Beyond the Keller-Segel model
Authored by P Romanczuk, U Erdmann, H Engel, L Schimansky-Geier
Date Published: 2008
DOI: 10.1140/epjst/e2008-00631-1
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Abstract
Complex spatio-temporal patterns of cell clusters were observed in
colonies of chemotactic bacteria such as Escherichia coli or Sallmonella
typhimurium. The production of a potent chemoattractant by the bacteria
themselves as a reaction to certain nutrients is the essential factor
for this pattern formation. Additional collective dynamics, such as
collective translation and rotation of bacterial clusters were reported
from experiments on bacterial colonies. Motivated by this observations
we suggest a simple model for the description of bacterial colonies
using the concept of active Brownian particles. Individual based models
represent an interesting alternative to the usually employed mean field
chemotaxis-diffusion equations (Keller-Segel model) as they allow us to
study the macroscopic pattern formation of the colony, the collective
dynamics of bacterial ensembles, as well as the microscopic dynamics of
individual cells. In this paper we derive microscopic model equations
from basic assumptions about bacterial dynamics, discuss the parameter
choice by comparison with biological data and analyse the macroscopic
and microscopic dynamics of the system. Finally we extend the model by a
velocity-alignment (swarming) interaction which leads to novel
collective dynamics in the system.
Tags
Dynamics
patterns
Bacterial chemotaxis
microorganisms
sensitivity
Colonies
Motion
Active brownian particles