Process description of an unconventional biofilm formation by bacterial cells autoagglutinating through sticky, long, and peritrichate nanofibers

2020 
In this study, we elucidated the formation process of an unconventional biofilm formed by a bacterium autoagglutinating through sticky, long, and peritrichate nanofibers. Understanding the mechanisms of biofilm formation is essential to control microbial behavior and improve environmental biotechnologies. Acinetobacter sp. Tol 5 autoagglutinate through the interaction of the long, peritrichate nanofiber protein AtaA, a trimeric autotransporter adhesin. Using AtaA, without cell growth or extracellular polymeric substances production, Tol 5 cells quickly form an unconventional biofilm. The process forming this unconventional biofilm started with cell–cell interactions, proceeded to cell clumping, and led to the formation of large cell aggregates. The cell–cell interaction was described by DLVO theory based on a new concept, which considers two independent interactions between two cell bodies and between two AtaA fiber tips forming a discontinuous surface. If cell bodies cannot collide owing to an energy bar...
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