Substrate stiffness governs dynamics and self-organization of nascent biofilms
Garima Rani, Anupam Sengupta

TL;DR
This study investigates how substrate stiffness influences bacterial colony growth and self-organization, revealing that softer surfaces promote multilayered structures and larger colonies, with biomechanical modeling explaining these effects.
Contribution
The paper provides experimental and biomechanical modeling insights into how substrate elastic deformability affects bacterial colony dynamics and structure formation.
Findings
Softer substrates lead to multilayered, rougher colonies.
Harder substrates initially promote monolayer growth before multilayer transition.
Biomechanical model explains the influence of substrate stiffness on colony expansion.
Abstract
The evolutionary success of bacteria lies in their ability to form complex surface-associated communities in diverse biophysical settings. However, it remains poorly understood how compliance of soft surfaces, measured in terms of their elastic deformability, impacts the dynamics and self-organization of bacterial cells proliferating into colonies. Using experiments and biomechanical modelling, here we study the expansion and self-organization of bacterial cells into sessile colonies on soft substrates. The dynamics and spatiotemporal structures were captured by visualising growing bacterial colonies on nutrient-rich, soft agarose pads, with elastic modulus in the range ~0.3 kPA to ~100 kPA by varying the concentration of the agarose in the underlying substrate. Our results show that, at the scale of the colonies, significant differences emerge in the spreading dynamics and colony…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Bacterial biofilms and quorum sensing · Cellular Mechanics and Interactions
