From a thin film model for passive suspensions towards the description of osmotic biofilm spreading

Biofilms are ubiquitous macro-colonies of bacteria that develop at various interfaces (solid- liquid, solid-gas or liquid-gas). The formation of biofilms starts with the attachment of individual bac- teria to an interface, where they proliferate and produce a slimy polymeric matrix - two processes t...

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Main Authors: Karin John, Uwe Thiele, Sarah Trinschek
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIMS Press 2016-08-01
Series:AIMS Materials Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.aimspress.com/Materials/article/913/fulltext.html
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spelling doaj-6b3279b651ec4897a599651225fd91592020-11-25T00:33:40ZengAIMS PressAIMS Materials Science2372-04842016-08-01331138115910.3934/matersci.2016.3.1138matersci-03-01138From a thin film model for passive suspensions towards the description of osmotic biofilm spreadingKarin John0Uwe ThieleSarah TrinschekLaboratoire Interdisciplinaire de Physique (LIPhy), CNRS / Université Grenoble-Alpes, 140 Rue de la Physique, 38402 Grenoble, FranceBiofilms are ubiquitous macro-colonies of bacteria that develop at various interfaces (solid- liquid, solid-gas or liquid-gas). The formation of biofilms starts with the attachment of individual bac- teria to an interface, where they proliferate and produce a slimy polymeric matrix - two processes that result in colony growth and spreading. Recent experiments on the growth of biofilms on agar substrates under air have shown that for certain bacterial strains, the production of the extracellular matrix and the resulting osmotic influx of nutrient-rich water from the agar into the biofilm are more crucial for the spreading behaviour of a biofilm than the motility of individual bacteria. We present a model which de- scribes the biofilm evolution and the advancing biofilm edge for this spreading mechanism. The model is based on a gradient dynamics formulation for thin films of biologically passive liquid mixtures and suspensions, supplemented by bioactive processes which play a decisive role in the osmotic spreading of biofilms. It explicitly includes the wetting properties of the biofilm on the agar substrate via a dis- joining pressure and can therefore give insight into the interplay between passive surface forces and bioactive growth processes.http://www.aimspress.com/Materials/article/913/fulltext.htmlthin film hydrodynamicsbiofilmsactive complex fluidsinterfacial flowsnonlinear science
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Karin John
Uwe Thiele
Sarah Trinschek
spellingShingle Karin John
Uwe Thiele
Sarah Trinschek
From a thin film model for passive suspensions towards the description of osmotic biofilm spreading
AIMS Materials Science
thin film hydrodynamics
biofilms
active complex fluids
interfacial flows
nonlinear science
author_facet Karin John
Uwe Thiele
Sarah Trinschek
author_sort Karin John
title From a thin film model for passive suspensions towards the description of osmotic biofilm spreading
title_short From a thin film model for passive suspensions towards the description of osmotic biofilm spreading
title_full From a thin film model for passive suspensions towards the description of osmotic biofilm spreading
title_fullStr From a thin film model for passive suspensions towards the description of osmotic biofilm spreading
title_full_unstemmed From a thin film model for passive suspensions towards the description of osmotic biofilm spreading
title_sort from a thin film model for passive suspensions towards the description of osmotic biofilm spreading
publisher AIMS Press
series AIMS Materials Science
issn 2372-0484
publishDate 2016-08-01
description Biofilms are ubiquitous macro-colonies of bacteria that develop at various interfaces (solid- liquid, solid-gas or liquid-gas). The formation of biofilms starts with the attachment of individual bac- teria to an interface, where they proliferate and produce a slimy polymeric matrix - two processes that result in colony growth and spreading. Recent experiments on the growth of biofilms on agar substrates under air have shown that for certain bacterial strains, the production of the extracellular matrix and the resulting osmotic influx of nutrient-rich water from the agar into the biofilm are more crucial for the spreading behaviour of a biofilm than the motility of individual bacteria. We present a model which de- scribes the biofilm evolution and the advancing biofilm edge for this spreading mechanism. The model is based on a gradient dynamics formulation for thin films of biologically passive liquid mixtures and suspensions, supplemented by bioactive processes which play a decisive role in the osmotic spreading of biofilms. It explicitly includes the wetting properties of the biofilm on the agar substrate via a dis- joining pressure and can therefore give insight into the interplay between passive surface forces and bioactive growth processes.
topic thin film hydrodynamics
biofilms
active complex fluids
interfacial flows
nonlinear science
url http://www.aimspress.com/Materials/article/913/fulltext.html
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