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      Not Just Going with the Flow: The Effects of Fluid Flow on Bacteria and Plankton

      1 , 1 , 2 , 3 , 1
      Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology
      Annual Reviews

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          Abstract

          Microorganisms often live in habitats characterized by fluid flow, from lakes and oceans to soil and the human body. Bacteria and plankton experience a broad range of flows, from the chaotic motion characteristic of turbulence to smooth flows at boundaries and in confined environments. Flow creates forces and torques that affect the movement, behavior, and spatial distribution of microorganisms and shapes the chemical landscape on which they rely for nutrient acquisition and communication. Methodological advances and closer interactions between physicists and biologists have begun to reveal the importance of flow–microorganism interactions and the adaptations of microorganisms to flow. Here we review selected examples of such interactions from bacteria, phytoplankton, larvae, and zooplankton. We hope that this article will serve as a blueprint for a more in-depth consideration of the effects of flow in the biology of microorganisms and that this discussion will stimulate further multidisciplinary effort in understanding this important component of microorganism habitats.

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          The Motion of Ellipsoidal Particles Immersed in a Viscous Fluid

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            The selective value of bacterial shape.

            Why do bacteria have shape? Is morphology valuable or just a trivial secondary characteristic? Why should bacteria have one shape instead of another? Three broad considerations suggest that bacterial shapes are not accidental but are biologically important: cells adopt uniform morphologies from among a wide variety of possibilities, some cells modify their shape as conditions demand, and morphology can be tracked through evolutionary lineages. All of these imply that shape is a selectable feature that aids survival. The aim of this review is to spell out the physical, environmental, and biological forces that favor different bacterial morphologies and which, therefore, contribute to natural selection. Specifically, cell shape is driven by eight general considerations: nutrient access, cell division and segregation, attachment to surfaces, passive dispersal, active motility, polar differentiation, the need to escape predators, and the advantages of cellular differentiation. Bacteria respond to these forces by performing a type of calculus, integrating over a number of environmental and behavioral factors to produce a size and shape that are optimal for the circumstances in which they live. Just as we are beginning to answer how bacteria create their shapes, it seems reasonable and essential that we expand our efforts to understand why they do so.
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              Diffusion in biofilms.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology
                Annu. Rev. Cell Dev. Biol.
                Annual Reviews
                1081-0706
                1530-8995
                October 06 2019
                October 06 2019
                : 35
                : 1
                : 213-237
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Institute of Environmental Engineering, Department of Civil, Environmental, and Geomatic Engineering, ETH Zürich, 8093 Zürich, Switzerland;
                [2 ]Department of Biomedical Sciences, Humanitas University, 20090 Pieve Emanuele (MI), Italy
                [3 ]Humanitas Clinical and Research Center–IRCCS, 20089 Rozzano (MI), Italy
                Article
                10.1146/annurev-cellbio-100818-125119
                31412210
                204f7867-f52a-4620-aa32-1b99b8ea03db
                © 2019
                History

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