Carine Douarche
University of Paris-Sud
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Carine Douarche.
Physical Biology | 2015
Maxime Ardré; Hervé Henry; Carine Douarche; Mathis Plapp
The bacterium Bacillus subtilis frequently forms biofilms at the interface between the culture medium and the air. We present a mathematical model that couples a description of bacteria as individual discrete objects to the standard advection-diffusion equations for the environment. The model takes into account two different bacterial phenotypes. In the motile state, bacteria swim and perform a run-and-tumble motion that is biased toward regions of high oxygen concentration (aerotaxis). In the matrix-producer state they excrete extracellular polymers, which allows them to connect to other bacteria and to form a biofilm. Bacteria are also advected by the fluid, and can trigger bioconvection. Numerical simulations of the model reproduce all the stages of biofilm formation observed in laboratory experiments. Finally, we study the influence of various model parameters on the dynamics and morphology of biofilms.
Biophysical Journal | 2015
Carine Douarche; Jean-Marc Allain; Eric Raspaud
A key issue in understanding why biofilms are the most prevalent mode of bacterial life is the origin of the degree of resistance and protection that bacteria gain from self-organizing into biofilm communities. Our experiments suggest that their mechanical properties are a key factor. Experiments on pellicles, or floating biofilms, of Bacillus subtilis showed that while they are multiplying and secreting extracellular substances, bacteria create an internal force (associated with a -80±25 Pa stress) within the biofilms, similar to the forces that self-equilibrate and strengthen plants, organs, and some engineered buildings. Here, we found that this force, or stress, is associated with growth-induced pressure. Our observations indicate that due to such forces, biofilms spread after any cut or ablation by up to 15-20% of their initial size. The force relaxes over very short timescales (tens of milliseconds). We conclude that this force helps bacteria to shape the biofilm, improve its mechanical resistance, and facilitate its invasion and self-repair.
PLOS ONE | 2017
Philippe Thomen; Jérôme Robert; Amaury Monmeyran; Anne-Florence Bitbol; Carine Douarche; Nelly Henry
Bacterial communities attached to surfaces under fluid flow represent a widespread lifestyle of the microbial world. Through shear stress generation and molecular transport regulation, hydrodynamics conveys effects that are very different by nature but strongly coupled. To decipher the influence of these levers on bacterial biofilms immersed in moving fluids, we quantitatively and simultaneously investigated physicochemical and biological properties of the biofilm. We designed a millifluidic setup allowing to control hydrodynamic conditions and to monitor biofilm development in real time using microscope imaging. We also conducted a transcriptomic analysis to detect a potential physiological response to hydrodynamics. We discovered that a threshold value of shear stress determined biofilm settlement, with sub-piconewton forces sufficient to prevent biofilm initiation. As a consequence, distinct hydrodynamic conditions, which set spatial distribution of shear stress, promoted distinct colonization patterns with consequences on the growth mode. However, no direct impact of mechanical forces on biofilm growth rate was observed. Consistently, no mechanosensing gene emerged from our differential transcriptomic analysis comparing distinct hydrodynamic conditions. Instead, we found that hydrodynamic molecular transport crucially impacts biofilm growth by controlling oxygen availability. Our results shed light on biofilm response to hydrodynamics and open new avenues to achieve informed design of fluidic setups for investigating, engineering or fighting adherent communities.
Physical Review Letters | 2015
Hector Lopez; Jérémie Gachelin; Carine Douarche; Harold Auradou; Eric Clément
European Physical Journal-special Topics | 2016
Eric Clément; Anke Lindner; Carine Douarche; Harold Auradou
arXiv: Fluid Dynamics | 2018
Adama Creppy; Eric Clément; Carine Douarche; Maria Veronica D'Angelo; Harold Auradou
arXiv: Biological Physics | 2018
Nuris Figueroa-Morales; Thierry Darnige; Carine Douarche; Vincent Martinez; Rodrigo Soto; Anke Lindner; Eric Clément
arXiv: Biological Physics | 2018
Benoit Vincenti; Carine Douarche; Eric Clément
Reflets De La Physique | 2018
Harold Auradou; Carine Douarche; Adama Creppy; Hector Lopez; Eric Clément
Archive | 2018
Adama Creppy; Eric Clément; Carine Douarche; Maria Veronica D'Angelo; Harold Auradou