Swimming and rafting of E.coli microcolonies at air-liquid interfaces.
Giorgia SinibaldiValerio IebbaMauro ChinappiPublished in: MicrobiologyOpen (2017)
The dynamics of swimming microorganisms is strongly affected by solid-liquid and air-liquid interfaces. In this paper, we characterize the motion of both single bacteria and microcolonies at an air-liquid interface. Both of them follow circular trajectories. Single bacteria preferentially show a counter-clockwise motion, in agreement with previous experimental and theoretical findings. Instead, no preferential rotation direction is observed for microcolonies suggesting that their motion is due to a different physical mechanism. We propose a simple mechanical model where the microcolonies move like rafts constrained to the air-liquid interface. Finally, we observed that the microcolony growth is due to the aggregation of colliding single-swimmers, suggesting that the microcolony formation resembles a condensation process where the first nucleus originates by the collision between two single-swimmers. Implications of microcolony splitting and aggregation on biofilm growth and dispersion at air-liquid interface are discussed.