Literature DB >> 24976172

Bacterial sugar utilization gives rise to distinct single-cell behaviours.

Taliman Afroz1, Konstantinos Biliouris2, Yiannis Kaznessis2, Chase L Beisel1.   

Abstract

Inducible utilization pathways reflect widespread microbial strategies to uptake and consume sugars from the environment. Despite their broad importance and extensive characterization, little is known how these pathways naturally respond to their inducing sugar in individual cells. Here, we performed single-cell analyses to probe the behaviour of representative pathways in the model bacterium Escherichia coli. We observed diverse single-cell behaviours, including uniform responses (d-lactose, d-galactose, N-acetylglucosamine, N-acetylneuraminic acid), 'all-or-none' responses (d-xylose, l-rhamnose) and complex combinations thereof (l-arabinose, d-gluconate). Mathematical modelling and probing of genetically modified pathways revealed that the simple framework underlying these pathways - inducible transport and inducible catabolism - could give rise to most of these behaviours. Sugar catabolism was also an important feature, as disruption of catabolism eliminated tunable induction as well as enhanced memory of previous conditions. For instance, disruption of catabolism in pathways that respond to endogenously synthesized sugars led to full pathway induction even in the absence of exogenous sugar. Our findings demonstrate the remarkable flexibility of this simple biological framework, with direct implications for environmental adaptation and the engineering of synthetic utilization pathways as titratable expression systems and for metabolic engineering.
© 2014 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24976172      PMCID: PMC4160389          DOI: 10.1111/mmi.12695

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Microbiol        ISSN: 0950-382X            Impact factor:   3.501


  73 in total

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  25 in total

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4.  Spot 42 sRNA regulates arabinose-inducible araBAD promoter activity by repressing synthesis of the high-affinity low-capacity arabinose transporter.

Authors:  Jiandong Chen; Susan Gottesman
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5.  Bistability and Nonmonotonic Induction of the lac Operon in the Natural Lactose Uptake System.

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6.  Rethinking the Hierarchy of Sugar Utilization in Bacteria.

Authors:  Chase L Beisel; Taliman Afroz
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  2015-11-16       Impact factor: 3.490

7.  AraR, an l-Arabinose-Responsive Transcriptional Regulator in Corynebacterium glutamicum ATCC 31831, Exerts Different Degrees of Repression Depending on the Location of Its Binding Sites within the Three Target Promoter Regions.

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8.  Reciprocal Regulation of l-Arabinose and d-Xylose Metabolism in Escherichia coli.

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9.  Noncanonical crRNAs derived from host transcripts enable multiplexable RNA detection by Cas9.

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Journal:  Mol Microbiol       Date:  2020-10-06       Impact factor: 3.501

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