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Featured researches published by Jintao Liu.


Nature | 2015

Ion channels enable electrical communication in bacterial communities

Arthur Prindle; Jintao Liu; Munehiro Asally; San Ly; Jordi Garcia-Ojalvo; Gürol M. Süel

The study of bacterial ion channels has provided fundamental insights into the structural basis of neuronal signalling; however, the native role of ion channels in bacteria has remained elusive. Here we show that ion channels conduct long-range electrical signals within bacterial biofilm communities through spatially propagating waves of potassium. These waves result from a positive feedback loop, in which a metabolic trigger induces release of intracellular potassium, which in turn depolarizes neighbouring cells. Propagating through the biofilm, this wave of depolarization coordinates metabolic states among cells in the interior and periphery of the biofilm. Deletion of the potassium channel abolishes this response. As predicted by a mathematical model, we further show that spatial propagation can be hindered by specific genetic perturbations to potassium channel gating. Together, these results demonstrate a function for ion channels in bacterial biofilms, and provide a prokaryotic paradigm for active, long-range electrical signalling in cellular communities.


Nature | 2015

Metabolic co-dependence gives rise to collective oscillations within biofilms

Jintao Liu; Arthur Prindle; Jacqueline Humphries; Marçal Gabalda-Sagarra; Munehiro Asally; Dong yeon D. Lee; San Ly; Jordi Garcia-Ojalvo; Gürol M. Süel

Cells that reside within a community can cooperate and also compete with each other for resources. It remains unclear how these opposing interactions are resolved at the population level. Here we investigate such an internal conflict within a microbial (Bacillus subtilis) biofilm community: cells in the biofilm periphery not only protect interior cells from external attack but also starve them through nutrient consumption. We discover that this conflict between protection and starvation is resolved through emergence of long-range metabolic co-dependence between peripheral and interior cells. As a result, biofilm growth halts periodically, increasing nutrient availability for the sheltered interior cells. We show that this collective oscillation in biofilm growth benefits the community in the event of a chemical attack. These findings indicate that oscillations support population-level conflict resolution by coordinating competing metabolic demands in space and time, suggesting new strategies to control biofilm growth.


Science | 2017

Coupling between distant biofilms and emergence of nutrient time-sharing

Jintao Liu; Rosa Martinez-Corral; Arthur Prindle; Dong yeon D. Lee; Joseph W. Larkin; Marçal Gabalda-Sagarra; Jordi Garcia-Ojalvo; Gürol M. Süel

Maximizing growth by sharing Bacterial colonies can undergo synchronized oscillations of cell growth, in which individual cells communicate through potassium ion-mediated electrical signals. Liu et al. found that such communication can also occur between adjacent colonies (see the Perspective by Gordon). Furthermore, colonies that would normally oscillate in synchrony adapted to an environment in which the nutrient supply was limited by growing out of phase with one another. Mathematical modeling and further experiments showed that this kept the colonies from having to compete for the limited nutrient and, counterintuitively, allowed the colonies to grow more quickly than they did with a higher nutrient concentration. Science, this issue p. 638; see also p. 583 How sharing resources can benefit bacterial colonies. Bacteria within communities can interact to organize their behavior. It has been unclear whether such interactions can extend beyond a single community to coordinate the behavior of distant populations. We discovered that two Bacillus subtilis biofilm communities undergoing metabolic oscillations can become coupled through electrical signaling and synchronize their growth dynamics. Coupling increases competition by also synchronizing demand for limited nutrients. As predicted by mathematical modeling, we confirm that biofilms resolve this conflict by switching from in-phase to antiphase oscillations. This results in time-sharing behavior, where each community takes turns consuming nutrients. Time-sharing enables biofilms to counterintuitively increase growth under reduced nutrient supply. Distant biofilms can thus coordinate their behavior to resolve nutrient competition through time-sharing, a strategy used in engineered systems to allocate limited resources.


PLOS Computational Biology | 2016

Noise Expands the Response Range of the Bacillus subtilis Competence Circuit

Andrew Mugler; Mark Kittisopikul; Luke Hayden; Jintao Liu; Chris H. Wiggins; Gürol M. Süel; Aleksandra M. Walczak

Gene regulatory circuits must contend with intrinsic noise that arises due to finite numbers of proteins. While some circuits act to reduce this noise, others appear to exploit it. A striking example is the competence circuit in Bacillus subtilis, which exhibits much larger noise in the duration of its competence events than a synthetically constructed analog that performs the same function. Here, using stochastic modeling and fluorescence microscopy, we show that this larger noise allows cells to exit terminal phenotypic states, which expands the range of stress levels to which cells are responsive and leads to phenotypic heterogeneity at the population level. This is an important example of how noise confers a functional benefit in a genetic decision-making circuit.


Cell | 2017

SnapShot: Electrochemical Communication in Biofilms

Dong yeon D. Lee; Arthur Prindle; Jintao Liu; Gürol M. Süel

The role of electricity in biological systems was first appreciated through electrical stimulation experiments performed by Luigi Galvani in the 18th century. These pioneering experiments demonstrated that the behavior of living tissues is governed by the flow of electrochemical species-an insight that gave rise to the modern field of electrophysiology. Since then, electrophysiology has largely remained a bastion of neuroscience. However, exciting recent developments have demonstrated that even simple bacteria residing in communities use electrochemical communication to coordinate population-level behaviors. These recent works are defining the emerging field of bacterial biofilm electrophysiology. To view this SnapShot, open or download the PDF.


bioRxiv | 2018

Bistable emergence of oscillations in structured cell populations

Rosa Martinez-Corral; Jintao Liu; Gürol M. Süel; Jordi Garcia-Ojalvo

Biofilm communities of Bacillus subtilis bacteria have recently been shown to exhibit collective growth-rate oscillations mediated by electrochemical signaling to cope with nutrient starvation. These oscillations emerge once the colony reaches a large enough number of cells. However, it remains unclear whether the amplitude of the oscillations, and thus their effectiveness, builds up over time gradually, or if they can emerge instantly with a non-zero amplitude. Here we address this question by combining microfluidics-based time-lapse microscopy experiments with a minimal theoretical description of the system in the form of a delay-differential equation model. Analytical and numerical methods reveal that oscillations arise through a subcritical Hopf bifurcation, which enables instant high amplitude oscillations. Consequently, the model predicts a bistable regime where an oscillating and a non-oscillating attractor coexist in phase space. We experimentally validate this prediction by showing that oscillations can be triggered by perturbing the media conditions, provided the biofilm size lies within an appropriate range. The model also predicts that the minimum size at which oscillations start decreases with stress, a fact that we also verify experimentally. Taken together, our results show that collective oscillations in cell populations can emerge suddenly with non-zero amplitude via a discontinuous transition.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018

Bistable emergence of oscillations in growing Bacillus subtilis biofilms

Rosa Martinez-Corral; Jintao Liu; Gürol M. Süel; Jordi Garcia-Ojalvo

Significance Cell communities can become resilient to stress by undergoing collective growth oscillations, which provide periodic stress relief and are collective in the sense that they arise only for large enough numbers of cells. Collective oscillatory phenomena usually emerge continuously as the system size increases, with oscillations starting with small amplitude and slowly growing as the cells proliferate. This behavior, however, is not appropriate in situations in which the population needs to implement a full-sized response quickly. Our combined theoretical and experimental study shows that collective oscillations in bacterial biofilm communities emerge via a discontinuous transition as their size increases. This behavior may provide an evolutionary advantage to cell communities, by allowing them to quickly alter qualitatively their dynamics in response to variations in external conditions such as stress. Biofilm communities of Bacillus subtilis bacteria have recently been shown to exhibit collective growth-rate oscillations mediated by electrochemical signaling to cope with nutrient starvation. These oscillations emerge once the colony reaches a large enough number of cells. However, it remains unclear whether the amplitude of the oscillations, and thus their effectiveness, builds up over time gradually or if they can emerge instantly with a nonzero amplitude. Here we address this question by combining microfluidics-based time-lapse microscopy experiments with a minimal theoretical description of the system in the form of a delay-differential equation model. Analytical and numerical methods reveal that oscillations arise through a subcritical Hopf bifurcation, which enables instant high-amplitude oscillations. Consequently, the model predicts a bistable regime where an oscillating and a nonoscillating attractor coexist in phase space. We experimentally validate this prediction by showing that oscillations can be triggered by perturbing the media conditions, provided the biofilm size lies within an appropriate range. The model also predicts that the minimum size at which oscillations start decreases with stress, a fact that we also verify experimentally. Taken together, our results show that collective oscillations in cell populations can emerge suddenly with nonzero amplitude via a discontinuous transition.


Cell | 2017

Species-Independent Attraction to Biofilms through Electrical Signaling

Jacqueline Humphries; Liyang Xiong; Jintao Liu; Arthur Prindle; Fang Yuan; Heidi A. Arjes; Lev S. Tsimring; Gürol M. Süel


Cell systems | 2018

Signal Percolation within a Bacterial Community

Joseph W. Larkin; Xiaoling Zhai; Kaito Kikuchi; Samuel E. Redford; Arthur Prindle; Jintao Liu; Sacha Greenfield; Aleksandra M. Walczak; Jordi Garcia-Ojalvo; Andrew Mugler; Gürol M. Süel


Biophysical Journal | 2018

A Novel Bacterial Cell to Cell Communication Mechanism

Arthur Prindle; Jintao Liu; Munehiro Asally; Jordi Garcia-Ojalvo; Gürol M. Süel

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Arthur Prindle

University of California

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Rosa Martinez-Corral

Barcelona Biomedical Research Park

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San Ly

University of California

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