Litcius/Paper detail

Mechanisms driving spatial distribution of residents in colony biofilms: an interdisciplinary perspective

Lukas Eigentler, Fordyce A. Davidson, Nicola R. Stanley‐Wall

2022Open Biology45 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Biofilms are consortia of microorganisms that form collectives through the excretion of extracellular matrix compounds. The importance of biofilms in biological, industrial and medical settings has long been recognized due to their emergent properties and impact on surrounding environments. In laboratory situations, one commonly used approach to study biofilm formation mechanisms is the colony biofilm assay, in which cell communities grow on solid-gas interfaces on agar plates after the deposition of a population of founder cells. The residents of a colony biofilm can self-organize to form intricate spatial distributions. The assay is ideally suited to coupling with mathematical modelling due to the ability to extract a wide range of metrics. In this review, we highlight how interdisciplinary approaches have provided deep insights into mechanisms causing the emergence of these spatial distributions from well-mixed inocula.

Topics & Concepts

BiofilmBiologyPerspective (graphical)Extracellular polymeric substancePopulationBacterial colonyEcologyBiochemical engineeringBiological systemMicrobiologyBacteriaComputer scienceGeneticsArtificial intelligenceEngineeringSociologyDemographyBacterial biofilms and quorum sensingPickering emulsions and particle stabilizationMicro and Nano Robotics