| Literature DB >> 27616752 |
Jason Merritt1,2, Seppe Kuehn1,2,3.
Abstract
We present a high-throughput method to measure abundance dynamics in microbial communities sustained in continuous-culture. Our method uses custom epi-fluorescence microscopes to automatically image single cells drawn from a continuously-cultured population while precisely controlling culture conditions. For clonal populations of Escherichia coli our instrument reveals history-dependent resilience and growth rate dependent aggregation.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27616752 PMCID: PMC5018735 DOI: 10.1038/srep33173
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Microscope-coupled continuous-culture device and image segmentation.
(a) Continuous-culture device and associated epi-fluorescence microscope. System temperature is set by a Peltier element and feedback to a thermometer (not shown), and optical density is measured by an infrared LED and photodiode in an absorbance geometry. The culture vial is stirred with an inductive stir plate, fed by a nutrient inflow line, and the culture volume is set by the outflow line. A separate microscope imaging line pumps culture samples into a thin rectangular glass capillary (inset) centered on the microscope’s focal plane for imaging. The fluorescence microscope uses an epi-fluorescence geometry with a high-powered LED, dichroic mirror, objective, and CCD camera. (b) Example image from device during operation, showing single cells and large cell aggregates or ‘clumps’ from E. coli constitutively expressing red fluorescent protein (dTomato). Contrast and brightness have been increased to show out-of-focus as well as in-focus objects. (c) Segmented image showing regions determined to be in-focus cells (blue) and clumps (red) by our custom image segmentation software (Methods).
Figure 2Abundance and aggregation dynamics in fluctuating nutrient conditions.
(a) Single-cell abundances, not including aggregates, from image segmentation in three replicate continuous-culture devices over a 26-day experiment. Data shown is smoothed by a rolling average with a one-hour window. Each dashed vertical line represents a washout event where ~90% of the culture is pumped out and replaced with fresh media. (b) Clump abundances for three replicate systems during the same experiment shown in (a). Data shown is smoothed by a one-hour rolling average. (c) Peak population recovery rates (Supplementary Fig. S1) increase quickly after the first washout event, but eventually decline. Peak growth rates are calculated during single-cell population recovery (Methods) following the washout events shown in (a). Error bars from fit are smaller than markers. (d) Following a washout event, clump abundances remain low until the specific growth rate of the single-cell population slows to approximately 0.2 h−1. Graph shows data from recovery after all washout events in one system, before the next washout event begins, sorted into equal-width growth rate bins. Shaded region show central two-thirds of clump abundance data in each bin. (e) Separate experiments were carried out to determine clump abundances after a population reaches steady state at a constant dilution rate, rather than during recovery after a washout event. Data represents a time average of clump abundances between 40 and 48 hours after a population’s introduction to constant dilution conditions, and error bars show the standard error of the mean for data in this period.