Abstract

Microbes adapt their metabolism to take advantage of nutrients in their environment. Such adaptations control specific metabolic pathways to match energetic demands with nutrient availability. Upon depletion of nutrients, rapid pathway recovery is key to release cellular resources required for survival under the new nutritional conditions. Yet, little is known about the regulatory strategies that microbes employ to accelerate pathway recovery in response to nutrient depletion. Using the fatty acid catabolic pathway in Escherichia coli, here, we show that fast recovery can be achieved by rapid release of a transcriptional regulator from a metabolite-sequestered complex. With a combination of mathematical modeling and experiments, we show that recovery dynamics depend critically on the rate of metabolite consumption and the exposure time to nutrients. We constructed strains with rewired transcriptional regulatory architectures that highlight the metabolic benefits of negative autoregulation over constitutive and positive autoregulation. Our results have wide-ranging implications for our understanding of metabolic adaptations, as well as for guiding the design of gene circuitry for synthetic biology and metabolic engineering.IMPORTANCE Rapid metabolic recovery during nutrient shift is critical to microbial survival, cell fitness, and competition among microbiota, yet little is known about the regulatory mechanisms of rapid metabolic recovery. This work demonstrates a previously unknown mechanism where rapid release of a transcriptional regulator from a metabolite-sequestered complex enables fast recovery to nutrient depletion. The work identified key regulatory architectures and parameters that control the speed of recovery, with wide-ranging implications for the understanding of metabolic adaptations as well as synthetic biology and metabolic engineering.

Highlights

  • Microbes adapt their metabolism to take advantage of nutrients in their environment

  • While much of the literature has focused on the control of activation dynamics upon nutrient induction [14,15,16], little is known on how these regulatory mechanisms shape pathway recovery after depletion of nutrients

  • To study the recovery dynamics of fatty acid uptake, we built a kinetic model based on four core components of the regulatory system, FadD (D), free FadR (R), acyl-CoA (A), and sequestered FadR

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Summary

Introduction

Microbes adapt their metabolism to take advantage of nutrients in their environment. Such adaptations control specific metabolic pathways to match energetic demands with nutrient availability. To study the recovery dynamics of fatty acid uptake, we built a kinetic model based on four core components of the regulatory system, FadD (D), free FadR (R), acyl-CoA (A), and sequestered FadR (aR).

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