Escherichia coli metabolism under short-term repetitive substrate dynamics: Adaptation and trade-offs
Escherichia coli metabolism under short-term repetitive substrate dynamics: Adaptation and trade-offs
Abstract BackgroundMicrobial metabolism is highly dependent on the environmental conditions. Especially, the substrate concentration, as well as oxygen availability, determine the metabolic rates. In large-scale bioreactors, microorganisms encounter dynamic conditions in substrate and oxygen availability (mixing limitations), which influence their metabolism and subsequently their physiology. Earlier, single substrate pulse experiments were not able to explain the observed physiological changes generated under large-scale industrial fermentation conditions. ResultsIn this study we applied a repetitive feast-famine regime in an aerobic Escherichia coli culture in a time-scale of seconds. The regime was applied for several generations, allowing cells to adapt to the (repetitive) dynamic environment. The observed response was highly reproducible over the cycles, indicating that cells were indeed fully adapted to the regime. We observed an increase of the specific substrate and oxygen consumption (average) rates during the feast-famine regime, compared to a steady-state (chemostat) reference environment. The increased rates at same (average) growth rate led to a reduced biomass yield (30% lower). Interestingly, this drop was not followed by increased by-product formation, pointing to the existence of energy-spilling reactions and/or less effective ATP synthesis. During the feast-famine cycle, the cells rapidly increased their uptake rate. Within 10 seconds after the beginning of the feeding, the substrate uptake rate was higher (4.68 μmol/gCDW/s) than reported during batch growth (3.3 μmol/gCDW/s). The high uptake led to an accumulation of several intracellular metabolites, during the feast phase, accounting for up to 34 % of the carbon supplied. Although the metabolite concentrations changed rapidly, the cellular energy charge remained unaffected, suggesting well-controlled balance between ATP producing and ATP consuming reactions. The role of inorganic polyphosphate as an energy buffer is discussed. ConclusionsThe adaptation of the physiology and metabolism of Escherichia coli under substrate dynamics, representative for large-scale fermenters, revealed the existence of several cellular mechanisms coping with stress. Changes in the substrate uptake system, storage potential and energy-spilling processes resulted to be of great importance. These metabolic strategies consist a meaningful step to further tackle reduced microbial performance, observed under large-scale cultivations.
Vasilakou Eleni、van Loosdrecht Mark C. M.、Wahl S. Aljoscha
Department of Biotechnology, Delft University of TechnologyDepartment of Biotechnology, Delft University of TechnologyDepartment of Biotechnology, Delft University of Technology
微生物学生物化学生物科学研究方法、生物科学研究技术
Escherichia colifeast-faminesubstrate dynamicsdynamic metabolic responsesenergy homeostasis
Vasilakou Eleni,van Loosdrecht Mark C. M.,Wahl S. Aljoscha.Escherichia coli metabolism under short-term repetitive substrate dynamics: Adaptation and trade-offs[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-05-04].https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.03.14.982140.点此复制
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