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  • Rheology of living cells
    Publication . Portela, R.; Franco, Jose M.; Almeida, Pedro L.; Patricio, Pedro; Sobral, Rita; R. Leal, Catarina
    The mechanical behavior of living cells, during planktonic growth, has been thoroughly explored combining common biological techniques with rheology and rheo-imaging measurements. Under a shear flow, bacterial cultures of Staphylococcus aureus revealed a complex and rich rheological behavior not usually accessed in biological studies. In particular, in stationary shear flow, the viscosity increased during the exponential phase and returned close to its initial value at the late phase of growth, accompanied by the stabilization of the bacterial population. In oscillatory flow, the elastic and viscous moduli exhibited power-law behaviors whose exponents are dependent on the bacteria growth stage, and can be associated to a Soft Glassy Material behavior. These behaviors were framed in a microscopic model that suggests the formation of a dynamic web-like structure, where specific aggregation phenomena may occur, depending on growth stage and cell density. Furthermore, systematic measurements combining optical density and dry weight techniques presented new evidences, which confirmed that the observed cell aggregation patterns developed during growth, under shear, can not only be cell density dependent.
  • Staphylococcus aureus strains rheology during growth
    Publication . Portela, Raquel; Almeida, Pedro L.; Patricio, Pedro; M.T., Cidade; Sobral, Rita; R. Leal, Catarina
    The study of the mechanical properties of living bacteria in a liquid rich medium, environment commonly used in laboratorial settings, opens a new perspective on the bacterial physiology and behaviour during population growth. In this work, the human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus was used as a study model due to its coccoid shape and regular morphology: MRSA strain COL [1] and its mutant strain RUSAL9 [2], which presents a deficient daughter-cell separation mechanism. Cultures were grown under a mechanical stress solicitation in parallel with optical density monitorization. Complex viscoelastic behaviour was revealed by these bacterial systems [3]. In particular the shear viscosity measurement during growth time, for a constant shear rate, showed an unexpected behaviour that cannot be observed by common optical experimental techniques.
  • Motility and cell shape roles in the rheology of growing bacteria cultures
    Publication . Portela, Raquel; Almeida, Pedro L.; Sobral, Rita; R. Leal, Catarina
    Cell shape, size and self-motility appear as determinant intrinsic cell factors in the rheological behavior of living bacterial cultures during the growth process. In this work three different species were considered due to their differences on these intrinsic characteristics: two different strains of Staphylococcus aureus – strain COL and its isogenic cell wall autolysis mutant, RUSAL9 – both non-motile and Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis – both presenting intrinsic motility. In situ real-time rheology, was used to characterize the activity of growing bacteria, under steady-shear conditions, in particular the viscosity growth curve was measured, for a constant shear flow rate, presenting for all studied cultures, different and rich flow curves. These complex rheological behaviors are a consequence of two coupled effects: the cell density continuous increase and its changing interacting properties, where cell size and shape and intrinsic motility are major players.