[24-10-2014]
Bacteria respond to a host of changing cues provided by their environment. In their article, published on October 24, Felix Hol and Cees Dekker review how microfluidic and nanofabricated devices can provide a platform to deliver different stimuli in a variety of environments. Bacterial quorum sensing and electron transport are among the problems that can be studied in this way.
Background
Nanotechnology and bacteriology at  first sight may seem like two disparate worlds, but a rapidly moving  field of research                            has formed at the interface of these  disciplines in the past decade. Bacteria experience spatial structure at  many scales:                            Individual bacteria interact with nanoscale  surface features, whereas bacterial communities are shaped by landscape  structure                            down to the microscale. Nanofabrication and  microfluidics are ideally suited to define and control the environment  at those                            scales, allowing us to zoom in on the  peculiarities of individual cells and to broaden our understanding of  the processes                            that shape multi-species communities.  Recently developed nanotools provide unprecedented control over the  bacterial microenvironment                            and have been key to the discovery of new  phenomena in bacteriology.                         

Studying bacteria using nanofabrication and microfluidics. (A) Escherichia coli bacteria use their flagella to exploit submicrometer crevices for surface attachment [Reprinted with permission from (5) (reference list of full paper online)]. (B) Biofilm streamers form in a meandering flow channel (Pseudomonas aeruginosa, red; extracellular polymeric substances, green) [Reprinted with permission from (93)]. (C) E. coli undergo a shape transition when squeezing into a nanofabricated channel as shallow as half their width [Reprinted with permission from (26)]. Scale bars, (A) 2 µm; (B) 200 µm; and (C) 5 µm.
Advances
Nanofabrication and microfluidics  have expanded our view on a myriad of bacterial phenomena. Microfluidics  provides ways to                            study individual bacteria in dynamic and  well-defined environments and has been used to address long-standing  questions concerning                            bacterial aging and antibiotic persistence.  Biological insights have been gained by exploring bacterial growth and  movement                            in nanofabricated constrictions and revealed  that bacteria can penetrate constrictions as narrow as only half their  width.                            Furthermore, nanofabrication has been used to  discriminate between competing hypotheses regarding the mechanisms that  underlie                            intercellular electron transport. Confinement  of single bacteria in tiny volumes has provided an individualistic  perspective                            on collective phenotypes and demonstrated  that density-dependent behaviors can even be exhibited by individuals.  Bacteria                            growing in nanofabricated chambers adopt  predefined shapes and have been used to study the geometry dependence of  intracellular                            processes. Microfluidics and nanofabrication  have been combined to create synthetic ecosystems in which the spatial  eco-evolutionary                            dynamics of bacterial communities can be  explored. Various approaches to mimic the intricate spatial structure of  natural                            bacterial habitats now contribute to our  understanding of competition and cooperation within bacterial  populations. Microfluidic                            platforms have boosted research on  unculturable environmental species by eliminating the need for  pre-analysis culturing.                            On-chip whole-genome amplification of  environmental isolates has recently provided a first genotypic glimpse  on this “dark                            matter of biology.”                         
                                                                                                                    Outlook
Looking ahead, it is clear that the  doors that nanofabrication and microfluidics have opened will continue  to make important                            contributions to basic bacteriology research.  A comprehensive investigation of the uncultured majority with  microfluidic technologies,                            for instance, may uncover the vast potential  of currently unknown species. Practical applications such as microbial  fuel cells                            or antibacterial surfaces will benefit from  the understanding of bacterial behavior at the nanoscale. Microfluidic  devices                            are now beginning to be commonly used in  microbiology labs because of a demand for precise measurements in  complex environments                            that can be controlled at the microscale.  This trend will undoubtedly continue as scientists delve deeper into the  complex                            lives of bacteria.