Homeostasis of cytoplasmic crowding by cell wall fluidization and ribosomal counterions

Author:

Basan Markus1ORCID,Mukherjee Avik1ORCID,Huang Yanqing1ORCID,Oh Seungeun1,Sanchez Carlos1,Chang Yu-Fang1,Liu Xili1ORCID,Bradshaw Gary1,Benites Nina1,Paulsson Johan2ORCID,Kirschner Marc1,Sung Yongjin3,Elgeti Jens4

Affiliation:

1. HARVARD MEDICAL SCHOOL

2. Harvard University

3. UW Milwaukee

4. FZ Juelich

Abstract

Abstract In bacteria, algae, fungi, and plant cells, the wall must expand in concert with cytoplasmic biomass production, otherwise cells would experience toxic molecular crowding1,2 or lyse. But how cells achieve expansion of this complex biomaterial in coordination with biosynthesis of macromolecules in the cytoplasm remains unexplained3, although recent works have revealed that these processes are indeed coupled4,5. Here, we report a striking increase of turgor pressure with growth rate in E. coli, suggesting that the speed of cell wall expansion is controlled via turgor. Remarkably, despite this increase in turgor pressure, cellular biomass density remains constant across a wide range of growth rates. By contrast, perturbations of turgor pressure that deviate from this scaling directly alter biomass density. A mathematical model based on cell wall fluidization by cell wall endopeptidases not only explains these apparently confounding observations but makes surprising quantitative predictions that we validated experimentally. The picture that emerges is that turgor pressure is directly controlled via counterions of ribosomal RNA. Elegantly, the coupling between rRNA and turgor pressure simultaneously coordinates cell wall expansion across a wide range of growth rates and exerts homeostatic feedback control on biomass density. This mechanism may regulate cell wall biosynthesis from microbes to plants and has important implications for the mechanism of action of antibiotics6.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference41 articles.

1. Klumpp, S., Scott, M., Pedersen, S. & Hwa, T. Molecular crowding limits translation and cell growth. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 110, 16754–16759 (2013).

2. Lee, A. J. et al. Robust, linear correlations between growth rates and β-lactam–mediated lysis rates. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 115, 4069–4074 (2018).

3. Microorganisms maintain crowding homeostasis;Berg J;Nat Rev Microbiol,2017

4. Relative rates of surface and volume synthesis set bacterial cell size;Harris LK;Cell,2016

5. Oldewurtel, E. R., Kitahara, Y. & Teeffelen, S. van. Robust surface-to-mass coupling and turgor-dependent cell width determine bacterial dry-mass density. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 118, (2021).

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