Authors
William PJ Smith, Yohan Davit, James M Osborne, Wook Kim, Kevin R Foster, Joe M Pitt-Francis
Publication date
2017/1/17
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
114
Issue
3
Pages
E280-E286
Publisher
National Acad Sciences
Description
The clearest phenotypic characteristic of microbial cells is their shape, but we do not understand how cell shape affects the dense communities, known as biofilms, where many microbes live. Here, we use individual-based modeling to systematically vary cell shape and study its impact in simulated communities. We compete cells with different cell morphologies under a range of conditions and ask how shape affects the patterning and evolutionary fitness of cells within a community. Our models predict that cell shape will strongly influence the fate of a cell lineage: we describe a mechanism through which coccal (round) cells rise to the upper surface of a community, leading to a strong spatial structuring that can be critical for fitness. We test our predictions experimentally using strains of Escherichia coli that grow at a similar rate but differ in cell shape due to single amino acid changes in the actin homolog MreB. As …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
WPJ Smith, Y Davit, JM Osborne, W Kim, KR Foster… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2017