细菌利用鞭毛拉锯战在各向异性介质中航行

PRX Life Pub Date : 2024-07-25 DOI:10.1103/prxlife.2.033004
Ameya G. Prabhune, A. S. García-Gordillo, Igor S. Aranson, Thomas R. Powers, Nuris Figueroa-Morales
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引用次数: 0

摘要

细菌在生物膜、生物聚合物溶液和土壤孔隙等各向异性介质中茁壮成长。在机械各向异性很强的介质中,物理相互作用迫使细菌沿着偏好的方向游动,而不是执行三维随机游动,这是因为细菌具有奔跑和翻滚行为。尽管细菌在自然界中无处不在,而且对人类健康非常重要,但人们对细菌在这些介质中受限于一维运动的导航机制却知之甚少。利用生物兼容液晶,我们发现了细菌在各向异性介质中转换方向的两种机制。首先,鞭毛集结成束,从细胞体的两端互相作用,在这种鞭毛 "拉锯战 "中占优势的一侧推动细菌沿向日葵方向前进。细菌经常通过在细胞的另一侧进行鞭毛弯曲和重组的机制,将游动方向逆转 180∘。液晶的弗兰克弹性能决定了鞭毛欧拉屈曲的最小压缩量。当介质的弹性超过临界值时,鞭毛马达就无法产生鞭毛屈曲所需的扭矩,细菌就会被卡在其构型中。不过,我们发现细菌仍然可以利用第二种机制切换游动方向,即单个鞭毛束交替旋转。我们的研究结果揭示了细菌在各向异性介质中的航行策略,并提出了有关感知环境线索和在鞭毛束水平上进行适应的问题。这里发现的两种适应机制支持使用生物相容性液晶作为细菌自然环境的合成模型。 美国物理学会发表 2024
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Bacteria Navigate Anisotropic Media using a Flagellar Tug-of-Oars
Bacteria thrive in anisotropic media such as biofilms, biopolymer solutions, and soil pores. In strongly mechanically anisotropic media, physical interactions force bacteria to swim along a preferred direction rather than to execute the three-dimensional random walk due to their run-and-tumble behavior. Despite their ubiquity in nature and importance for human health, there is little understanding of bacterial mechanisms to navigate these media while constrained to one-dimensional motion. Using a biocompatible liquid crystal, we discovered two mechanisms used by bacteria to switch directions in anisotropic media. First, the flagella assemble in bundles that work against each other from opposite ends of the cell body, and the dominating side in this flagellar “Tug-of-Oars” propels the bacterium along the nematic direction. Bacteria frequently revert their swimming direction 180∘ by a mechanism of flagellar buckling and reorganization on the opposite side of the cell. The Frank elastic energies of the liquid crystal dictate the minimum compression for the Euler buckling of a flagellum. Beyond a critical elasticity of the medium, flagellar motors cannot generate the necessary torque for flagellar buckling, and bacteria are stuck in their configuration. However, we found that bacteria can still switch swimming directions using a second mechanism where individual bundles alternate their rotation. Our results shed light on bacterial strategies to navigate anisotropic media and give rise to questions about sensing environmental cues and adapting at the level of flagellar bundles. The two adaptation mechanisms found here support the use of biocompatible liquid crystals as a synthetic model for bacterial natural environments. Published by the American Physical Society 2024
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