Web Release Date: June 5,
Quantification of Bacterial Chemotaxis in Porous Media Using Magnetic Resonance Imaging
and

Program of Interdisciplinary Research in Contaminant Hydrogeology, Departments of Civil Engineering and Chemical Engineering, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22904
Received for review November 6, 2003
Revised manuscript received March 10, 2004
Accepted May 3, 2004
Abstract:
Bacterial chemotaxis has the potential to enhance
biodegradation of organic contaminants in polluted
groundwater systems. However, studies of bacterial
chemotaxis in porous media are scarce. In this study we
use magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for the noninvasive
measurement of changes in bacterial-density distributions
in a packed column at a spatial resolution of 330
m
as a function of time. We analyze both the diffusive and
the chemotactic behavior of Pseudomonas putida F1 in the
presence of the chemical stimulus trichloroethylene
(TCE). The migration of motile bacteria in experiments
without TCE was described using an effective motility
coefficient, whereas the presence of TCE required addition
of a nonzero chemotactic sensitivity coefficient, indicating
a significant response to TCE. The need for a chemotactic
sensitivity term was justified by a test for statistical
significance. This study represents the first quantification
of bacterial chemotactic parameters within a packed
column. For conditions under which chemotaxis occurs in
porous media, it may potentially be exploited to significantly
improve rates of in situ pollutant biodegradation in the
subsurface environment, particularly for pollutants dissolved
in water trapped in low-permeability formations or
lenses.
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