2017 Annual Meeting
(289f) Surface Drag and Swarming in Motile Bacteria
Authors
We will present our latest findings that suggest that CCW-biased mutants fail to swarm but motility can be rescued by simply wetting the agar surface, in agreement with earlier reports. However, swarming in CW-biased mutants cannot be rescued by increasing surface wetness. To determine the underlying reason for this difference, we employed biophysical characterization assays and measured the torque generated by individual flagellar motors in the CCW and CW mutants. Results suggested anisotropic torque generation in the two directions, consistent with our previous observations in a different species [1]. However the anisotropy by itself was inadequate in explaining the inhibition of swarming in the CW-mutants. Fluorescent-labeling experiments were carried out to determine the predominant polymorphic flagellar forms in the two types of mutants. We will discuss the insights revealed by the fluorescent experiments and the resulting effects on the thrust developed by each cell. The implications of these phenotypes in swarm-inititation will also be discussed.
[1] P. P. Lele, T. Roland, A. Shrivastava, Y. Chen, H. C. Berg, âDirectional dependence of stall torques in C. crescentus motorsâ, Nature Physics (2016), 12, 175-178.