Random walk patterns of a soil bacterium in open and confined environments

Theves M, Taktikos J, Zaburdaev V, Stark H, Beta C (2015)


Publication Status: Published

Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2015

Journal

Publisher: EPL ASSOCIATION, EUROPEAN PHYSICAL SOCIETY

Book Volume: 109

Journal Issue: 2

DOI: 10.1209/0295-5075/109/28007

Abstract

We used microfluidic tools and high-speed time-lapse microscopy to record trajectories of the soil bacterium Pseudomonas putida in a confined environment with cells swimming in close proximity to a glass-liquid interface. While the general swimming pattern is preserved, when compared to swimming in the bulk fluid, our results show that cells in the presence of two solid boundaries display more frequent reversals in swimming direction and swim faster. Additionally, we observe that run segments are no longer straight and that cells swim on circular trajectories, which can be attributed to the hydrodynamic wall effect. Using the experimentally observed parameters together with a recently presented analytic model for a run-reverse random walker, we obtained additional insight on how the spreading behavior of a cell population is affected under confinement. While on short time scales, the mean square displacement of confined swimmers grows faster as compared to the bulk fluid case, our model predicts that for large times the situation reverses due to the strong increase in effective rotational diffusion. Copyright (C) EPLA, 2015

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APA:

Theves, M., Taktikos, J., Zaburdaev, V., Stark, H., & Beta, C. (2015). Random walk patterns of a soil bacterium in open and confined environments. EPL - Europhysics Letters, 109(2). https://doi.org/10.1209/0295-5075/109/28007

MLA:

Theves, M., et al. "Random walk patterns of a soil bacterium in open and confined environments." EPL - Europhysics Letters 109.2 (2015).

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