Bacteria optimize tumble bias to strategically navigate surface constraints
Antai Tao, Guangzhe Liu, Rongjing Zhang, Junhua Yuan

TL;DR
This study investigates how bacteria adjust their tumble bias to optimize surface navigation, balancing exploration and escape, with implications for understanding bacterial behavior in complex environments.
Contribution
It reveals the strategic relationship between tumble bias and surface residence time, highlighting a phenotypic variation mechanism for bacterial survival and exploration.
Findings
Surface residence time decreases with increasing tumble bias.
Surface diffusivity peaks near the wild-type tumble bias (~0.25).
Phenotypic variation in tumble bias aids bacterial survival strategies.
Abstract
In natural environments, solid surfaces present both opportunities and challenges for bacteria. On one hand, they serve as platforms for biofilm formation, crucial for bacterial colonization and resilience in harsh conditions. On the other hand, surfaces can entrap bacteria for extended periods and force them to swim along circular trajectories, constraining their environmental exploration compared to the freedom they experience in the bulk liquid. Here, through systematic single-cell behavioral measurements, phenomenological modeling, and theoretical analysis, we reveal how bacteria strategically navigate these factors. We observe that bacterial surface residence time decreases sharply with increasing tumble bias from zero, transitioning to a plateau at the mean tumble bias of wild-type Escherichia coli (~ 0.25). Furthermore, we find that bacterial surface diffusivity peaks near this…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGut microbiota and health
