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Biofilm wrinkling from differential growth as a function of circumferential and radial strain

From:

Cheng Zhang, Bo Li, Xiao Huang, Yong Ni and Xi-Qiao Feng, “Morphomechanics of bacterial biofilms undergoing anisotropic differential growth”, Applied Physics Letters, Vol. 109, 143701, 2016, doi: 10.1063/1.4963780

ABSTRACT: Growing bacterial biofilms exhibit a number of surface morphologies, e.g., concentric wrinkles, radial ridges, and labyrinthine networks, depending on their physiological status and nutrient access. We explore the mechanisms underlying the emergence of these greatly different morphologies. Ginzburg-Landau kinetic method and Fourier spectral method are integrated to simulate the morphological evolution of bacterial biofilms. It is shown that the morphological instability of biofilms is triggered by the stresses induced by anisotropic and heterogeneous bacterial expansion, and involves the competition between membrane energy and bending energy. Local interfacial delamination further enriches the morphologies of biofilms. Phase diagrams are established to reveal how the anisotropy and spatial heterogeneity of growth modulate the surface patterns. The mechanics of three-dimensional microbial morphogenesis may also underpin self-organization in other development systems and provide a potential strategy for engineering microscopic structures from bacterial aggregates.

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