# Microbial range expansions on liquid substrates

**Authors:** Severine Atis, Bryan T. Weinstein, Andrew W. Murray, and David R., Nelson

arXiv: 1812.09797 · 2019-07-03

## TL;DR

This study investigates how fluid flow generated by microbial colonies on viscous liquids influences their morphology and genetic structure, revealing active matter behavior and flow-driven pattern formation.

## Contribution

It demonstrates that yeast colonies on viscous fluids generate significant fluid flows that affect their growth patterns and genetic diversity, a novel insight into microbial active matter in liquid environments.

## Key findings

- Yeast colonies produce flows much faster than their expansion speed.
- Flow impacts colony morphology, causing fingers and breakup into fragments.
- Different viscosities lead to distinct colony structures and genetic diversity.

## Abstract

Despite the importance that fluid flow plays in transporting and organizing populations, few laboratory systems exist to systematically investigate the impact of advection on their spatial evolutionary dynamics. To address this problem, we study the morphology and genetic spatial structure of microbial colonies growing on the surface of a nutrient-laden fluid $10^4$ to $10^5$ times more viscous than water in Petri dishes, the extreme but finite viscosity inhibits undesired thermal convection and allows populations to effectively live at the air-liquid interface due to capillary forces. We discover that S. cerevisiae (baker's yeast) growing on a viscous liquid behave like "active matter": they metabolically generate fluid flows many times larger than their unperturbed colony expansion speed, and that flow, in return, can dramatically impact their colony morphology and spatial population genetics. We show that yeast cells generate fluid flows by consuming surrounding nutrients and decreasing the local substrate density, leading to misaligned fluid pressure and density contours, which ultimately generates vorticity via a thresholdless baroclinic instability. Numerical simulations demonstrate that an intense vortex ring is produced below the colony's edge and quantitatively predict the observed flow. As the viscosity of the substrate is lowered and the self-induced flow intensifies, we observe three distinct morphologies: at the highest viscosity,compact circular colonies similar to those grown on hard agar plates except with a stretched regime of exponential expansion, intermediate viscosities give rise to compact colonies with "fingers" that are ripped away to break into smaller cell clusters, and at the lowest viscosity, the expanding colony breaks up into many genetically-diverse, mutually repelling, island-like fragments of yeast colonies.

## Full text

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## Figures

20 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1812.09797/full.md

## References

70 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1812.09797/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1812.09797