History-dependent physiological adaptation to lethal genetic modification under antibiotic exposure

Author:

Koganezawa Yuta1ORCID,Umetani Miki12ORCID,Sato Moritoshi234ORCID,Wakamoto Yuichi124ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Basic Science, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, The University of Tokyo

2. Research Center for Complex Systems Biology, The University of Tokyo

3. Department of Life Sciences, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, The University of Tokyo

4. Universal Biology Institute, The University of Tokyo

Abstract

Genetic modifications, such as gene deletion and mutations, could lead to significant changes in physiological states or even cell death. Bacterial cells can adapt to diverse external stresses, such as antibiotic exposure, but can they also adapt to detrimental genetic modification? To address this issue, we visualized the response of individual Escherichia coli cells to deletion of the antibiotic resistance gene under chloramphenicol (Cp) exposure, combining the light-inducible genetic recombination and microfluidic long-term single-cell tracking. We found that a significant fraction (∼40%) of resistance-gene-deleted cells demonstrated a gradual restoration of growth and stably proliferated under continuous Cp exposure without the resistance gene. Such physiological adaptation to genetic modification was not observed when the deletion was introduced in 10 hr or more advance before Cp exposure. Resistance gene deletion under Cp exposure disrupted the stoichiometric balance of ribosomal large and small subunit proteins (RplS and RpsB). However, the balance was gradually recovered in the cell lineages with restored growth. These results demonstrate that bacterial cells can adapt even to lethal genetic modifications by plastically gaining physiological resistance. However, the access to the resistance states is limited by the environmental histories and the timings of genetic modification.

Funder

Japan Science and Technology Agency

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Kanagawa Institute of Industrial Science and Technology

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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