Bacterial Motility
bacterial motility
“Life in a Tight Spot: How Bacteria Move in Heterogeneous Media”
Bacterial motility is central to processes in agriculture, the environment, and medicine. While motility is typically studied in homogeneous environments, many bacterial habitats—e.g., soils, sediments, and biological gels/tissues—are heterogeneous porous media. Here, through studies of E. coli in transparent 3D porous media, we demonstrate that confinement in a heterogeneous medium fundamentally alters motility. In particular, we show how the paradigm of run-and-tumble motility is dramatically altered by pore-scale confinement, both for cells performing undirected motion and those performing chemotaxis, directed motion in response to a chemical stimulus. Our porous media also enable precisely structured multi-cellular communities to be 3D printed. Using this capability, we show how confinement-dependent chemotaxis enables populations to stabilize large-scale perturbations in their overall morphology. Together, our work thus reveals new principles to predict and control the behavior of bacteria, and active matter in general, in heterogeneous environments.
Motility-dependent pathogenicity of a spirochetal bacterium
Motility is a crucial virulence factor for many species of bacteria, but it is not fully understood how bacterial motility is practically involved in pathogenicity. This time I will give a talk on the association of motility with pathogenicity in the zoonotic spirochete bacterium Leptospira. Recently, we measured swimming force of individual leptospires using optical tweezers and found that they can generate ~30 times of the swimming force of E. coli. We also observed that leptospires increase the reversal frequency of swimming at the gel-liquid interface, resembling host dermis exposed to contaminated water (Abe et al., 2020, Sci Rep). These could be involved in percutaneous infection of the spirochete. We have shown that Leptospira not only swims in liquid but also moves over solid surfaces (Tahara et al., 2018, Sci Adv). We quantified the surface motility called “crawling” on cultured kidney tissues from various mammals, showing that pathogenic leptospires crawl over the tissue surfaces more persistently that non-pathogenic ones (Xu et al., 2020, Front Microbiol). I will discuss the spirochete motility related to pathogenicity from the biophysical viewpoint.