Free boundary problem for the role of planktonic cells in biofilm formation and development
B. D'Acunto, L. Frunzo, V. Luongo, M.R. Mattei, A. Tenore

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel mathematical model for biofilm development that captures the interactions between planktonic and sessile bacteria, providing insights into biofilm growth and species colonization.
Contribution
It presents a new 1D free boundary model combining hyperbolic and elliptic equations to simulate biofilm dynamics and planktonic-sessile interactions.
Findings
Model accurately reproduces biofilm growth patterns.
Proves existence and uniqueness of solutions under certain conditions.
Overcomes limitations of previous ecological models.
Abstract
The dynamics of biofilm lifecycle are deeply influenced by the surrounding environment and the interactions between sessile and planktonic phenotypes. Bacterial biofilms typically develop in three distinct stages: attachment of cells to a surface, growth of cells into colonies, and detachment of cells from the colony into the surrounding medium. The attachment of planktonic cells plays a prominent role in the initial phase of biofilm lifecycle as it initiates the colony formation. During the maturation stage, biofilms harbor numerous microenvironments which lead to metabolic heterogeneity. Such microniches provide conditions suitable for the growth of new species, which are present in the bulk liquid as planktonic cells and can penetrate the porous biofilm matrix. We present a 1D continuum model on the interaction of sessile and planktonic phenotypes in biofilm lifestyle which considers…
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