A common soil
dwelling1 bacterium2 appears to possess a sense of touch, researchers have shown. A study, by Dr James Stratford at The University of Nottingham and Dr Simon Park at the University of Surrey, has found that Bacillus mycoides, which has been known to science since 1842, responds to forces and
curvature(弯曲) in the medium on which it's growing.
The microbe's ability to respond to subtle changes in its environment, as revealed in the journal PLOS ONE, could signal potential useful scientific, engineering and medical applications for B. mycoides.
Dr Stratford, a research fellow at Nottingham's School of Life Sciences, said: "We happened to notice the way the growing bacteria interacted with small defects in our solid culture media and thought what if that's more than just
random3 variation?"
Like living spiral art, the organism produces a spreading colony made up of repeatedly curving
filaments5(花丝,细丝). While its response to changes occurs in individual
bacterial6 filaments on a
microscopic7 level, the resulting pattern is easily visible to the naked eye on culture plates.
Whirlpool shaped structures the size of a human hand are produced in response to growth on curved surfaces and the organism can even respond to damage -- holes cut in the gel on which it is growing lead to changes in the direction of nearby filaments.
The ability to respond to force allows filaments of B. mycoides to orient themselves towards objects which are causing even the tiniest disruptions to the surface nearby. B. mycoides was even able to 'find' small glass
beads8 placed in the vicinity of the bacterial colony.
The study used high magnification time
lapse9 to capture B. mycoides responding to a compression force in the agar gel being used as a growth medium. Images were taken at 20 minute
intervals10 after force was
applied11.
Using this method it was possible to
steer12 bacterial cells under the microscope from a distance by changing the direction of force in the growth medium. The bacterial filaments grow parallel to stretching and
perpendicular13 to compression force. When the gel was squeezed by only 1% it resulted in a full 90° turn by the
filament4. It is not known exactly how the response works but theories include a
molecular14 sensing
mechanism15 related to motility or possibly that the bacterium follows the distorted gel surface like a record player's
stylus(唱针) follows the
grooves16(细槽) in a vinyl.
With its rapid growth and ability to respond to force, B. mycoides could function as an easy-to-read living early warning system detecting strain and failure in structures under mechanical load.
Mechanotaxis -- the ability to respond to force -- is also an important organising mechanism for the assembly of multicellular organisms,
helping17 to
sculpt18 developing tissues and organs including those of humans. Insights into how the response works in this simple bacterium may further understanding of how mechanotaxis evolved.