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Locomotion of flagellated bacteria: the influence of complex fluids and the role of multiflagellarity

Date: 2023-07-19
Time: 15:00
Venue: M255
Speaker: Prof. Xiang Cheng

Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Minnesota  

腾讯会议ID: 571-354-674

会议密码:07192

Abstract:

A flagellated bacterium inhabits and swims in fluids of low Reynolds numbers, a world, though foreign to us, is of ultimately importance to many aspects of our lives. Here, I discuss two recent experimental works in my group on the fascinating swimming behaviors of a prominent example of flagellated bacteria, Escherichia coli. First, we study the motility of E. coli in colloidal suspensions of varying sizes and volume fractions. We find that bacteria in dilute colloidal suspensions display the quantitatively same motile behaviors as those in dilute polymer solutions. This striking similarity resolves the long-standing controversy over bacterial motility enhancement in complex fluids and challenges the existing theories using polymer dynamics in addressing the swimming of flagellated bacteria in dilute polymer solutions. We develop a simple hydrodynamic model incorporating the colloidal nature of complex fluids, which quantitatively explains our experimental observations. Second, we explore the role of multiflagellarity in maintaining the constant swimming of E. coli of different lengths. By synergizing experiments with hydrodynamic modeling and simulations, we reveal how bacteria utilize the increasing number of flagella to regulate the flagellar motor load, which leads to faster flagellar rotation neutralizing the higher fluid drag on their larger bodies. 

Brief CV of Prof. Xiang Cheng:

Xiang Cheng received his B.S. in physics from Peking University in China in 2002. He then moved to U.S. and obtained his Ph.D. in physics from the University of Chicago in 2009. He worked as a postdoctoral associate in the Department of Physics at Cornell University from 2009 to 2013. He is currently a professor at the Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science at the University of Minnesota. Dr. Cheng has received several academic awards, including Arthur B. Metzner Early Career Award from Society of Rheology, NSF Career Award, Packard Fellowship, DARPA Young Faculty Award, 3M non-tenured faculty award and McKnight Land-Grant Professorship. His research group studies biophysics and soft materials physics in experiments, with a special focus on the emergent flow behaviors in biological and soft matter systems. Particularly, his research interests include bacterial locomotion, hydrodynamics of active fluids, rheology of colloidal suspensions and dynamics of liquid-drop impact processes.

主  持  人:彭毅  特聘研究员

联  系  人:傅琦(82649469)