Living bacteria rheology: Population growth, aggregation patterns, and collective behaviour under diferente shear flows


Autoria(s): Patrício, Pedro Manuel Alves; Almeida, Pedro Lúcio Maia Marques de; Portela, R.; Sobral, R. G.; Grilo, I. R.; Cidade, T.; Leal, Catarina Marques Mendes Almeida da Rosa
Data(s)

25/08/2015

25/08/2015

01/08/2014

Resumo

The activity of growing living bacteria was investigated using real-time and in situ rheology-in stationary and oscillatory shear. Two different strains of the human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus-strain COL and its isogenic cell wall autolysis mutant, RUSAL9-were considered in this work. For low bacteria density, strain COL forms small clusters, while the mutant, presenting deficient cell separation, forms irregular larger aggregates. In the early stages of growth, when subjected to a stationary shear, the viscosity of the cultures of both strains increases with the population of cells. As the bacteria reach the exponential phase of growth, the viscosity of the cultures of the two strains follows different and rich behaviors, with no counterpart in the optical density or in the population's colony-forming units measurements. While the viscosity of strain COL culture keeps increasing during the exponential phase and returns close to its initial value for the late phase of growth, where the population stabilizes, the viscosity of the mutant strain culture decreases steeply, still in the exponential phase, remains constant for some time, and increases again, reaching a constant plateau at a maximum value for the late phase of growth. These complex viscoelastic behaviors, which were observed to be shear-stress-dependent, are a consequence of two coupled effects: the cell density continuous increase and its changing interacting properties. The viscous and elastic moduli of strain COL culture, obtained with oscillatory shear, exhibit power-law behaviors whose exponents are dependent on the bacteria growth stage. The viscous and elastic moduli of the mutant culture have complex behaviors, emerging from the different relaxation times that are associated with the large molecules of the medium and the self-organized structures of bacteria. Nevertheless, these behaviors reflect the bacteria growth stage.

Identificador

PATRÍCIO, Pedro Manuel Alves, [et al] – Living bacteria rheology: Population growth, aggregation patterns, and collective behaviour under diferente shear flows. Physical Review E. ISSN: 1539-3755. Vol. 90, nr. 2 (2014), Art. nr. 022720

1539-3755

1550-2376

http://hdl.handle.net/10400.21/4982

10.1103/PhysRevE.90.022720

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Amer Physical Soc

Relação

022720

Direitos

closedAccess

Palavras-Chave #Soft Glassy Materials #Staphylococcus-Aureus #Cell #Detachment #Resistance #Insights #Biofilms
Tipo

article