Skip to content Accessibility statement

Gel study uncovers unexpected dynamics

News

Posted on Thursday 24 September 2015

Research by scientists at the University of York has revealed important new information about the dynamics of bacterial gels which could ultimately suggest new ways of helping prevent or better control diseases such as cystic fibrosis.

The research in the Department of Chemistry at York demonstrated that alginate gels, which can be produced as biofilms by bacteria such as pseudomonas aeruginosa, are more dynamic than previously thought.  The research, which is published in Soft Matter, was funded by the Royal Society.

Understanding the dynamics of alginate gels may ultimately suggest new ways of helping prevent or better control such bacterial infections, which can be particularly critical in the lungs of cystic fibrosis patients.

Dr Victor Chechik and Professor David Smith, working with visiting Romanian scientist Dr Gabriela Ionita, used electron paramagnetic resonance methods to gain a detailed insight into these materials. 

The sticky alginate gel biofilms are composed of a combination of positively charged metal ions and negatively charged alginate polymers.  It was well-known that the positively charged metal ions in these materials were mobile, but it was thought that the negatively charged alginate polymers acted as a relatively rigid and immobile framework holding the gel network together. 

The scientists used ‘spin-labelling’ methods to find that the alginate polymers actually had high levels of mobility and could readily exchange with one another.

Dr Chechik said: “The unexpected, highly dynamic and exchangeable nature of the alginate polymers in these materials suggests ways in which such gels could, in the future, be modified or disrupted.”

Professor Smith added: “This fundamental research may allow the introduction of additional function to these dynamic soft materials, or even suggest new ways of helping disrupt alginate-producing bacterial infections such as pseudomonas aeruginosa.”

Further information

Research newsletter

Our monthly research newsletter features a curated mix of news, events, and recent discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.

Sign up

Explore more news

News

28 May 2026

A routine questionnaire completed by parents when their child turns two could play a vital role in identifying children who need extra support before they start primary school, a new study has revealed.

News

28 May 2026

Scientists have warned that understanding the complex make-up of the world’s peatlands is an underestimated climate battle.

News

28 May 2026

Professor Kate Pickett OBE, a leading epidemiologist at the University of York, has become the UK's first-ever Professor for the Public Understanding of Social Science.

News

22 May 2026

British demand for everyday global commodities can be linked to more than 29,000 hectares of deforestation worldwide in a single year, with tens of thousands of hectares stripped directly from overseas ecosystems.

News

19 May 2026

More than 100 years after Seebohm Rowntree’s landmark study of poverty and social life in York, researchers are once again using pubs to reassess the city’s social fabric.

Read more news