Litcius/Paper detail

In Situ Chemotaxis Assay to Examine Microbial Behavior in Aquatic Ecosystems

Estelle E. Clerc, Jean‐Baptiste Raina, Bennett Lambert, Justin R. Seymour, Roman Stocker

2020Journal of Visualized Experiments22 citationsDOI

Abstract

Microbial behaviors, such as motility and chemotaxis (the ability of a cell to alter its movement in response to a chemical gradient), are widespread across the bacterial and archaeal domains. Chemotaxis can result in substantial resource acquisition advantages in heterogeneous environments. It also plays a crucial role in symbiotic interactions, disease, and global processes, such as biogeochemical cycling. However, current techniques restrict chemotaxis research to the laboratory and are not easily applicable in the field. Presented here is a step-by-step protocol for the deployment of the in situ chemotaxis assay (ISCA), a device that enables robust interrogation of microbial chemotaxis directly in the natural environment. The ISCA is a microfluidic device consisting of a 20 well array, in which chemicals of interest can be loaded. Once deployed in aqueous environments, chemicals diffuse out of the wells, creating concentration gradients that microbes sense and respond to by swimming into the wells via chemotaxis. The well contents can then be sampled and used to (1) quantify strength of the chemotactic responses to specific compounds through flow cytometry, (2) isolate and culture responsive microorganisms, and (3) characterize the identity and genomic potential of the responding populations through molecular techniques. The ISCA is a flexible platform that can be deployed in any system with an aqueous phase, including marine, freshwater, and soil environments.

Topics & Concepts

ChemotaxisChemotaxis assayBiogeochemical cycleIn situBiologyEnvironmental scienceBiological systemEcologyBiochemical engineeringChemistryReceptorEngineeringOrganic chemistryBiochemistryMolecular Communication and NanonetworksMicro and Nano RoboticsMicrofluidic and Bio-sensing Technologies