Institute of Life Sciences, UCLouvain, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium.
Walloon Excellence in Life Sciences and Biotechnology (WELBIO), Wavre, Belgium.
Nat Rev Microbiol. 2020 Apr;18(4):227-240. doi: 10.1038/s41579-019-0314-2. Epub 2020 Jan 20.
Microorganisms have evolved to thrive in virtually any terrestrial and marine environment, exposing them to various mechanical cues mainly generated by fluid flow and pressure as well as surface contact. Cellular components enable bacteria to sense and respond to physical cues to optimize their function, ultimately improving bacterial fitness. Owing to newly developed biophysical techniques, we are now starting to appreciate the breadth of bacterial phenotypes influenced by mechanical inputs: adhesion, motility, biofilm formation and pathogenicity. In this Review, we discuss how microbiology and biophysics are converging to advance our understanding of the mechanobiology of microorganisms. We first review the various physical forces that bacteria experience in their natural environments and describe the structures that transmit these forces to a cell. We then discuss how forces can provide feedback to enhance adhesion and motility and how they can be transduced by dedicated cellular machinery to regulate diverse phenotypes. Finally, we provide a perspective on how mechanics influence biofilm spatial organization and homeostasis.
微生物已经进化到可以在几乎任何陆地和海洋环境中生存,使它们接触到各种主要由流体流动和压力以及表面接触产生的机械线索。细胞成分使细菌能够感知和响应物理线索,以优化其功能,最终提高细菌的适应性。由于新开发的生物物理技术,我们现在开始意识到机械输入影响细菌表型的广泛性:粘附、运动、生物膜形成和致病性。在这篇综述中,我们讨论了微生物学和生物物理学如何融合,以增进我们对微生物力学的理解。我们首先回顾了细菌在其自然环境中经历的各种物理力,并描述了将这些力传递到细胞的结构。然后,我们讨论了力如何提供反馈来增强粘附和运动,以及它们如何被专门的细胞机制转导来调节多种表型。最后,我们提供了一个视角,说明力学如何影响生物膜的空间组织和动态平衡。