Directional reversals enableMyxococcus xanthuscells to produce collective one-dimensional streams during fruiting-body formation
Author(s) -
Shashi Thutupalli,
Mingzhai Sun,
Filiz Bunyak,
Kannappan Palaniappan,
Joshua W. Shaevitz
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of the royal society interface
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.655
H-Index - 139
eISSN - 1742-5689
pISSN - 1742-5662
DOI - 10.1098/rsif.2015.0049
Subject(s) - myxococcus xanthus , flocking (texture) , biology , population , collective motion , biological system , aggregate (composite) , multicellular organism , motility , collective behavior , biophysics , evolutionary biology , ecology , physics , microbiology and biotechnology , cell , nanotechnology , genetics , gene , demography , materials science , quantum mechanics , sociology , mutant , anthropology
The formation of a collectively moving group benefits individuals within a population in a variety of ways. The surface-dwelling bacterium Myxococcus xanthus forms dynamic collective groups both to feed on prey and to aggregate during times of starvation. The latter behaviour, termed fruiting-body formation, involves a complex, coordinated series of density changes that ultimately lead to three-dimensional aggregates comprising hundreds of thousands of cells and spores. How a loose, two-dimensional sheet of motile cells produces a fixed aggregate has remained a mystery as current models of aggregation are either inconsistent with experimental data or ultimately predict unstable structures that do not remain fixed in space. Here, we use high-resolution microscopy and computer vision software to spatio-temporally track the motion of thousands of individuals during the initial stages of fruiting-body formation. We find that cells undergo a phase transition from exploratory flocking, in which unstable cell groups move rapidly and coherently over long distances, to a reversal-mediated localization into one-dimensional growing streams that are inherently stable in space. These observations identify a new phase of active collective behaviour and answer a long-standing open question in Myxococcus development by describing how motile cell groups can remain statistically fixed in a spatial location.
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