Bacterial persistence is an active σ S stress response to metabolic flux limitation

  • Radzikowski J
  • Vedelaar S
  • Siegel D
  • et al.
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Abstract

© 2016 The Authors. Published under the terms of the CC BY 4.0 licenseWhile persisters are a health threat due to their transient antibiotic tolerance, little is known about their phenotype and what actually causes persistence. Using a new method for persister generation and high-throughput methods, we comprehensively mapped the molecular phenotype of Escherichia coli during the entry and in the state of persistence in nutrient-rich conditions. The persister proteome is characterized by σS-mediated stress response and a shift to catabolism, a proteome that starved cells tried to but could not reach due to absence of a carbon and energy source. Metabolism of persisters is geared toward energy production, with depleted metabolite pools. We developed and experimentally verified a model, in which persistence is established through a system-level feedback: Strong perturbations of metabolic homeostasis cause metabolic fluxes to collapse, prohibiting adjustments toward restoring homeostasis. This vicious cycle is stabilized and modulated by high ppGpp levels, toxin/anti-toxin systems, and the σS-mediated stress response. Our system-level model consistently integrates past findings with our new data, thereby providing an important basis for future research on persisters.

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Radzikowski, J. L., Vedelaar, S., Siegel, D., Ortega, Á. D., Schmidt, A., & Heinemann, M. (2016). Bacterial persistence is an active σ S stress response to metabolic flux limitation. Molecular Systems Biology, 12(9). https://doi.org/10.15252/msb.20166998

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