Fluid dynamics and noise in bacterial cell-cell and cell-surface scattering
Knut Drescher, J\"orn Dunkel, Luis H. Cisneros, Sujoy Ganguly, Raymond, E. Goldstein

TL;DR
This study measures bacterial flow fields to evaluate the roles of fluid dynamics and stochastic noise in bacterial interactions, revealing that short-range forces dominate over long-range hydrodynamics in cell-cell and cell-surface scattering.
Contribution
First direct measurements of bacterial flow fields near surfaces, demonstrating the dominance of stochastic and short-range forces over long-range fluid effects in bacterial interactions.
Findings
Thermal and intrinsic stochasticity overshadow fluid dynamical effects in cell-cell interactions.
Short-range steric and lubrication forces primarily govern bacterial collisions.
Hydrodynamic effects influence bacteria near surfaces after collisions, affecting residence times.
Abstract
Bacterial processes ranging from gene expression to motility and biofilm formation are constantly challenged by internal and external noise. While the importance of stochastic fluctuations has been appreciated for chemotaxis, it is currently believed that deterministic long-range fluid dynamical effects govern cell-cell and cell-surface scattering - the elementary events that lead to swarming and collective swimming in active suspensions and to the formation of biofilms. Here, we report the first direct measurements of the bacterial flow field generated by individual swimming Escherichia coli both far from and near to a solid surface. These experiments allowed us to examine the relative importance of fluid dynamics and rotational diffusion for bacteria. For cell-cell interactions it is shown that thermal and intrinsic stochasticity drown the effects of long-range fluid dynamics,…
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