Abstract

Bacterial cells need to coordinate the cell cycle with biomass growth to maintain cell size homeostasis. For fast-growing bacterial species like Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis, it is well-known that cell size exhibits a strong dependence on the growth rate under different nutrient conditions (known as the nutrient growth law). However, cell size changes little with slow growth (doubling time of >90 min) for E. coli, posing the interesting question of whether slow-growing bacteria species also observe the nutrient growth law. Here, we quantitatively characterize the cell size and cell cycle parameter of a slow-growing bacterium, Sinorhizobium meliloti, at different nutrient conditions. We find that S. meliloti exhibits a threefold change in its cell size when its doubling time varies from 2 h to 6 h. Moreover, the progression rate of its cell cycle is much longer than that of E. coli, suggesting a delicate coordination between the cell cycle progression rate and the biomass growth rate. Our study shows that the nutrient growth law holds robustly regardless of the growth capacity of the bacterial species, generalizing its applicability among the bacterial kingdom.IMPORTANCE The dependence of cell size on growth rate is a fundamental principle in the field of bacterial cell size regulation. Previous studies of cell size regulation mainly focus on fast-growing bacterial species such as Escherichia coli and Bacillussubtilis We find here that Sinorhizobium meliloti, a slow-growing bacterium, exhibits a remarkable growth rate-dependent cell size pattern under nutrient limitation, generalizing the applicability of the empirical nutrient growth law of cell size. Moreover, S. meliloti exhibits a much slower speed of cell cycle progression than E. coli does, suggesting a delicate coordination between the cell cycle progression rate and the biomass growth rate.

Highlights

  • Bacterial cells need to coordinate the cell cycle with biomass growth to maintain cell size homeostasis

  • The growth of biomass can exert a profound effect on the cell size of bacteria, as indicated by the well-known positive dependence of cell size on growth rate for Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis under different nutrient conditions [1, 3, 6,7,8,9]

  • During the process of symbiotic nitrogen fixation, the host plant generates a family of small host peptides called nodule-specific cysteine-rich (NCR) peptides to modulate the cell cycle progression of S. meliloti, further stimulating the conversion of bacterial cells into bacteroids, which are much larger than free-living cells [12, 14, 15]

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Summary

Introduction

Bacterial cells need to coordinate the cell cycle with biomass growth to maintain cell size homeostasis. KEYWORDS Sinorhizobium meliloti, cell cycle, cell size, growth rate Bacterial cells manage to coordinate biomass growth with cell cycle progression, including chromosome replication and cell division to maintain size homeostasis [3,4,5]. It remains unclear whether nutrient limitation could lead to a similar growth-dependent cell size pattern in slow-growing bacterial species.

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