Popis: |
Bacteria grow in constantly changing environments that can suddenly become completely deleted in essential nutrients. The stringent response, a rewiring of the cellular metabolism mediated by the alarmone (p)ppGpp, plays a crucial role in adjusting bacterial growth to the severity of the nutritional insult. The ability of (p)ppGpp to trigger a slowdown of cell growth or induce bacterial dormancy has been widely investigated. However, little is known about the role of (p)ppGpp in promoting growth recovery after severe growth inhibition. In this study, we performed a time-resolved analysis of (p)ppGpp metabolism inEscherichia colias it recovered from a sudden slowdown in growth. Results show thatE. colirecovers by itself from the growth disruption provoked by the addition of serine hydroxamate, the serine analogue that we used to induce the stringent response. Growth inhibition was accompanied by a severe disturbance of metabolic activity and more surprisingly, by a transient overflow of valine and alanine. Our data also show that ppGpp is crucial for growth recovery since in the absence of ppGpp,E. coli’s growth recovery was slower. In contrast, an increased concentration of pppGpp was found to have no significant effect on growth recovery. Interestingly, the observed decrease in intracellular ppGpp levels in the recovery phase correlated with bacterial growth and the main effect involved was identified as growth dilution rather than active degradative process. This report thus significantly expands our knowledge of (p)ppGpp metabolism inE. coliphysiology.IMPORTANCEThe capacity of microbes to resist and overcome environmental insults, know as resilience, allows them to survive in changing environments but also to resist antibiotic and biocide treatments, immune system responses. Although the role of the stringent response in bacterial resilience to nutritional insults has been well studied, little is known about its importance in the ability of the bacteria to not just resist but also recover from these disturbances. To address this important question, we investigated growth disruption resilience in the model bacteriumEscherichia coliand its dependency on the stringent response alarmone (p)ppGpp by quantifying ppGpp and pppGpp levels as growth was disrupted and then recovered. Our findings may thus contribute to understanding how ppGpp improvesE. coli’s resilience to nutritional stress and other environmental insults. |