| Literature DB >> 29135971 |
Kristin Aleklett1, E Toby Kiers2, Pelle Ohlsson3, Thomas S Shimizu4, Victor Ea Caldas2,4, Edith C Hammer1.
Abstract
Soil is likely the most complex ecosystem on earth. Despite the global importance and extraordinary diversity of soils, they have been notoriously challenging to study. We show how pioneering microfluidic techniques provide new ways of studying soil microbial ecology by allowing simulation and manipulation of chemical conditions and physical structures at the microscale in soil model habitats.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29135971 PMCID: PMC5776464 DOI: 10.1038/ismej.2017.184
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISME J ISSN: 1751-7362 Impact factor: 11.217
Figure 1Fabrication of microfluidic devices. A common method to make microfluidic devices is to make a master by photolithography, which is then used to mold PDMS silicone. (a) Deposition of photoresist on a silicon or glass wafer. The thickness of the photoresist is defined by spinning the wafer at a certain rotational speed for a certain time. (b) UV light exposure through mask. UV light illuminates the desired pattern through a photomask and catalyses photoresist crosslinking. (c) Development of the exposed wafer. Non-crosslinked photoresist is removed using a solvent bath. The pattern is now visible on the surface of the master. (d) PDMS molding. PDMS is poured on the developed master and allowed to polymerize in an oven, forming a flexible polymer block. (e) Surface activation. Holes for desired inlets are punched into the PDMS slab, and both PDMS and the glass slide are activated in a plasma chamber. Other materials such as membranes or other PDMS layers can also be used to seal the chip. (f) Sealing the chip by placing the surfaces in contact, which form covalent bonds between the PDMS and the glass surface. (g) Hyphae of Mycetinis scorodonius growing in a pillar system with 100 μm wide pillars. (h) Nematode that migrated into a chip channel from a natural soil inoculum. (i) Microfluidic chip where a dye gradient is generated by sequential mixing and introduced into a culture chamber. (j) Zoom-in on the gradient generator showing and dye diffusion.
A selection of top-ranked soil and microbial ecology research questions collaboratively identified by Antwis and Eisenhauer , and the potential benefits microfluidic approaches can provide
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| Do theories of macro ecology hold for microbial systems? | Possibility to incorporate microscale habitat structure into microbial model systems. Live imaging of micro-structured chambers and channels where microbial cells can compete or initiate reciprocal resource exploitation. Potential examination of niche differentiation, predator–prey relationships, food web interactions including microfauna, island biogeography (habitat patches within soil aggregates), the connection between microorganism biodiversity and ecosystem function, all with the aid of biosensors such as fluorescent probes. |
| What are the environmental triggers of microbial behavior and evolution? | Real-time visual analysis of cell interactions with complex environmental conditions. Monitoring of frequency and triggers of horizontal gene transfer. Controlled microenvironments to study quorum sensing, biofilm formation and community dynamics. Possibility to follow foraging and branching of tip-growing cells to monitor cellular decision making. Model-soil aggregates as evolutionary incubators to study microbial selection pressures. Microscale and |
| How do microbes behave across short and long timescales to chemical cues? | Controlled chemical gradients or nutrient patches to study chemotaxis of single cells or hyphal tips. Gradients can be time resolved, switched on and off or being reversed. Microorganisms can be exposed to pulses of exudates or signaling molecules of interacting organisms. |
| What are the stages and preconditions of microbiome formation and succession? | Empirical platforms for testing stochastic vs deterministic community assembly processes. Time-lapse analysis of micro-structured incubation chambers to simulate soil aggregates and other habitats on a chip. Surface structure simulations from imprints to study microbiome formation, and successional drivers. |
| What cellular processes are necessary for symbiotic establishment and resource exchange between hosts and their microbes? | Microscopic channels for growing individual roots with precise control over environmental conditions and timing of symbiont exposure (for example, mycorrhizal fungi or Rhizobia). |
| What specific roles do microbes play in the process of soil aggregation and organic matter stabilization? | Simulation and manipulation of microscale habitat structure to study the importance of organic matter occlusion. Injection of loose microparticles in chambers for the microbes to rearrange and aggregate. Bendable micro-pillars for microbes to physically manipulate. Mineral surface coating to study chemical interactions at microscale. Live visualization of particle aggregation process. |
| How can we improve and verify computer models of microbial processes, in order to upscale results to global ecosystem models? | Acquire empirical data of microbial growth, interactions and substrate usage via biosensors and image analysis. Grid-based designs for realistic and highly replicated tests of |
Figure 2Five aspects of how microfluidics can be used to mimic the soil-environment and study microbial behavior in a small-structured environment. (a) Simulating physical heterogeneity. Pillars and walls of different sizes and shapes can be used to simulate differences in soil structure and porosity to study how variation in physical heterogeneity affects, for example, microbial establishment, behavior (Held ; Deng ), and feedback interactions with their environment. (b) Creating chemical gradients and patches. Chemical gradients or plume-like injections can be created inside the chips to mimic spatial heterogeneity of nutrients or other soluble compounds and study, for example, chemotaxis (Stocker ). (c) Manipulating microbial interactions. Arenas for the study of microbial physiology, behavior and interactions can be fabricated, allowing minute control over when and where microbes enter the system, with the possibility to restrict encounters to few individual cells or hyphae (Stanley ; Hol ). (d) Culturing the unculturable. With the development of the Ichip (Nichols ), new possibilities have opened up for culturing soil bacteria that have not previously been possible in solid medium cultures. The main design factor thought to facilitate this is the micro-confinement of individual cells in diffusion chambers sealed off with membranes, still allowing for metabolic transfer to and from the surrounding environment. This strongly expands the species pool for laboratory studies, and facilitates identification of their special requirements for pure culture isolation. (e) Studying rhizosphere interactions. Plant roots can be grown from seeds, for example, through pipette tips, into channels of microfluidic devices (Grossmann ), permitting close monitoring of root morphology, and giving us the ability to control nutrient supply as well as microbial exposure within the root system. This will open up possibilities to study, for example, the colonization success and succession of root symbiosis such as those involving rhizobia and mycorrhizas, or monitoring of pathogens under differentiated nutrient conditions.