Effects of internal dynamics on chemotactic aggregation of bacteria

Phys Biol. 2021 Sep 10;18(6). doi: 10.1088/1478-3975/ac2048.

Abstract

The effects of internal adaptation dynamics on the self-organized aggregation of chemotactic bacteria are investigated by Monte Carlo (MC) simulations based on a two-stream kinetic transport equation coupled with a reaction-diffusion equation of the chemoattractant that bacteria produce. A remarkable finding is a nonmonotonic behavior of the peak aggregation density with respect to the adaptation time; more specifically, aggregation is the most enhanced when the adaptation time is comparable to or moderately larger than the mean run time of bacteria. Another curious observation is the formation of a trapezoidal aggregation profile occurring at a very large adaptation time, where the biased motion of individual cells is rather hindered at the plateau regimes due to the boundedness of the tumbling frequency modulation. Asymptotic analysis of the kinetic transport system is also carried out, and a novel asymptotic equation is obtained at the large adaptation-time regime while the Keller-Segel type equations are obtained when the adaptation time is moderate. Numerical comparison of the asymptotic equations with MC results clarifies that trapezoidal aggregation is well described by the novel asymptotic equation, and the nonmonotonic behavior of the peak aggregation density is interpreted as the transient of the asymptotic solutions between different adaptation time regimes.

Keywords: Monte Carlo simulation; aggregation; asymptotic analysis; chemotaxis; instability; kinetic transport theory.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Bacterial Physiological Phenomena*
  • Chemotactic Factors / physiology*
  • Chemotaxis*
  • Diffusion
  • Escherichia coli / physiology
  • Kinetics
  • Models, Biological
  • Monte Carlo Method

Substances

  • Chemotactic Factors