Molecular Systems Biology (Oct 2015)

Inflating bacterial cells by increased protein synthesis

  • Markus Basan,
  • Manlu Zhu,
  • Xiongfeng Dai,
  • Mya Warren,
  • Daniel Sévin,
  • Yi‐Ping Wang,
  • Terence Hwa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.15252/msb.20156178
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 10
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Understanding how the homeostasis of cellular size and composition is accomplished by different organisms is an outstanding challenge in biology. For exponentially growing Escherichia coli cells, it is long known that the size of cells exhibits a strong positive relation with their growth rates in different nutrient conditions. Here, we characterized cell sizes in a set of orthogonal growth limitations. We report that cell size and mass exhibit positive or negative dependences with growth rate depending on the growth limitation applied. In particular, synthesizing large amounts of “useless” proteins led to an inversion of the canonical, positive relation, with slow growing cells enlarged 7‐ to 8‐fold compared to cells growing at similar rates under nutrient limitation. Strikingly, this increase in cell size was accompanied by a 3‐ to 4‐fold increase in cellular DNA content at slow growth, reaching up to an amount equivalent to ~8 chromosomes per cell. Despite drastic changes in cell mass and macromolecular composition, cellular dry mass density remained constant. Our findings reveal an important role of protein synthesis in cell division control.

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