| Living on a surface: swarming and biofilm formation Trends in Microbiology, Volume 16, Issue 10, 1 October 2008, Pages 496-506 Natalie Verstraeten, Kristien Braeken, Bachaspatimayum Debkumari, Maarten Fauvart, Jan Fransaer, Jan Vermant and Jan Michiels Abstract Swarming is the fastest known bacterial mode of surface translocation and enables the rapid colonization of a nutrient-rich environment and host tissues. This complex multicellular behavior requires the integration of chemical and physical signals, which leads to the physiological and morphological differentiation of the bacteria into swarmer cells. Here, we provide a review of recent advances in the study of the regulatory pathways that lead to swarming behavior of different model bacteria. It has now become clear that many of these pathways also affect the formation of biofilms, surface-attached bacterial colonies. Decision-making between rapidly colonizing a surface and biofilm formation is central to bacterial survival among competitors. In the second part of this article, we review recent developments in the understanding of the transition between motile and sessile lifestyles of bacteria. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (1226 kb) |
| Lipid chemotaxis and signal transduction in Myxococcusxanthus Trends in Microbiology, Volume 9, Issue 3, 1 March 2001, Pages 126-129 Daniel B Kearns and Lawrence J Shimkets Abstract The lipid phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) is the first chemoattractant to be described for a surface-motile bacterium. In , the specific activity of PE is determined by its fatty acid components. Two active species have been identified: dilauroyl PE and dioleoyl PE. Excitation to dilauroyl PE requires fibril appendages and the presence of two cytoplasmic chemotaxis systems, of which one (Dif) appears to mediate excitation and the other (Frz) appears to mediate adaptation. A possible mechanism for fibril-mediated signal transduction is discussed, along with the potential roles for PE chemotaxis in the context of the life cycle. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (220 kb) |
| Taxing questions in development Trends in Microbiology, Volume 11, Issue 6, 1 June 2003, Pages 239-242 Judith P. Armitage Abstract Bacteria use taxis-controlled movement to reach their optimum environment. Chemotaxis is probably the best understood behavioural system in biology, biasing the normal random movement of bacteria using a phospho-relay pathway from receptors to the motility organelles. The pathways are typified by signal recognition and receptor adaptation, enabling bacteria to sense and respond to changing environments. Models have been derived from the single chemosensory pathway of but the sequencing of an increasing number of bacterial genomes is revealing genes that apparently encode multiple chemosensory pathways. Recently, data have accumulated suggesting that some of these pathways might not control motility, although the mechanisms by which this might happen remain unclear. Information from the soil bacterium could lead the way to an understanding of such mechanisms. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (104 kb) |
Copyright © 1982 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 40, Issue 3, 209-219, 1 December 1982
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(82)84476-7
Research Article
D. Lauffenburger, R. Aris and K. Keller
A mathematical model is developed to elucidate the effects of biophysical transport processes (nutrient diffusion, cell motility, and chemotaxis) along with biochemical reaction processes (cell growth and death, nutrient uptake) upon steady-state bacterial population growth in a finite one-dimensional region. The particular situation considered is that of growth limitation by a nutrient diffusing from an adjacent phase not accessible to the bacteria. It is demonstrated that the cell motility and chemotaxis properties can have great influence on steady-state population size. In fact, motility effects can be as significant as growth kinetic effects, in a manner analogous to diffusion- and reaction-limited regimes in chemically reacting systems. In particular, the following conclusions can be drawn from our analysis for bacterial populations growing at steady-state in a confined, unmixed region: (a) Random motility may lead to decreased population density; (b) chemotaxis can allow increased population density if the chemotactic response is large enough; (c) a species with superior motility properties can outgrow a species with superior growth kinetic properties; (d) motility effects become greater as the size of the confined growth region increases; and (e) motility effects are diminished by significant mass-transfer limitation of the nutrient from the adjacent source phase. The relationships of these results for populations to previous conclusions for individual cells is discussed, and implications for microbial competition are suggested.