Issue 27, 2019

Rivalry in Bacillus subtilis colonies: enemy or family?

Abstract

Two colonies of Bacillus subtilis of identical strains growing adjacent to each other on an agar plate exhibit two distinct types of interactions: they either merge as they grow or demarcation occurs leading to formation of a line of demarcation at the colony fronts. The nature of this interaction depends on the agar concentration in the growth medium and the initial separation between the colonies. When the agar concentration was 0.67% or lower, the two sibling colonies were found to always merge. At 1% or higher concentrations, the colonies formed a demarcation line only when their initial separation was 20 mm or higher. Interactions of a colony with solid structures and liquid drops have indicated that biochemical factors rather than the presence of physical obstacles are responsible for the demarcation line formation. A reaction diffusion model has been formulated to predict if two sibling colonies will form a demarcation line under given agar concentration and initial separation. The model prediction agrees well with experimental findings and generates a dimensionless phase diagram containing merging and demarcation regimes. The phase diagram is in terms of a dimensionless initial separation, [d with combining macron], and a dimensionless diffusion coefficient, [D with combining macron], of the colonies. The phase boundary between the two interaction regimes can be described by a power law relation between [d with combining macron] and [D with combining macron].

Graphical abstract: Rivalry in Bacillus subtilis colonies: enemy or family?

Associated articles

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
18 Apr 2019
Accepted
31 May 2019
First published
31 May 2019

Soft Matter, 2019,15, 5400-5411

Rivalry in Bacillus subtilis colonies: enemy or family?

R. Paul, T. Ghosh, T. Tang and A. Kumar, Soft Matter, 2019, 15, 5400 DOI: 10.1039/C9SM00794F

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