TY - JOUR
T1 - An inexpensive imaging platform to record and quantitate bacterial swarming
AU - Chen, Weijie
AU - Mani, Sridhar
AU - Tang, Jay X.
N1 - Funding Information:
The instrument and studies presented here were built and conducted using funds at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, INC and supported by the Broad Medical Research Program at CCFA (Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation of America; Grant# 362520) (to S.M.); NIH R01 CA127231; CA 161879; 1R01ES030197-01; and Department of Defense Partnering PI (W81XWH-17-1-0479; PR160167) (S.M.).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Seniko studio Ltd. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021/9/20
Y1 - 2021/9/20
N2 - Bacterial swarming refers to a rapid spread, with coordinated motion, of flagellated bacteria on a semi-solid surface (Harshey, 2003). There has been extensive study on this particular mode of motility because of its interesting biological and physical relevance, e.g., enhanced antibiotic resistance (Kearns, 2010) and turbulent collective motion (Steager et al., 2008). Commercial equipment for the live recording of swarm expansion can easily cost tens of thousands of dollars (Morales-Soto et al., 2015); yet, often the conditions are not accurately controlled, resulting in poor robustness and a lack of reproducibility. Here, we describe a reliable design and operations protocol to perform reproducible bacterial swarming assays using time-lapse photography. This protocol consists of three main steps: 1) building a “homemade,” environment-controlled photographing incubator; 2) performing a bacterial swarming assay; and 3) calculating the swarming rate from serial photos taken over time. An efficient way of calculating the bacterial swarming rate is crucial in performing swarming phenotype-related studies, e.g., screening swarming-deficient isogenic mutant strains. The incubator is economical, easy to operate, and has a wide range of applications. In fact, this system can be applied to many slowly evolving processes, such as biofilm formation and fungal growth, which need to be monitored by camera under a controlled temperature and ambient humidity.
AB - Bacterial swarming refers to a rapid spread, with coordinated motion, of flagellated bacteria on a semi-solid surface (Harshey, 2003). There has been extensive study on this particular mode of motility because of its interesting biological and physical relevance, e.g., enhanced antibiotic resistance (Kearns, 2010) and turbulent collective motion (Steager et al., 2008). Commercial equipment for the live recording of swarm expansion can easily cost tens of thousands of dollars (Morales-Soto et al., 2015); yet, often the conditions are not accurately controlled, resulting in poor robustness and a lack of reproducibility. Here, we describe a reliable design and operations protocol to perform reproducible bacterial swarming assays using time-lapse photography. This protocol consists of three main steps: 1) building a “homemade,” environment-controlled photographing incubator; 2) performing a bacterial swarming assay; and 3) calculating the swarming rate from serial photos taken over time. An efficient way of calculating the bacterial swarming rate is crucial in performing swarming phenotype-related studies, e.g., screening swarming-deficient isogenic mutant strains. The incubator is economical, easy to operate, and has a wide range of applications. In fact, this system can be applied to many slowly evolving processes, such as biofilm formation and fungal growth, which need to be monitored by camera under a controlled temperature and ambient humidity.
KW - Bacterial motility
KW - Bacterial swarming
KW - Colony growth
KW - Incubation
KW - Time-lapse imaging
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U2 - 10.21769/BioProtoc.4162
DO - 10.21769/BioProtoc.4162
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85116127612
SN - 2331-8325
VL - 11
JO - Bio-protocol
JF - Bio-protocol
IS - 18
M1 - 4162
ER -