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Ulcer-Causing Bacteria Baffled by Mucus
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Engineering
Researchers Discover Impact of Viscoelasticity on the
Collective Behavior of Swimming
Microorganisms
Even the tiniest microscopic organisms make waves when they
swim. In fact, dealing with these waves is a fact of life for
the ulcer-causing bacteria H. pylori.
The bacteria are known to change their behavior in order to
compensate for the waves created by other bacteria swimming
around in the same aquatic neighborhood. From the relatively
simple actions of these individual bacteria emerges a complex,
coordinated group behavior.
A new study by engineering researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
demonstrates how introducing certain polymers—like those found
in human mucus and saliva—into the environment makes it
significantly more difficult for H. pylori and other
microorganisms to coordinate. The findings raise many new
questions about the relationship between the individual and
group behaviors of bacteria. The study also suggests that human
mucus, saliva, and other biological fluid barriers may have
evolved to disrupt the ability of harmful bacteria to
coordinate.
“In the human body, microorganisms are always moving around
in mucus, saliva, and other systems that exhibit elasticity due
to the presence of polymers. Our study is among the first to
look at how this elasticity impacts the collective behavior of
microorganisms like H. pylori,” said lead
researcher Patrick T. Underhill, assistant professor in the Howard P. Isermann Department of
Chemical and Biological Engineering at Rensselaer. “What we
found is that polymers do in fact have a substantial impact on
the flows created by the swimming bacteria, which in turn makes
it more difficult for the individual bacteria to coordinate
with each other. This opens the door to new ways of looking at
our immune system.”
Results of the study are detailed in the paper “Effect of
viscoelasticity on the collective behavior of swimming
microorganisms,” recently published by the journal Physical
Review E. See the paper online at: http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevE.84.061901
Underhill’s study, based on large-scale computer
simulations, leveraged the power of the Rensselaer Computational Center
for Nanotechnology Innovations (CCNI), one of the world’s
most powerful university-based supercomputers. These
simulations involved creating a computer model of more than
110,000 individual H. pylori bacteria simultaneously
occupying a small volume of polymer-infused liquid. The
simulations captured all of the individual actions and
interactions created as the bacteria swam through the liquid.
The most difficult aspect of this kind of simulation, Underhill
said, is to identify collective behaviors and extract relevant
conclusions from the massive amount of data generated.
In addition to computer simulations, Underhill employed
theoretical models to understand how the addition of elasticity
to liquid impacts the waves created by swimming H.
pylori and, in turn, the collective behavior of a large
group of the bacteria. Bacteria like H. pylori are
known as pushers, as they propel themselves through water by
twisting the long helical filaments that trail behind them.
Rensselaer chemical engineering graduate student Yaser
Bozorgi is a co-author of the paper.
The study was funded by the National Science
Foundation (NSF). In 2010, Underhill received a prestigious
NSF Faculty Early Career Development Award (CAREER) to support
his transport phenomena research.
For more information on Underhill’s research at Rensselaer,
visit:
Faculty Home Page
http://cbe.rpi.edu/node/90
Rensselaer Professor Patrick Underhill Receives
NSF CAREER Award
http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2733
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Published
January 18,
2012 |
Contact: Michael Mullaney
Phone: (518) 276-6161
E-mail: mullam@rpi.edu |
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