4.6 Article

A rheological approach to identify efficient biopolymer producing bacteria

Journal

BIOTECHNOLOGY AND BIOENGINEERING
Volume 118, Issue 2, Pages 622-632

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/bit.27595

Keywords

active matter; methanotrophs; polyhydroxybutyrate; polyhydroxyalkanoates; rheology

Funding

  1. Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico [312951/2018-3]
  2. Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado de Sao Paulo [2014/50279-4, 2016/14337-5, 2018/22790-7, 2019/15754-7]

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This study investigates the relationship between collective motion and propulsion of bacterial consortia and their biopolymer production efficiency, finding that different consortia exhibit distinct rheological behaviors closely related to their ability to capture methane. The formation of structures in consortia may hinder bacterial movement, impacting biopolymer production.
This study investigates the relationship between collective motion and propulsion of bacterial consortia and their biopolymer production efficiency. Rheological tests were conducted for suspensions of two different methanotrophic bacterial consortia obtained after enrichment of sediment samples from mangrove sites in Brazil. We considered the linear viscoelasticity region and analyzed the values of storage and loss moduli as functions of days of cultivation, for different values of the volume fraction. The suspensions' rheological behaviors reflected the bacterial growth stage. We found that the formation of structures over time in some types of consortia can hinder the movement of bacteria in the search for nutrients. The change in complex viscosity of the two consortia followed a different and rich behavior that appears to be closely related to their capacity to capture methane. Our analysis showed a possible correlation between collective motion, viscosity reduction, and biopolymer production. The pieces of evidence from this study suggest that the efficiency of bacterial motion is directly related to biopolymer production, and this could facilitate the process of identifying the best consortium of biopolymer producing bacteria.

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