Simulation of Escherichia coli Dynamics in Biofilms and Submerged Colonies with an Individual-Based Model Including Metabolic Network Information
Authored by Ignace L M M Tack, Impe Jan F M Van, Philippe Nimmegeers, Simen Akkermans, Ihab Hashem
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2017.02509
Sponsors:
Flanders Research Foundation
Agency for Innovation by Science and Technology in Flanders (IWT)
Platforms:
MASON
Model Documentation:
ODD
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Clustered microbial communities are omnipresent in the food industry,
e.g., as colonies of microbial pathogens in/on food media or as biofilms
on food processing surfaces. These clustered communities are often
characterized by metabolic differentiation among their constituting
cells as a result of heterogeneous environmental conditions in the
cellular surroundings. This paper focuses on the role of metabolic
differentiation due to oxygen gradients in the development of
Escherichia coli cell communities, whereby low local oxygen
concentrations lead to cellular secretion of weak acid products. For
this reason, a metabolic model has been developed for the facultative
anaerobe E. coli covering the range of aerobic, microaerobic, and
anaerobic environmental conditions. This metabolic model is expressed as
a multiparametric programming problem, in which the influence of low
extracellular pH values and the presence of undissociated acid cell
products in the environment has been taken into account. Furthermore,
the developed metabolic model is incorporated in MICRODIMS, an in-house
developed individual-based modeling framework to simulate microbial
colony and biofilm dynamics. Two case studies have been elaborated using
the MICRODIMS simulator: (i) biofilm growth on a substratum surface and
(ii) submerged colony growth in a semi-solid mixed food product. In the
first case study, the acidification of the biofilm environment and the
emergence of typical biofilm morphologies have been observed, such as
the mushroom-shaped structure of mature biofilms and the formation of
cellular chains at the exterior surface of the biofilm. The simulations
show that these morphological phenomena are respectively dependent on
the initial affinity of pioneer cells for the substratum surface and the
cell detachment process at the outer surface of the biofilm. In the
second case study, a no-growth zone emerges in the colony center due to
a local decline of the environmental pH. As a result, cellular growth in
the submerged colony is limited to the colony periphery, implying a
linear increase of the colony radius over time. MICRODIMS has been
successfully used to reproduce complex dynamics of clustered microbial
communities
Tags
Individual-based modeling
environment
Multiscale modeling
E. coli
time
Protocol
Cell
Growth-rate
Lag phase
Bacterial cultures
Metabolomics
Biofilm dynamics
Food system
K-12