Emerging morphologies in round bacterial colonies: comparing volumetric versus chemotactic expansion
Code:
46/2015
Title:
Emerging morphologies in round bacterial colonies: comparing volumetric versus chemotactic expansion
Date:
Thursday 24th September 2015
Author(s):
Giverso, C.; Verani, M.; Ciarletta P.
Abstract:
Biological experiments performed on living bacterial colonies have demonstrated
the microbial capability to develop finger-like shapes and highly irregular contours,
even starting from an homogeneous inoculum. In this work, we study from
the continuum mechanics viewpoint the emergence of such branched morphologies
in an initially circular colony expanding on the top of a Petri dish coated with
agar. The bacterial colony expansion, based on either a source term, representing
volumetric mitotic processes, or a non-convective mass flux, describing chemotactic
expansion, is modelled at the continuum scale. We demonstrate that the
front of the colony is always linearly unstable, having similar dispersion curves
to the ones characterizing branching instabilities. We also perform finite element
simulations, which not only prove the emergence of branching, but also highlight
dramatic differences between the two mechanisms of colony expansion in the nonlinear
regime. Furthermore, the proposed combination of analytical and numerical
analysis allowed studying the influence of different model parameters on the
selection of specific patterns. A very good agreement has been found between
the resulting simulations and the typical structures observed in biological assays.
Finally, this work provides a new interpretation of the emergence of branched patterns
in living aggregates, depicted as the results of a complex interplay among
chemical, mechanical and size effects.
This report, or a modified version of it, has been also submitted to, or published on
Biomech. Model. Mechanobiol.
Biomech. Model. Mechanobiol.