Frontiers in Microbiology (Jun 2023)

Monitoring lineages of growing and dividing bacteria reveals an inducible memory of mar operon expression

  • Calin C. Guet,
  • Calin C. Guet,
  • Calin C. Guet,
  • Luke Bruneaux,
  • Luke Bruneaux,
  • Panos Oikonomou,
  • Panos Oikonomou,
  • Panos Oikonomou,
  • Maximino Aldana,
  • Philippe Cluzel,
  • Philippe Cluzel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2023.1049255
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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In Gram negative bacteria, the multiple antibiotic resistance or mar operon, is known to control the expression of multi-drug efflux genes that protect bacteria from a wide range of drugs. As many different chemical compounds can induce this operon, identifying the parameters that govern the dynamics of its induction is crucial to better characterize the processes of tolerance and resistance. Most experiments have assumed that the properties of the mar transcriptional network can be inferred from population measurements. However, measurements from an asynchronous population of cells can mask underlying phenotypic variations of single cells. We monitored the activity of the mar promoter in single Escherichia coli cells in linear micro-colonies and established that the response to a steady level of inducer was most heterogeneous within individual colonies for an intermediate value of inducer. Specifically, sub-lineages defined by contiguous daughter-cells exhibited similar promoter activity, whereas activity was greatly variable between different sub-lineages. Specific sub-trees of uniform promoter activity persisted over several generations. Statistical analyses of the lineages suggest that the presence of these sub-trees is the signature of an inducible memory of the promoter state that is transmitted from mother to daughter cells. This single-cell study reveals that the degree of epigenetic inheritance changes as a function of inducer concentration, suggesting that phenotypic inheritance may be an inducible phenotype.

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