomplete, partly because we lack high-throughput tools to quantitatively study their interactions. Here, we introduce a method to generate a large amount of agarose microbeads that mimic the natural culture conditions experienced by bacteria to co-encapsulate two strains of fluorescence-labeled . Focusing specifically on low bacterial inoculum (1-100 cells/capsule), we demonstrate a study on the formation of colonies of both strains within these 3D scaffolds and follow their growth kinetics and interaction using fluorescence microscopy in highly replicated experiments. We confirmed that the average final colony size is inversely proportional to the inoculum size in this semi-solid environment as a result of limited available resources. Furthermore, the colony shape and fluorescence intensity per colony are distinctly different in monoculture and co-culture. The experimental observations in mono- and co-culture are compared with predictions from a simple growth model. We suggest that our high throughput and small footprint microbead system is an excellent platform for future investigation of competitive and cooperative interactions in bacterial communities under diverse conditions, including antibiotics stress.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10058504PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/mi14030645DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

bacterial competition
8
competitive cooperative
8
cooperative interactions
8
high-throughput gel
4
gel microbeads
4
microbeads incubators
4
bacterial
4
incubators bacterial
4
competition study
4
study bacteria
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!