Lighting Up Bacteria: Riedel-Kruse and Jin’s New Technique Reveals How Biofilms Grow and Resist Antibiotics
Xizofan Jin, Assistant Professor at the Schulich School of Engineering, University of Calgary, and Ingmar Riedel-Kruse, Associate Professor, Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of Arizona, recently published a paper in Nature Communications, titled "Optogenetic patterning generates multi-strain biofilms with spatially distributed antibiotic resistance".
Their study introduces Multipattern Biofilm Lithography (MBL), a new technique that allows scientists to precisely control the spatial arrangement of bacterial communities using light. Biofilms, which are groups of bacteria that stick to surfaces and form protective layers, are common in nature and play important roles in medicine, industry, and the environment. Unlike free-floating bacteria, those in biofilms work together, share resources, and are more resistant to antibiotics. MBL mimics natural biofilm formation by using light to pattern where different bacterial strains grow. This enables researchers to study how bacteria interact, compete, and cooperate in structured environments, something that has been difficult to observe and measure before.