Abstract

Bacteria must maintain a cytosolic osmolarity higher than that of their environment in order to take up water. High-osmolarity environments therefore present formidable stress to bacteria. To explore the evolutionary mechanisms by which bacteria adapt to high-osmolarity environments, we selected Escherichia coli in media with a variety of osmolytes and concentrations for 250 generations. Adaptation was osmolyte dependent, with sorbitol stress generally resulting in increased fitness under conditions with higher osmolarity, while selection in high concentrations of proline resulted in increased fitness specifically on proline. Consistent with these phenotypes, sequencing of the evolved populations showed that passaging in proline resulted in specific mutations in an associated metabolic pathway that increased the ability to utilize proline for growth, while evolution in sorbitol resulted in mutations in many different genes that generally resulted in improved growth under high-osmolarity conditions at the expense of growth at low osmolarity. High osmolarity decreased the growth rate but increased the mean cell volume compared with growth on proline as the sole carbon source, demonstrating that osmolarity-induced changes in growth rate and cell size follow an orthogonal relationship from the classical Growth Law relating cell size and nutrient quality. Isolates from a sorbitol-evolved population that captured the likely temporal sequence of mutations revealed by metagenomic sequencing demonstrated a trade-off between growth at high osmolarity and growth at low osmolarity. Our report highlights the utility of experimental evolution for dissecting complex cellular networks and environmental interactions, particularly in the case of behaviors that can involve both specific and general metabolic stressors.IMPORTANCE For bacteria, maintaining higher internal solute concentrations than those present in the environment allows cells to take up water. As a result, survival is challenging in high-osmolarity environments. To investigate how bacteria adapt to high-osmolarity environments, we maintained Escherichia coli in a variety of high-osmolarity solutions for hundreds of generations. We found that the evolved populations adopted different strategies to improve their growth rates depending on the osmotic passaging condition, either generally adapting to high-osmolarity conditions or better metabolizing the osmolyte as a carbon source. Single-cell imaging demonstrated that enhanced fitness was coupled to faster growth, and metagenomic sequencing revealed mutations that reflected growth trade-offs across osmolarities. Our study demonstrated the utility of long-term evolution experiments for probing adaptation occurring during environmental stress.

Highlights

  • Bacteria must maintain a cytosolic osmolarity higher than that of their environment in order to take up water

  • To ascertain whether and how E. coli can adapt to growth in highosmolarity environments, we propagated populations in DM25 medium (Davis minimal medium plus 25 mg/liter glucose) (Materials and Methods) using four replicates with each of five common osmolytes: glycine betaine, proline, sorbitol, sucrose, and sodium chloride (Fig. 1A)

  • Glycine betaine and proline were chosen as osmolytes based on their well-known role in E. coli osmoregulation as osmoprotectants, which could impact which mutations are adaptive [8, 9]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Bacteria must maintain a cytosolic osmolarity higher than that of their environment in order to take up water. The rate of cell wall expansion in E. coli is not directly dependent on turgor pressure; hyperosmotic shock does not affect the instantaneous growth rate of single cells on time scales of minutes, indicating that cells can buffer against osmotic changes to continue fast growth [18]. This buffering capacity suggests that cells are able to evolve to grow at a higher rate in higher-osmolarity environments

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call