Abstract

Response to acid stress is critical for Escherichia coli to successfully complete its life-cycle by passing through the stomach to colonize the digestive tract. To develop a fundamental understanding of this response, we established a molecular mechanistic description of acid stress mitigation responses in E. coli and integrated them with a genome-scale model of its metabolism and macromolecular expression (ME-model). We considered three known mechanisms of acid stress mitigation: 1) change in membrane lipid fatty acid composition, 2) change in periplasmic protein stability over external pH and periplasmic chaperone protection mechanisms, and 3) change in the activities of membrane proteins. After integrating these mechanisms into an established ME-model, we could simulate their responses in the context of other cellular processes. We validated these simulations using RNA sequencing data obtained from five E. coli strains grown under external pH ranging from 5.5 to 7.0. We found: i) that for the differentially expressed genes accounted for in the ME-model, 80% of the upregulated genes were correctly predicted by the ME-model, and ii) that these genes are mainly involved in translation processes (45% of genes), membrane proteins and related processes (18% of genes), amino acid metabolism (12% of genes), and cofactor and prosthetic group biosynthesis (8% of genes). We also demonstrated several intervention strategies on acid tolerance that can be simulated by the ME-model. We thus established a quantitative framework that describes, on a genome-scale, the acid stress mitigation response of E. coli that has both scientific and practical uses.

Highlights

  • Multiple studies have focused on the ability of Escherichia coli to tolerate acid stress [1,2,3,4,5,6]

  • The ability of E. coli to tolerate acid stress can be attributed to its various regulatory, metabolic and physiological mechanisms

  • Several studies have demonstrated that the membrane lipid composition of E. coli changes under acid stress, resulting in the change of membrane fluidity that potentially reduces the leakage of protons into the cytoplasm [20,21,32]

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Summary

Introduction

Multiple studies have focused on the ability of Escherichia coli to tolerate acid stress [1,2,3,4,5,6]. Mechanisms that actively consume protons include four types of amino acid decarboxylase systems and formate hydrogen lyase [9,10,11,12,13]. When cytoplasmic pH drops under extreme acid stress, cytoplasmic chaperones such as Hsp bind and protect unfolded protein intermediates; DNA-binding proteins bind and protect DNA [17,18,19]. Periplasmic chaperones HdeA and HdeB are activated under acid stress to bind and protect unfolded protein intermediates [22]. Outer membrane porins are bound by polyphosphate or cadaverine to reduce proton influx [23,24]

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