May 21, 2026
Journal Article

Structured Interactions Drive Abrupt Transitions in the Spatial Organization of Microbial Communities

Abstract

Bacteria possess diverse mechanisms to regulate their motility in response to environmental and physiological signals, enabling them to navigate complex habitats and adapt their behavior. Some of these mechanisms are species specific and enable cells to modulate their movement based on the ecological identity of neighboring species. Here, we introduce a model in which bacteria interact via local signals that either enhance or suppress the motility of neighboring cells depending on species type. Through large-scale simulations and a coarse-grained stochastic model, we demonstrate the emergence of a sharp transition driven by nucleation processes: increasing the density of motility-suppressing interactions drives the system from a fully mixed, motile phase to a state characterized by large, stationary bacterial clusters. Remarkably, in systems with a large number of interacting species, this transition can be triggered solely by altering the structure of the motility-regulation interaction matrix while maintaining species and interaction densities constant. In particular, we find that heterogeneous and modular interactions promote the transition more readily than homogeneous random ones. These findings add a dimension to the theory of motility-induced phase separation and contribute to the ongoing effort to understand microbial interactions, suggesting that structured, nonrandom ones may be key to reproducing commonly observed spatial patterns in microbial communities.

Published: May 21, 2026

Citation

Mattei M., D.S. Panos, M.M. Halappanavar, and A. Arenas Moreno. 2025. Structured Interactions Drive Abrupt Transitions in the Spatial Organization of Microbial Communities. Physical Review Research 7, no. 4:Art No. 043210. PNNL-SA-214612. doi:10.1103/g5bm-m9c4

Research topics