Synthesis and degradation of FtsZ quantitatively predict the first cell division in starved bacteria

  • Sekar K
  • Rusconi R
  • Sauls J
  • et al.
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Abstract

In natural environments, microbes are typically non-dividing and gauge when nutrients permit division. Current models are phenomenological and specific to nutrient-rich, exponentially growing cells, thus cannot predict the first division under limiting nutrient availability. To assess this regime, we supplied starving Escherichia coli with glucose pulses at increasing frequencies. Real-time metabolomics and microfluidic single-cell microscopy revealed unexpected, rapid protein, and nucleic acid synthesis already from minuscule glucose pulses in non-dividing cells. Additionally , the lag time to first division shortened as pulsing frequency increased. We pinpointed division timing and dependence on nutrient frequency to the changing abundance of the division protein FtsZ. A dynamic, mechanistic model quantitatively relates lag time to FtsZ synthesis from nutrient pulses and FtsZ protease-dependent degradation. Lag time changed in model-congruent manners, when we experimentally modulated the synthesis or degradation of FtsZ. Thus, limiting abundance of FtsZ can quantitatively predict timing of the first cell division.

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Sekar, K., Rusconi, R., Sauls, J. T., Fuhrer, T., Noor, E., Nguyen, J., … Sauer, U. (2018). Synthesis and degradation of FtsZ quantitatively predict the first cell division in starved bacteria. Molecular Systems Biology, 14(11). https://doi.org/10.15252/msb.20188623

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