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Bacterial Filamentation Drives Colony Chirality

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posted on 2025-08-01, 13:36 authored by A Aranda-Díaz, C Rodrigues, A Grote, J Sun, C Schreck, O Hallatschek, A Souslov, W Möbius, KC Huang
Chirality is ubiquitous in nature, with consequences at the cellular and tissue scales. As Escherichia coli colonies expand radially, an orthogonal component of growth creates a pinwheel-like pattern that can be revealed by fluorescent markers. To elucidate the mechanistic basis of this colony chirality, we investigated its link to left-handed, single-cell twisting during E. coli elongation. While chemical and genetic manipulation of cell width altered single-cell twisting handedness, colonies ceased to be chiral rather than switching handedness, and anaerobic growth altered colony chirality without affecting single-cell twisting. Chiral angle increased with increasing temperature even when growth rate decreased. Unifying these findings, we discovered that colony chirality was associated with the propensity for cell filamentation. Inhibition of cell division accentuated chirality under aerobic growth and generated chirality under anaerobic growth. Thus, regulation of cell division is intrinsically coupled to colony chirality, providing a mechanism for tuning macroscale spatial patterning. IMPORTANCE Chiral objects, such as amino acids, are distinguishable from their mirror image. For living systems, the fundamental mechanisms relating cellular handedness to chirality at the multicellular scale remain largely mysterious. Here, we use chemical, genetic, and environmental perturbations of Escherichia coli to investigate whether pinwheel patterns in bacterial colonies are directly linked to single-cell growth behaviors. We discover that chirality can be abolished without affecting single-cell twisting; instead, the degree of chirality was linked to the proportion of highly elongated cells at the colony edge. Inhibiting cell division boosted the degree of chirality during aerobic growth and even introduced chirality to otherwise achiral colonies during anaerobic growth. These findings reveal a fascinating connection between cell division and macroscopic colony patterning.

Funding

Allen Discovery Center at Stanford University on Systems Modeling of Infection

MCB-1149328

National Institutes of Health (NIH)

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© 2021 Aranda-Díaz et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.

Notes

This is the final version. Available on open access from the American Society for Microbiology via the DOI in this record

Journal

mBio

Pagination

e0154221-

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Place published

United States

Version

  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2021-12-10T14:09:49Z

FOA date

2021-12-10T14:12:35Z

Citation

Vol. 12 (6), article e01542-21

Department

  • Physics and Astronomy

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