蓝藻菌落的破碎和聚集

Yuri Z. Sinzato, Robert Uittenbogaard, Petra M. Visser, Jef Huisman, Maziyar Jalaal
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引用次数: 0

摘要

流体流动对细菌菌落的聚集和破碎有重大影响。然而,理解和预测流体动力学如何影响菌落大小的通用框架仍然遥不可及。本研究探讨了流体如何影响蓝藻大型菌落结构的形成和维持。我们对蓝藻微囊藻的实验室培养物和湖泊样本进行了实验,同时通过直接显微成像测量了它们的菌落大小分布。我们证明,由细胞分裂形成的 EPS 嵌入细胞对剪切力具有显著的机械阻力。然而,在流体动力应力水平升高时(超过通常由表面风混合产生的应力水平),这些菌落会通过侵蚀过程而破碎。我们还发现,单细胞会因流体流动而聚集成小菌落。然而,与细胞分裂形成的菌落相比,这些由流动引起的菌落的结构完整性较弱。我们提供了支持实验的数学分析,并证明包含两类菌落的种群模型可以描述测量到的大小分布。我们的研究结果揭示了在哪些特定条件下,水流诱导的蓝藻分裂和聚集起决定性作用,并表明自然条件下的菌落形成主要由细胞分裂驱动,尽管水流诱导的聚集可能在密集藻华事件中发挥作用。这些发现可用于改进有毒蓝藻藻华的预测模型和缓解策略,还可能应用于藻类生物技术或医疗等其他领域,因为生物聚集体的动力学在这些领域发挥着重要作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Fragmentation and aggregation of cyanobacterial colonies
Fluid flow has a major effect on the aggregation and fragmentation of bacterial colonies. Yet, a generic framework to understand and predict how hydrodynamics affects colony size remains elusive. This study investigates how fluid flow affects the formation and maintenance of large colonial structures in cyanobacteria. We performed experiments on laboratory cultures and lake samples of the cyanobacterium Microcystis, while their colony size distribution was measured simultaneously by direct microscopic imaging. We demonstrate that EPS-embedded cells formed by cell division exhibit significant mechanical resistance to shear forces. However, at elevated hydrodynamic stress levels (exceeding those typically generated by surface wind mixing) these colonies experience fragmentation through an erosion process. We also show that single cells can aggregate into small colonies due to fluid flow. However, the structural integrity of these flow-induced colonies is weaker than that of colonies formed by cell division. We provide a mathematical analysis to support the experiments and demonstrate that a population model with two categories of colonies describes the measured size distributions. Our results shed light on the specific conditions wherein flow-induced fragmentation and aggregation of cyanobacteria are decisive and indicate that colony formation under natural conditions is mainly driven by cell division, although flow-induced aggregation could play a role in dense bloom events. These findings can be used to improve prediction models and mitigation strategies for toxic cyanobacterial blooms and also offer potential applications in other areas such as algal biotechnology or medical settings where the dynamics of biological aggregates play a significant role.
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