Growth and division are central to cell size. Bacteria achieve size homeostasis by dividing when growth has added a constant size since birth, termed the adder principle, by unknown mechanisms.1,2 Growth is well known to be regulated by guanosine tetraphosphate (ppGpp), which controls diverse processes from ribosome production to metabolic enzyme activity and replication initiation and whose absence or excess can induce stress, filamentation, and small growth-arrested cells.3, 4, 5, 6 These observations raise unresolved questions about the relation between ppGpp and size homeostasis mechanisms during normal exponential growth. Here, to untangle effects of ppGpp and nutrients, we gained control of cellular ppGpp by inducing the synthesis and hydrolysis enzymes RelA and Mesh1. We found that ppGpp not only exerts control over the growth rate but also over cell division and thus the steady state cell size. In response to changes in ppGpp level, the added size already establishes its new constant value while the growth rate still adjusts, aided by accelerated or delayed divisions. Moreover, the magnitude of the added size and resulting steady-state birth size correlate consistently with the ppGpp level, rather than with the growth rate, which results in cells of different size that grow equally fast. Our findings suggest that ppGpp serves as a key regulator that coordinates cell size and growth control.

ppGpp is a bacterial cell size regulator / F. Büke, J. Grilli, M. COSENTINO LAGOMARSINO, G. Bokinsky, S.J. Tans. - In: CURRENT BIOLOGY. - ISSN 0960-9822. - 32:4(2022 Feb 28), pp. 870-877.e5. [10.1016/j.cub.2021.12.033]

ppGpp is a bacterial cell size regulator

M. COSENTINO LAGOMARSINO
Membro del Collaboration Group
;
2022

Abstract

Growth and division are central to cell size. Bacteria achieve size homeostasis by dividing when growth has added a constant size since birth, termed the adder principle, by unknown mechanisms.1,2 Growth is well known to be regulated by guanosine tetraphosphate (ppGpp), which controls diverse processes from ribosome production to metabolic enzyme activity and replication initiation and whose absence or excess can induce stress, filamentation, and small growth-arrested cells.3, 4, 5, 6 These observations raise unresolved questions about the relation between ppGpp and size homeostasis mechanisms during normal exponential growth. Here, to untangle effects of ppGpp and nutrients, we gained control of cellular ppGpp by inducing the synthesis and hydrolysis enzymes RelA and Mesh1. We found that ppGpp not only exerts control over the growth rate but also over cell division and thus the steady state cell size. In response to changes in ppGpp level, the added size already establishes its new constant value while the growth rate still adjusts, aided by accelerated or delayed divisions. Moreover, the magnitude of the added size and resulting steady-state birth size correlate consistently with the ppGpp level, rather than with the growth rate, which results in cells of different size that grow equally fast. Our findings suggest that ppGpp serves as a key regulator that coordinates cell size and growth control.
Escherichia coli; adder mechanism; cell size; cell size homeostasis; growth rate; lineage tree analysis; microfluidics; microscopy; ppGpp; single cell analysis;
Settore BIO/11 - Biologia Molecolare
Settore FIS/02 - Fisica Teorica, Modelli e Metodi Matematici
Settore BIOS-08/A - Biologia molecolare
Settore PHYS-04/A - Fisica teorica della materia, modelli, metodi matematici e applicazioni
28-feb-2022
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/903263
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