Slow-growing cells within isogenic populations have increased RNA polymerase error rates and DNA damage

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Abstract

Isogenic cells show a large degree of variability in growth rate, even when cultured in the same environment. Such cell-to-cell variability in growth can alter sensitivity to antibiotics, chemotherapy and environmental stress. To characterize transcriptional differences associated with this variability, we have developed a method - FitFlow - that enables the sorting of subpopulations by growth rate. The slow-growing subpopulation shows a transcriptional stress response, but, more surprisingly, these cells have reduced RNA polymerase fidelity and exhibit a DNA damage response. As DNA damage is often caused by oxidative stress, we test the addition of an antioxidant, and find that it reduces the size of the slow-growing population. More generally, we find a significantly altered transcriptome in the slow-growing subpopulation that only partially resembles that of cells growing slowly due to environmental and culture conditions. Slow-growing cells upregulate transposons and express more chromosomal, viral and plasmid-borne transcripts, and thus explore a larger genotypic - and so phenotypic-space.

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Van Dijk, D., Dhar, R., Missarova, A. M., Espinar, L., Blevins, W. R., Lehner, B., & Carey, L. B. (2015). Slow-growing cells within isogenic populations have increased RNA polymerase error rates and DNA damage. Nature Communications, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms8972

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