Bacterial colonies are far more than simple "piles of cells." They are dynamic, multicellular-like systems characterized by intricate spatial organization, functional differentiation, and coordinated collective behaviors. While traditional microbiology has often treated bacteria as isolated single cells, modern perspectives recognize that a colony functions as a highly organized and spatially heterogeneous ecosystem. From a single founder cell to a macroscopic community, colony development is governed by the tight coupling of nutrient gradients, metabolic interactions, gene regulatory networks, and physical forces. Breaking through our traditional cognitive limitations to recognize this complexity is crucial for advancing our ability to precisely manipulate microbial communities and tackle critical challenges in healthcare, agriculture, environmental science, and industrial bioproduction.
Recently, a research team led by Xiongfei Fu at the State Key Laboratory for Quantitative Synthetic Biology, Shenzhen Institute of Synthetic Biology, Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, published a review article in Quantitative Biology titled "Understanding the development of bacterial colony: Physiology, new technology, and modeling". The article synthesizes current knowledge on how bacterial colonies grow, organize, and function, highlighting emerging research tools and theoretical approaches that are transforming the field.
The review presents bacterial colonies as complex communities formed through continuous interactions between cells and their environment. As colonies expand on surfaces, gradients of nutrients, oxygen, and metabolic by-products arise, producing strong spatial heterogeneity. These gradients lead to distinct physiological subpopulations — including rapidly growing cells, dormant cells, and specialized differentiated cells — coexisting within the same colony. Coordination among these diverse cell states is achieved through global regulatory networks and multiple communication mechanisms, such as quorum sensing, diffusible chemical signals, and metabolic cross-feeding, enabling cooperation, competition, and division of labor.
The authors also highlight recent technological advances that have revolutionized colony research. High-resolution fluorescence microscopy, light-sheet imaging, chemical imaging, and spatially resolved molecular analyses now allow scientists to observe colony structure, gene expression, and metabolic activity over time with single-cell precision. These tools are providing unprecedented insight into how colonies develop and respond to environmental conditions.
In addition, the review discusses theoretical frameworks used to interpret colony behavior, including reaction–diffusion models, continuum mechanical descriptions, cellular automata, and agent-based simulations. By integrating physiological knowledge, quantitative experimental techniques, and mathematical modeling, the article offers a comprehensive picture of how bacterial colonies self-organize, form complex spatial structures, and adapt to changing environments.
This interdisciplinary perspective not only advances fundamental understanding of microbial life but also lays the groundwork for future applications, from controlling biofilms and infections to engineering beneficial microbial communities for sustainable production and environmental remediation.
DOI:10.1002/qub2.95