Analysis and IbM simulation of the stages in bacterial lag phase: Basis for an updated definition
Authored by Jordi Ferrer, Clara Prats, Daniel Lopez, Josep Vives-Rego, Antoni Giro
Date Published: 2008
DOI: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2008.01.019
Sponsors:
The Generalitat de Catalunya
European Social Fund
Spanish Ministries
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No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
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Abstract
The lag phase is the initial phase of a culture that precedes
exponential growth and occurs when the conditions of the culture medium
differ from the pre-inoculation conditions. It is usually defined by
means of cell density because the number of individuals remains
approximately constant or slowly increases, and it is quantified with
the lag parameter lambda. The lag phase has been studied through
mathematical modelling and by means of specific experiments. In recent
years, Individual-based Modelling (IbM) has provided helpful insights
into lag phase studies.
In this paper, the definition of lag phase is thoroughly examined.
Evolution of the total biomass and the total number of bacteria during
lag phase is tackled separately. The lag phase lasts until the culture
reaches a maximum growth rate both in biomass and cell density. Once in
the exponential phase, both rates are constant over time and equal to
each other. Both evolutions are split into an initial phase and a
transition phase, according to their growth rates. A population-level
mathematical model is presented to describe the transitional phase in
cell density.
INDividual DIScrete SIMulation (INDISIM) is used to check the outcomes
of this analysis. Simulations allow the separate study of the evolution
of cell density and total biomass in a batch culture, they provide a
depiction of different observed cases in lag evolution at the
individual-cell level, and are used to test the population-level model.
The results show that the geometrical lag parameter lambda is not
appropriate as a universal definition for the lag phase. Moreover, the
lag phase cannot be characterized by a single parameter. For the studied
cases, the lag phases of both the total biomass and the population are
required to fully characterize the evolution of bacterial cultures.
The results presented prove once more that the lag phase is a complex
process that requires a more complete definition. This will be possible
only after the phenomena governing the population dynamics at an
individual level of description, and occurring during the lag and
exponential growth phases, are well understood. (c) 2008 Elsevier Ltd.
All rights reserved.
Tags
Model
growth
Division
Listeria-monocytogenes
Cultures
Cellular-automaton approach
Microbial lag