Abstract

Membrane-potential dynamics mediate bacterial electrical signaling at both intra- and intercellular levels. Membrane potential is also central to cellular proliferation. It is unclear whether the cellular response to external electrical stimuli is influenced by the cellular proliferative capacity. A new strategy enabling electrical stimulation of bacteria with simultaneous monitoring of single-cell membrane-potential dynamics would allow bridging this knowledge gap and further extend electrophysiological studies into the field of microbiology. Here we report that an identical electrical stimulus can cause opposite polarization dynamics depending on cellular proliferation capacity. This was demonstrated using two model organisms, namely Bacillus subtilis and Escherichia coli, and by developing an apparatus enabling exogenous electrical stimulation and single-cell time-lapse microscopy. Using this bespoke apparatus, we show that a 2.5-second electrical stimulation causes hyperpolarization in unperturbed cells. Measurements of intracellular K+ and the deletion of the K+ channel suggested that the hyperpolarization response is caused by the K+ efflux through the channel. When cells are preexposed to 400 ± 8 nm wavelength light, the same electrical stimulation depolarizes cells instead of causing hyperpolarization. A mathematical model extended from the FitzHugh-Nagumo neuron model suggested that the opposite response dynamics are due to the shift in resting membrane potential. As predicted by the model, electrical stimulation only induced depolarization when cells are treated with antibiotics, protonophore, or alcohol. Therefore, electrically induced membrane-potential dynamics offer a reliable approach for rapid detection of proliferative bacteria and determination of their sensitivity to antimicrobial agents at the single-cell level.

Highlights

  • Membrane-potential dynamics mediate bacterial electrical signaling at both intra- and intercellular levels

  • Using this tool combined with time-lapse microscopy, we showed that proliferative and inhibited cells respond to an electrical stimulation in apparent opposite directions

  • A mathematical model suggested that the apparent opposite responses can arise from diverse antibacterial stresses

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Membrane-potential dynamics mediate bacterial electrical signaling at both intra- and intercellular levels. Membrane potential is central to cellular proliferation It is unclear whether the cellular response to external electrical stimuli is influenced by the cellular proliferative capacity. We report that an identical electrical stimulus can cause opposite polarization dynamics depending on cellular proliferation capacity This was demonstrated using two model organisms, namely Bacillus subtilis and Escherichia coli, and by developing an apparatus enabling exogenous electrical stimulation and single-cell time-lapse microscopy. An external electrical stimulus alters cellular membrane potential according to the Schwan equation: ΔΨ max = ΔΨ max = 1.5aEð1 + ð2πf τÞ2Þ−12, where ΔΨ max is the induced membrane potential, a is the cell radius, E is the applied field strength, f is the AC field frequency, and τ is the relaxation time of the membrane [23]. Our findings offer an approach for rapid detection of proliferative bacteria at the single-cell level

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