Literature DB >> 34490846

Gut bacterial aggregates as living gels.

Brandon H Schlomann1,2, Raghuveer Parthasarathy1.   

Abstract

The spatial organization of gut microbiota influences both microbial abundances and host-microbe interactions, but the underlying rules relating bacterial dynamics to large-scale structure remain unclear. To this end, we studied experimentally and theoretically the formation of three-dimensional bacterial clusters, a key parameter controlling susceptibility to intestinal transport and access to the epithelium. Inspired by models of structure formation in soft materials, we sought to understand how the distribution of gut bacterial cluster sizes emerges from bacterial-scale kinetics. Analyzing imaging-derived data on cluster sizes for eight different bacterial strains in the larval zebrafish gut, we find a common family of size distributions that decay approximately as power laws with exponents close to -2, becoming shallower for large clusters in a strain-dependent manner. We show that this type of distribution arises naturally from a Yule-Simons-type process in which bacteria grow within clusters and can escape from them, coupled to an aggregation process that tends to condense the system toward a single massive cluster, reminiscent of gel formation. Together, these results point to the existence of general, biophysical principles governing the spatial organization of the gut microbiome that may be useful for inferring fast-timescale dynamics that are experimentally inaccessible.
© 2021, Schlomann and Parthasarathy.

Entities:  

Keywords:  aggregation; cluster size; gut microbiota; infectious disease; microbiology; physics of living systems; zebrafish

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34490846      PMCID: PMC8514234          DOI: 10.7554/eLife.71105

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Elife        ISSN: 2050-084X            Impact factor:   8.713


  32 in total

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Journal:  Nature       Date:  2017-04-12       Impact factor: 49.962

4.  Reconstruction of zebrafish early embryonic development by scanned light sheet microscopy.

Authors:  Philipp J Keller; Annette D Schmidt; Joachim Wittbrodt; Ernst H K Stelzer
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5.  Spatial organization of a model 15-member human gut microbiota established in gnotobiotic mice.

Authors:  Jessica L Mark Welch; Yuko Hasegawa; Nathan P McNulty; Jeffrey I Gordon; Gary G Borisy
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6.  Polymers in the gut compress the colonic mucus hydrogel.

Authors:  Sujit S Datta; Asher Preska Steinberg; Rustem F Ismagilov
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2016-06-14       Impact factor: 11.205

7.  Statistical thermodynamics of irreversible aggregation: the sol-gel transition.

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Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2015-03-09       Impact factor: 4.379

8.  Spatial and temporal features of the growth of a bacterial species colonizing the zebrafish gut.

Authors:  Matthew Jemielita; Michael J Taormina; Adam R Burns; Jennifer S Hampton; Annah S Rolig; Karen Guillemin; Raghuveer Parthasarathy
Journal:  mBio       Date:  2014-12-16       Impact factor: 7.867

9.  Killing by Type VI secretion drives genetic phase separation and correlates with increased cooperation.

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Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2017-02-06       Impact factor: 14.919

10.  Gel formation in protein amyloid aggregation: a physical mechanism for cytotoxicity.

Authors:  Daniel Woodard; Dylan Bell; David Tipton; Samuel Durrance; Lisa Cole Burnett; Lisa Cole; Bin Li; Shaohua Xu
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-04-16       Impact factor: 3.240

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  1 in total

1.  Disaggregation as an interaction mechanism among intestinal bacteria.

Authors:  Deepika Sundarraman; T Jarrod Smith; Jade V Z Kast; Karen Guillemin; Raghuveer Parthasarathy
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2022-08-18       Impact factor: 3.699

  1 in total

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