Effect of Viscosity on Bacterial Motility

Author:

Schneider W. R.1,Doetsch R. N.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Microbiology, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742

Abstract

The behavior of a number of motile flagellated bacteria toward viscosity characteristics of their fluid environments was observed. All showed an increase in velocity (micrometers per second) in more viscous solutions. Velocity reached a maximum at a characteristic value, however, and thereafter decreased with higher viscosities. Peritrichously flagellated bacteria had maximum velocities at higher viscosities than polarly flagellated bacteria. Effects of temperature, and possible utilization of chemical constituents in the viscous solutions, were studied and found to be negligible factors under the experimental conditions used. Different agents produced the same phenomenon, thus indicating that there probably were no chemically induced metabolic effects. Loss of available water and the possibility of a variable energy supply to the flagellar propulsive system were considered but are believed minimal. Theoretically derived thermodynamic equations were utilized and suggest that the conformation of the flagellar helix affects efficiency of propulsion. Such a relationship between helix waveform and velocity was experimentally observed with Thiospirillum jenese .

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Molecular Biology,Microbiology

Reference13 articles.

1. Chemotaxis in bacteria;Adler J.;Science,1966

2. Effects of increased viscosity on the movements of some invertebrate spermatozoa;Brokaw C. J.;J. Exp. Biol.,1966

3. Motility in procaryotic organisms: problems, points of view, and perspectives;Doetsch R. N.;Biol. Rev. Cambridge Phil. Soc.,1968

4. A hydrodynamic study of the motility of flagellated bacteria;Holwill M. E. J.;Arch. Biochem. Biophys.,1963

5. Propulsion of microorganisms by three dimensional flagellar waves;Holwill M. E. J.;J. Theor. Biol.,1972

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