Abstract

Bacteria respond to pH changes in their environment and use pH homeostasis to keep the intracellular pH as constant as possible and within a small range. A change in intracellular pH influences enzyme activity, protein stability, trace element solubilities and proton motive force. Here, the species Corynebacterium glutamicum was chosen as a neutralophilic and moderately alkali-tolerant bacterium capable of maintaining an internal pH of 7.5 ± 0.5 in environments with external pH values ranging between 5.5 and 9. In recent years, the phenotypic response of C. glutamicum to pH changes has been systematically investigated at the bulk population level. A detailed understanding of the C. glutamicum cell response to defined short-term pH perturbations/pulses is missing. In this study, dynamic microfluidic single-cell cultivation (dMSCC) was applied to analyze the physiological growth response of C. glutamicum to precise pH stress pulses at the single-cell level. Analysis by dMSCC of the growth behavior of colonies exposed to single pH stress pulses (pH = 4, 5, 10, 11) revealed a decrease in viability with increasing stress duration w. Colony regrowth was possible for all tested pH values after increasing lag phases for which stress durations w were increased from 5 min to 9 h. Furthermore, single-cell analyses revealed heterogeneous regrowth of cells after pH stress, which can be categorized into three physiological states. Cells in the first physiological state continued to grow without interruption after pH stress pulse. Cells in the second physiological state rested for several hours after pH stress pulse before they started to grow again after this lag phase, and cells in the third physiological state did not divide after the pH stress pulse. This study provides the first insights into single-cell responses to acidic and alkaline pH stress by C. glutamicum.

Highlights

  • Various environmental fluctuations influence the growth and physiology of bacteria (Lara et al, 2006)

  • This study investigates the influence of different pH pulses at the single-cell level. dynamic microfluidic single-cell cultivation (dMSCC) was used to analyze the growth response of C. glutamicum at the single-cell level to different single stress pH values

  • New insights were developed into the growth behaviors occurring with non-optimal pHs and after different pH stress pulses, which had not been possible before

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Summary

Introduction

Various environmental fluctuations influence the growth and physiology of bacteria (Lara et al, 2006). E. coli has three different mechanisms for resistance to acidic pH values, one glucose catabolite-repressed system and two amino acid decarboxylase-dependent systems (Tucker et al, 2002) Sodium proton antiporters such as MDfA and NhaA lead to resistance to alkaline pHs (Lewinson et al, 2004). As a result of reduced methionine synthesis, cysteine accumulates, which is toxic in acidic environments (Follmann et al, 2009b) Another important mechanism for pH homeostasis in acidic environments is potassium uptake via potassium channels (Kitko et al, 2010; Ochrombel et al, 2011). The reader is referred to Guo et al (2019) for a detailed summary of the known mechanism and suggested strategies with which C. glutamicum may cope with pH stress

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