Author:
Lewis Daniel D.,Gong Ting,Xu Yuanwei,Tan Cheemeng
Abstract
The fusion of living bacteria and man-made materials represents a new frontier in medical and biosynthetic technology. However, the principles of bacterial signal processing inside synthetic materials with three-dimensional and fluctuating environments remain elusive. Here, we study bacterial growth in a three-dimensional hydrogel. We find that bacteria expressing an antibiotic resistance module can take advantage of ambient kinetic disturbances to improve growth while encapsulated. We show that these changes in bacterial growth are specific to disturbance frequency and hydrogel density. This remarkable specificity demonstrates that periodic disturbance frequency is a new input that engineers may leverage to control bacterial growth in synthetic materials. This research provides a systematic framework for understanding and controlling bacterial information processing in three-dimensional living materials.
Funder
Human Frontier Science Program
National Science Foundation
Subject
Biomedical Engineering,Histology,Bioengineering,Biotechnology
Cited by
1 articles.
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