Issue 2, 2016

Nanofabricated structures and microfluidic devices for bacteria: from techniques to biology

Abstract

Nanofabricated structures and microfluidic technologies are increasingly being used to study bacteria because of their precise spatial and temporal control. They have facilitated studying many long-standing questions regarding growth, chemotaxis and cell-fate switching, and opened up new areas such as probing the effect of boundary geometries on the subcellular structure and social behavior of bacteria. We review the use of nano/microfabricated structures that spatially separate bacteria for quantitative analyses and that provide topological constraints on their growth and chemical communications. These approaches are becoming modular and broadly applicable, and show a strong potential for dissecting the complex life of bacteria at various scales and engineering synthetic microbial societies.

Graphical abstract: Nanofabricated structures and microfluidic devices for bacteria: from techniques to biology

Article information

Article type
Tutorial Review
Submitted
30 Jun 2015
First published
18 Sep 2015

Chem. Soc. Rev., 2016,45, 268-280

Author version available

Nanofabricated structures and microfluidic devices for bacteria: from techniques to biology

F. Wu and C. Dekker, Chem. Soc. Rev., 2016, 45, 268 DOI: 10.1039/C5CS00514K

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