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Main Authors: Xu, Xin-Xin, Tian, Yangguang, Pu, Yuhe, Che, Bingchen, Luo, Hao, Liu, Yanan, Liu, Yan-Jun, Jing, Guangyin
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.12580
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author Xu, Xin-Xin
Tian, Yangguang
Pu, Yuhe
Che, Bingchen
Luo, Hao
Liu, Yanan
Liu, Yan-Jun
Jing, Guangyin
author_facet Xu, Xin-Xin
Tian, Yangguang
Pu, Yuhe
Che, Bingchen
Luo, Hao
Liu, Yanan
Liu, Yan-Jun
Jing, Guangyin
contents Flagellar-driven locomotion plays a critical role in bacterial attachment and colonization of surfaces, contributing to the risks of contamination and infection. Tremendous attempts to uncover the underlying principles governing bacterial motility near surfaces have relied on idealized assumptions of surrounding inorganic boundaries. However, in the context of living systems, the role of cells from tissues and organs becomes increasingly critical, particularly in bacterial swimming and adhesion, yet it remains poorly understood. Here, we propose using biological surfaces composed of vascular endothelial cells to experimentally investigate bacterial motion and interaction behaviors. Our results reveal that bacterial trapping observed on inorganic surfaces is counteractively manifested with reduced radii of circular motion on cellular surfaces, while with two distinct modes of bacterial adhesion: tight adhesion and loose adhesion. Interestingly, the presence of living cells enhances bacterial surface enrichment, and imposed flow intensifies this accumulation via bias-swimming effect. These results surprisingly indicate that physical effects remain the dominant factor regulating bacterial motility and accumulation at the single-cell layer level in vitro, bridging the gap between simplified hydrodynamic mechanisms and complex biological surfaces, with relevance to biofilm formation and bacterial contamination.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2502_12580
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Bacterial swimming and accumulation on endothelial cell surfaces
Xu, Xin-Xin
Tian, Yangguang
Pu, Yuhe
Che, Bingchen
Luo, Hao
Liu, Yanan
Liu, Yan-Jun
Jing, Guangyin
Soft Condensed Matter
Flagellar-driven locomotion plays a critical role in bacterial attachment and colonization of surfaces, contributing to the risks of contamination and infection. Tremendous attempts to uncover the underlying principles governing bacterial motility near surfaces have relied on idealized assumptions of surrounding inorganic boundaries. However, in the context of living systems, the role of cells from tissues and organs becomes increasingly critical, particularly in bacterial swimming and adhesion, yet it remains poorly understood. Here, we propose using biological surfaces composed of vascular endothelial cells to experimentally investigate bacterial motion and interaction behaviors. Our results reveal that bacterial trapping observed on inorganic surfaces is counteractively manifested with reduced radii of circular motion on cellular surfaces, while with two distinct modes of bacterial adhesion: tight adhesion and loose adhesion. Interestingly, the presence of living cells enhances bacterial surface enrichment, and imposed flow intensifies this accumulation via bias-swimming effect. These results surprisingly indicate that physical effects remain the dominant factor regulating bacterial motility and accumulation at the single-cell layer level in vitro, bridging the gap between simplified hydrodynamic mechanisms and complex biological surfaces, with relevance to biofilm formation and bacterial contamination.
title Bacterial swimming and accumulation on endothelial cell surfaces
topic Soft Condensed Matter
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.12580