19–22 May 2026
Europe/Paris timezone

Spatial structure, chemotaxis and quorum sensing shape biomass accumulation in complex systems

19 May 2026, 15:05
1h 30m
Poster Presentation (MS08) Mixing, dispersion and reaction processes across scales in heterogeneous and fractured media Poster

Speaker

Pietro De Anna

Description

Biological tissues, sediments, or engineered systems are spatially structured media with a tortuous and porous structure that host the flow of fluids. Such complex environments can influence the spatial and temporal colonization patterns of bacteria by controlling the transport of individual bacterial cells, the availability of resources, and the distribution of chemical signals for communication. Yet, due to the multi-scale structure of these complex systems, it is hard to assess how different biotic and abiotic properties work together to control the accumulation of bacterial biomass. Here, we explore how flow mediated interactions allow the gut commensal Escherichia coli to colonize a porous structure that is composed of heterogenous dead-end pores (DEPs) and connecting percolating channels, i.e. transmitting pores (TPs), mimicking the structured surface of mammalian guts. We find that in presence of flow, gradients of the quorum sensing (QS) signaling molecule autoinducer-2 (AI-2) promote E. coli chemotactic accumulation in the DEPs. In this crowded environment, the combination of growth and cell-to-cell collision favors the development of suspended bacterial aggregates. This results in hot-spots of resource consumption, which, upon resource limitation, triggers the mechanical evasion of biomass from glucose and oxygen depleted DEPs. Our findings demonstrate that microscale medium structure and complex flow coupled with bacterial quorum sensing and chemotaxis control the heterogenous accumulation of bacterial biomass in a spatially structured environment, such as villi and crypts in the gut or in tortuous pores within soil and filters.

Country Switzerland
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Authors

David Scheidweiler (Institute of Earth Science, University of Lausanne, Lausanne 1015, Switzerland) Dr Ankur Bordoloi (CNRS - IRPHE, Aix-Marseille, France) Dr Monica Bollani (IFN-CNR, L-NESS, Via Anzani 42, 22100, Como, Italy) Dr Vladimir Sentchilo (Department of Fundamental Microbiology, University of Lausanne, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland) Prof. Philipp Engel (Department of Fundamental Microbiology, University of Lausanne, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland) Pietro De Anna

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