Dynamic self-assembly of motile bacteria in liquid crystals
This paper reports an investigation of dynamical behaviors of motile rod-shaped bacteria within anisotropic viscoelastic environments defined by lyotropic liquid crystals (LCs). In contrast to passive microparticles (including non-motile bacteria) that associate irreversibly in LCs via elasticity-me...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Soft matter 2014-01, Vol.1 (1), p.88-95 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | This paper reports an investigation of dynamical behaviors of motile rod-shaped bacteria within anisotropic viscoelastic environments defined by lyotropic liquid crystals (LCs). In contrast to passive microparticles (including non-motile bacteria) that associate irreversibly in LCs
via
elasticity-mediated forces, we report that motile
Proteus mirabilis
bacteria form dynamic and reversible multi-cellular assemblies when dispersed in a lyotropic LC. By measuring the velocity of the bacteria through the LC (8.8 ± 0.2 μm s
−1
) and by characterizing the ordering of the LC about the rod-shaped bacteria (tangential anchoring), we conclude that the reversibility of the inter-bacterial interaction emerges from the interplay of forces generated by the flagella of the bacteria and the elasticity of the LC, both of which are comparable in magnitude (tens of pN) for motile
Proteus mirabilis
cells. We also measured the dissociation process, which occurs in a direction determined by the LC, to bias the size distribution of multi-cellular bacterial complexes in a population of motile
Proteus mirabilis
relative to a population of non-motile cells. Overall, these observations and others reported in this paper provide insight into the fundamental dynamic behaviors of bacteria in complex anisotropic environments and suggest that motile bacteria in LCs are an exciting model system for exploration of principles for the design of active materials.
This paper reports an investigation of dynamical self-assembly of motile rod-shaped bacteria within anisotropic viscoelastic environments defined by lyotropic liquid crystals. |
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ISSN: | 1744-683X 1744-6848 |
DOI: | 10.1039/c3sm52423j |