Spatiotemporal development of expanding bacterial colonies driven by emergent mechanical constraints and nutrient gradients
Harish Kannan, Hui Sun, M.R. Warren, Tolga Çağlar, Pantong Yao, Brian Taylor, Kinshuk Sahu, Daotong Ge, Matteo Mori, David Kleinfeld, Jiajia Dong, Bo Li, Terence Hwa
Abstract
Bacterial colonies growing on solid surfaces can exhibit robust expansion kinetics, with constant radial growth and saturating vertical expansion, suggesting a common developmental program. Here, we study this process for Escherichia coli cells using a combination of modeling and experiments. We show that linear radial colony expansion is set by the verticalization of interior cells due to mechanical constraints rather than radial nutrient gradients as commonly assumed. In contrast, vertical expansion slows down from an initial linear regime even while radial expansion continues linearly. This vertical slowdown is due to limitation of cell growth caused by vertical nutrient gradients, exacerbated by concurrent oxygen depletion. Starvation in the colony interior results in a distinct death zone which sets in as vertical expansion slows down, with the death zone increasing in size along with the expanding colony. Thus, our study reveals complex heterogeneity within simple monoclonal bacterial colonies, especially along the vertical dimension. The intricate dynamics of such emergent behavior can be understood quantitatively from an interplay of mechanical constraints and nutrient gradients arising from obligatory metabolic processes.