FEMS Microbiology Ecology 74 (1990) 103-120 Published by Elsevier 103 FEMSEC 00285 When nutrient limitation places bacteria in the domains of slow growth: metabolic, morphologic and cell cycle behavior William C h e s b r o 1 Michael Arbige 2 and R o b i n Eifert 3 t Department of Microbiology, UJiiversity of New Hampshire, Durham, NH, 2 Genencor Inc., San Francisco, CA and ~ Lederle Biologicals, Pearl River, NY, U.S.A. Key words: Chronic starvation; Stringent response; Toxin secretion; Cell cycle 1. SUMMARY Growth systems appropriate for studying mass transfer in different bacterial environments are reviewed. Fed batch and recycling fermentors are suited to modelling nutrient limitation and slow growth. Use of these two growth systems reveals the existence of three growth rate regions, or domains, defined by maintenance energy demands, nucleotide regulation, metabolism, and physiological behavior. They are exemplified in Escherichia coil by domain-dependent synthesis of attachment antigens, heat-labile toxin, and inducible enzymes. Distribution of the bacterial population among cell cycle stages changes with growth rate domain because lengths of the stages differ in their dependence on growth rate. This produces subpopulafions whose ratios vary with growth rate and that are likely to differ in both molecular composition and stress resistance. 2. I N T R O D U C T I O N In a hospitable milieu containing enough nutrients to saturate their uptake systems, bacteria Correspondence to: W. Chesbro, Department of Microbiology, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH 03824, U.S.A. must surmount at least two metabolic barriers to reach their maximum growth rate: (i) obtaining energy, essentially ATP, at faster rates to fuel the demands of more rapid anabolism although their catabolic pathways are substrate saturated; (ii) increasing their rate of chromosome replication althot~gh the rate of D N A chain extension has becot~ae limited by the temperature of the environment rather than by availability of intermediates. They solve (i) by shifting to spill, or overflow, catabolic paths [1]. This increases the rate of ATP production at the expense of a reduced yield of ATF per mol catabolic substrate [2]. They solve (ii) by starting new rounds of chromosome replication before previous rounds are completed [3,4], producing chromosomes with multiple replication forks. Simultaneous multiple chromosome replications then bypass the limitation set on single chromosome replication by the fixed rate of chain length extension. In the less hospitable and more usual circumstances of nutrient limitation (i.e. starvation in some degree of severity), with long doubling times ensuing, bacteria must solve a different version of the energy provision problem: that of capturing sufficient energy substrate and extracting from it the maximum yield of ATP. The energy demand is exacerbated at long doubling time~ by an increased need for maintenance energy that rises in abrupt steps to require 70% or more of the cell's energy flow [5,6]. 0168-6496/90/$03.50 © 1990 Federation of European Microbiological Societies 104 The nature of the chromosome replication problem also changes when bacteria are nutrient limited. The continuous, proportionate increases in all the cell's properties that define balanced, exponential growth [7] become more punctate in slower growing, chronically starved cells. Gaps from which chromosome replication is absent develop in the cell growth cycle, the proportions between the lengths of cell cycle stages change [8,9], and the changed proportions are increasingly wrong (in Escherichia coli) for provision of adequate cytoplasmic volume, through lateral wall extension, to both accommodate the nucleoid and allow mid-cell placement of the transve~se (division plane) wall [10]. The stress of nutrient limitation evokes elevated levels of the regulatory nucleotides cAMP and guanosine 5'-diphosphate 3'-diphosphate (ppGpp) [11,12] which drive adaptations to the stress, including adaptations to the problems of energy provision and transverse wall placement. Adapting to the starved state results in populations with an average chemical and molecular composition markedly different from exponentially growing, nutrient-sufficient populations [13], along with an altered morphology [14]. Although some of the differences in the chemical makeup of the two populations undoubtedly arise as direct consequences of nutrient limitation, observations will be presented that point toward another part of these differences arising from nucleotide regulation which, in correcting the problem of inadequate cytoplasmic volume for both nucleoid separation and mid-cell placement of the nascent division plane, compels changes to take place in the proportions of subpopulations of cells in different cell cycle stages. The molecular makeup of cells inherently varies between the stages. Consequently, changing proportions among the subpopulations in different cell cycles stages would be expected to change the average co~aposition of ~'he total population. 3. CHOOSING A G R O W T H SYSTEM STUDY N U T R I E N T LIMITATION TO To anyone used to the batch culture of heterotrophs in concentrated substrate solutions, an in- terdivision time (~') of 2 h can be a limit and larger values of ~" irrelevant [15]. To those who routinely employ the chemostat, over 95% of the microbial growth rate range seems to have been surveyed when a specific mass growth rate, /.t, of 0.05 h - 1 is reached, i.e. a ~"of approximately 14 h, since the upper limit of # in bacteria is near 2.0 h -1 and the lower limit is 0 h-1. Bt,! for those who consider environments in which dissolved organic carbon can have a half-life of 6000 y [16], either value for ~" is unthinkably short. The ztudy of nutrient-limited, slowly growing bacterial populations in the laboratory requires choosing a growth system whose mass transfer characteristics will yield ranges of ~" containing values relevant to the study. This requirement, although obvious, is frequently not met [5,6,10, 12,13]. A model of mass transfer has been published [12] that permits identifying a number of laboratory and industrial growth systems, as well as a limited number of natural systems, whose mass transfer characteristics determSne the bacterial growth curve the system will yield. Although ,qc mode~ seemed simplistic when it was proposed and clearly has marked limitations, it gives a degree of insight into the behavior of slowly growing bacteria when combined with the growth rate domain concept [5,10,17-19] discussed in follow;ag sections. The basis for the model is consideration of a locus of indefinite volume that contains bacterial cells and nutrients, followed by an assessment of whether or not this locus permits biomass (cells) and nutrients to enter or leave. This produces four types of 1o~, representing the possible combinations e! ~:pc~ and closed mass transfer. Figure 1 provides examples of these four archetypes of mass transfer and the bacterial growth kinetics expected in each archetype. The nutrient closed-biomass closed system, the ordi~lary seeded medium contained in a closed vessel, gives the 7-phase growth curve generally taken to be representative of the growth of bacterial populations. The bacterial behavior best observed in this system is behaviol' exhibited in steady-state exponential growth and the system is unsuited to the study of transients, or slowly growing cells, because of the rapidity of growth rate changes in the system. It is a system simple to 105 GROWTH SYSTEM IS EXAMPLES P A T T E R N OF POPULATION GROWTH nutrient closed, biomass closed batch bioreactors: test tube and flasks often the "7-phase" sigmoid curve nutrient open, biomass open chemostat; some other forms of coutinuoas culture; carriage of luminous bacteria by some fish may be in steady state at constant td nntri¢,nt closed, biomass open common in nature: bacterial biofilms on particulate substrates attached cells at shortest t d in system, detached cells at longest t d nutrient open, biomass closed fed batch bioreaetors; recycling fermentor; host-comained bacteria t d increases progressively for indefinitely long period t d denotes tba mass doubling time in h Fig. 1. S i m p l e m o d e l o f m a s s t r a n s f e r into a n d f r o m a b a c t e r i a l environment of indefinite volume. employ ~or studying phenomena that occur in exponential growth, and probably for this reason has been the preferred starting point in most laboratory studies in microbiology. However, it is difficult to identify any natural environment with these mass transfer characteristics, and this probably has a bearing on why most laboratory studies are difficult to relate to bacterial behavior outside the laboratory. The nutrient open-biomass open system most frequently used in the laboratory is the chemostat. Chemostats produce a population in exponential growth with a reasonably narrow dispersion of ~among cells of the population when ~- is shorter than 14 h. At longer ~,, its dispersion becomes too great for studies requiring a homogeneous population [13,20]. The chemostat is the system of choice for studying exponential growth at r shorter than 14 h, and for studying transients to and from starvation. Perhaps the clearest example of a natu- rally evolved chemostat is the cheek pouch of the fish Photoblepharon in which it maintains an apparently monoclonal population of luminescent bacteria [21]. The nutrient closed-biomass open system occurs in nature wherever a particle of substrate ;~s surface colonized by bacteria capable of metabolizing it. Bacteva attached to the substrate will be at the nutrient-sufficient, maximum growth rate for the system ~xhile detached bacteria will be starving at the minimum growth rate. The nutrient open-biomass closed co~pbination is best suited of the four for examination ot slowly growing, chronically starved populations. Cells held within the system are subject to a continuously dwindling rate of nutrient supply per unit biomass, causing the specific growth rate, #~ to dwindle continuously. This situation occurs naturally wherever bacteria are a biofilm on a nondegradable surface and likely also when pathogens or symbiotes remain contained inside a host cell or macrostructure. In the laboratory, fed batch and recycling fermentor systems belong to this class, as do illuminated reactors for growing phototrophs (such units ar," b~sically fed-batch reactors by virtue of the way light energy is supplied). The fed batch system is simpler to operate, but because the system is ultimately limited by the size of the reactor vessel (except for illuminated reactors for growing phototrophs), the practical longer limit to the mass doubling time (ta) range it can produce is about 40-50 h. The recycling fermentor, however, has no theoretical limit to the t d range it can produce. A recycling fermentor can be constructed from any of the instrumented fermentor units commonly available by adding an inflow line for pumping sterile medium at the desired rate from a reservoir and a tubing loop leading from the reactor to a tangential flow membrane filter. Sterile medium is continuously pumped to the fermentor. At the same time, fermentation broth is pumped to the membrane filter. A portion of the broth is continuously filtered through the membrane at a rate equal to the rate at which sterile medium is being added to the fermentor and the balance of the broth, containing the cells, returned across the membrane's surface to the fermentor. 106 4. T H E G R O W T H RATE DOMAIN CONCEPT 4.1. Progressive nutrient limitation is m a r k e d by the onset of global changes in growth rate and yield at particular mass doubling times In all the experiments to be described, the culture was grown in a recycling fermentor at 3 0 " C in a glucose-limiting minimal medium with the pH kept at 6.8-7.0. The pattern of anaerobic growth of Escherichia c~!i ~ under these conditions is shown in Fig. 2. Paracoccus denitrificans [5], Bacillus p o l y m y x a [10], Bacillus licheniformis [13,191, Clostridium beijerinckii [22] and Clostridium C7 (this Volume; Ross et al.) all produce similar patterns of growth in the fermentor. The pattern is the same aerobically and anaerobically for the facultative species, and similar patterns are observed with the aerobe Paracoccus denitrificans and the two anaerobic clostridia. The growth curve in Fig. 2 has two inflections, separating the curve into three growth rate regions. After seeding, the culture goes to its maximum ~ and shortest t a. The critical nutrient in the . . . . . . . . ._ . / 17 .J E f CO O_ [ t t~ E o.21 0 -0.2' -10 ~: : , 0 :" ' i ) ~ ' - ~ "~-10 20 nutrlont ,. 30 . . 4 0 50 I'K~RS upshlft . . . 60 70 8 0 90 ~00 Fig. 2. Characteristic bacLerial growth panern given by Escherichia coli B ,'elA s p o t growing anaerobically in a recy- cling fermentor in a glacose-limiting minimal medium held at pH 6.8-7.0 and 30°C. A nutrient upshift was made 70 h zffter seeding the reactor by increasing the nutrient inflow rate 4-fold. The shaded zone col~.tains the second growth rate region which separates the first an~ ~hird regions by growth r:ae cha~tges under bacterial control at constant nutrient ~nflow rail;. reactor is rapidly consumed and the growth rate becomes dependent on the transfer rate of fresh nutrient into the reactor; the rate drops abruptly to a t a of about 20 h, producing the first inflection, and the apparent yield coefficient, Ys (g biomass/mol carbon-energy substrate consumed) falls by about 50%. The decrease in Ys is canonically interpretable as a diversion of about 50% of the cell's available energy from growth processes to maintenance processes [6]. The volumetric growth rate, d X / d t (g biomass i n c r e m e n t / h / ! ) , in this second region (shaded in Fig. 2) proceeds at a constant, linear rate determined by the constant rate of nutrient flow to the bioreactor. Because the specific growth rate, # (g biomass increm e n t / g biomass per h), is derived by dividing d X / d t by X (g biomass/l, the instantaneous value of biomass in the fermentor) and X continuously increases, /~ is required to fall continuously, while its reciprocal, t o , consequently increases linearly. That is, after the first inflection in the growth curve t d lengthens in direct parallel with biomass increase. At a t d of 50-55 h, the second inflection occurs in populations which are wild-type in the stringent response genes. The stringent response is enabled at this point and d X / d t drops abruptly as a result of the inhibition of ribosome synthesis. Tiffs results in the calculated t a lengthening abruptly to about 100 h. At the same time, Ys decrease~; by a further 50%, interpretable as a further diversion of energy to maintenance processes. After the transition to the string~:nt response :;tare, linear growth in this third region resumes at a lower volumetric rate and t a continaes to lengthen indefinitely unless the nutrient flew rate to the bioreactor is changed. Figure 2 illustrates the effect of a 4-fold upshift in ;.~e nutrient supply rate administered in the 3rd re g:~on. The ,culture rapidly returned to the t d and Ys values of the 1st region and then recapitulated the passage ir~to the second region. The volumetric growth rate, dX/dt, in this recapitulated second ,'egion was four-times that of the earlier 2nd region~ but the calculation of t a and the Ys showed tbem to be the same. That is, when the culture returned to the t a range of the second region, it returned to the same regulational and mass transfer behavior. 107 corresponding a m o u n t of biomass being synthesized, which increases sharply in the two domains of slower growth. In d o m a i n 3 the increase in m a i n t e n a n c e energy d e m a n d is clearly associated with the onset of stringent regulation [11] and editing of translation [6]. Escherichia coli subjected to a 4-fold upshift in the rate of nutrient supply to the fermentor in domain 3 (Fig. 2) returns in growth rate to the domain 1 range and the domains are quickly retraversed. In such an upshift the cellular level of p p G p p returns to that of the preceding d o m a i n s [11]. In E. coli, the sudden drop in d X / d t when it enters d o m a i n 2 defines a t o b o u n d a r y at which energy is diverted abruptly from biosynthesis to maintenance. In B. licheniformis r e l - growing aerobically and in a phenotypically wild type P. 4.2. Maintenance energy and nucleotide regulation in the three growth rate domains In each of the three growth rate regions just described, the population showed markedly different levels of regulatory nucleotide, mass transfer behavior, catabolic paths, morphology, and enzyme inducibility, making each region a distinct d o m a i n b o u n d e d by particular growth rates. Table 1 summarizes the characterizing features of the domains found so far. The most characteristic feature of each domain is the cellular level of the regulatory nucleotide guanosine 5'-diphosphate 3'-diphosphate, ppGpp. Another distinguishing characteristic is the apparent fiaction of the energy substrate required to meet the maintenance energy demand, i.e. the a m o u n t of energy sabstrate consumed without a Table 1 Bacterial metabolism,morphology and mass transfer relationships in three growth rate domains correspondingto different rates of nutrient provision Characteristic Growth rate domain 1 2 3 N o m i n a l td~ range Nutritional status Regulatory nucleotides < 14 h Sufficient cAMP and ppGpp at basal levels Mass transfer fluxes YE2 reaches a maximum; MED3 reaches a minimum; spih cata~,oli.~m[nay occur; exclusiveuse of favored catabolic substrate Exploitation 20-60 h Chronic starvation cAMP at maximum level; ppGpp level rising YE - 50% of maximum; MED - 50,%of energy flux; no spill catabolism; multiple use of catabolic substrates Adaptation > 100 h Severe chro-~i¢starvation cAMP elevated; ppGpp at levelenabling the stringent response YE -- 25% of maximum; MED - 75% of energy flux; no spill catabolism; multiple use of catabolic substrates Accumulation Disbursed Exhausted Decreases with increasing Minimal Minimal Species/strain dependent Species/strain dependent Species/strain dependent D period becomes a smaller fraction of ~" as ta increases D period becomes a larger fraction of "r as ta increases D approaches a constant fraction of Relationship to the environment Energy reserves Attachment ( E. coli ) Enzyme/toxin secretion ( E. coil, B. licheniformis, Clostridium strain C7) Cell cycle stages 1 Maintenance td t a is the mass doubling time; ~- is interdivisiontime. 2 YE is the biomassyield in g dry weight per mol energy-limitingsubstrate. 3 MED is the maintenanceenergy demand as a fraction of the cellular energy flux. as t d increases 108 denitrificans [13,23], d X / d t falls at a more constant rate without a sudden change between domains 1 and 2 to indicate an abrupt increase in maintenance energy demand. However, the maintenance energy demand increases continuously to reach levels similar to those reached in E. coli in domain 2. The reason for the increased maimcnance energy demand of domain 2 remains unknown. The t d at which the domain 2 - 3 transition occurs is independent of nutrient provision rate and is determined solely by the status of the major genes determining cellular levels of ppGpp. In -10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 HOU~ 70 80 9 0 100 [ o9 i 0.7 t~ G.6 ~0.4 ! ,-n .....:~'~ 0.2!1 ~ -10 0 ~o 0.3 ~ ~'~ ~::~i~!~:~~:: Escherichia coil 711 P307 :~i,,:~:::,!~)~i : 10 20 30 40 50 60 HOURS Fig. 3. Growth curves given by Escherichia coli H10407 rel+ and 711P307spoT growinganaerobicallyin a recyclingfermentor in a glucose-fi,-rAtingn~Znilmalmedium held at pH 6.8-7.0 and 30 ° C. The shaded zones contain the second growth rate region which separates the first and third regions by growth rate changes under bacterial control at constant nutrient inflow rate. strains wild type for these loci, the transition occurs at a t a of 50-55 h. In relA mutants, with ribosome-dependent p p G p p synthetase I activity reduced [24], or a relX mutant, with ribosome-independent synthesis of p p G p p reduced [25,26], p p G p p accumulates more slowly during chronic starvation and the transition occurs at a t d of 6 5 - 7 0 h. In spoT mutants, ~ith p p G p p pyr~phosphatase activity reduced [24], p p G p p accumulates more rapidly than in the wild type a , d domain 2 terminates at a t a of 20-25 h [11]. Figure 3 illustrates the effect of these gene differences in two enterotoxigenic E. coil, strains H10407 rel + and 711P307 spoT. Domain 2 extends to a t a of 55 h in the former, but only to 25 h in the latter. In terms of actual time elapsed, H10407 rel + requires approx. 48 h to traverse domain 2 (i.e. accumulate enough p p G p p to cause a sudden reduction in r R N A and ribonucleoprotein synthesis, producing the transition to domain 3) while strain 711P307 spoT requires only approx. 12h. 4..3. E n z y m e induction and simultaneous use o f multiple carbon-energy sources, including endogenous sources, by E. coil in the two domains o f slower growth When E. coil B was grown in a minimal medium containing 0.007 M glucose, 0.001 M lactose, and 0.0015 M L-tryptophan and allowed to traverse the three domains (Fig. 4), B-galactosidase and tryptophanase activity appeared in the cells as they entered domain 2. Specific activities of the enzymes rose to maximum levels as the cells passed to domain 3 and thereafter remained roughly at this level. The imposition of a 4-fold nutrient upshift in domain 3 had little effect on tryptophanase activity but fl-galactosidase activity fell sharply after the upshift. Simultaneous utilization of multiple substrates should be survival-positive in chronic starvation. It appeared that at the level of starvation corresponding to the t a of the domain 1 - 2 transition, catabolite repression by glucose was sufficiently reduced to allow cAMP-dependent inductions by alternative substrates and the population became capable of metabolizing both tryptophan and flgalactosides along with the major carbon-energy 109 ~. ~...1.8 ~'~ r./) - " " • "¢1 . . . . . " " shake flasks [27]. But it is not possible to correlate that in vivo finding with ours since, as noted in the first section, the batch culture method (nutrient closed-biomass closed) is suited only to the study of exponentially growing cells, and definitions of any other phase of growth in that system remain idiosyncratic because there is no general agreement on what characterizes 'early stationary phase cells'. - 1.6 _ 1.4 = o = " o o ,-n ~ 1 . 2 o•O.• 0.2 0 o 0 ~o 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 HOUR3 l~lg. 4. Lnanges m /J-galactoslaase ant] tryptopnanasc acuvzty in Escherichia coli H10407 growing anaerobically in a recycling fermentor in a glucose-limitingminimal medium containing 0.007 M glucose, 0.0015 L-tryptophan and 0.001 M lactose held at pH 6.8-7.0 and 30°C. A nutrient upshift was made 62 h after seeding the reactor by increasing the nutrient inflow rate 4-fold. The shaded zone contains the second growth rate region which separates the first and third regions by growth rate changes under bacterial control at constant nutrient inflow rate. source~ glucose. Repetition of the experiment with three other strains of E. coli growing on glucose confirmed that both enzymes were simultaneously inducible in domains 2 and 3. Thus, it seems likely that the capability for simultaneous use of multiple substrate~ ~'e present whet, this bacterium is in domains 2 and 3. Furthermore, Escherichia coil H10407 rel ÷ accumulated glycogen in domain 1 when growing on glucose. Glycogen granules were visible in electron micrographs and measurable as cell-bound glucose. The glycogen was metabolized during the 1st 10 h elapsed time that the culture was in domain 2 (data not shown). Thus, the utilization of this carbon-energy reserve by strain H10407 commenced at a nutrient level and t d appropriate for aiding energy-dependent adaptation to progressive starvation. The in vitro synthesis of E. coil glycogen synthesizing enzymes has been reported to be stimulated by c A M P and ppGpp, and the accumulation of glycogen and transcription of the biosynthetic genes in vivo found to be at their highest rates in 'early stationary phase cells' grown in 4.4. Domain-related synthesis of attachment antigen and secretion of heat-labile (LT) enterotoxin by E. coli Escherichia coli H10407 was grown anaerobically at 3 0 ° C and a constant p H of 7.5 in a glucose minimal medium. Secreted, heat-labile toxin (LT) was sampled from the filtrate stream of the recycling fermentor, reflecting the instantaneous, extracellular concentration of the toxin in the bioreactor. It was quantitated both on a volumetric basis using an E L I S A method [28] and as specific activity by its action on C H O cells in tissue culture [29]. Figure 5 shows the pattern of LT secretion across the three domains. Toxin appeared as the culture entered domain 2 whether its measurement was made volumetrically or specifically. The volumetric rate of secretion was constant in domain 2, but the specific rate of secretion increased throughout the domain (i.e. as the growth rate fell, th~ rate of LT secretion siowea less than did the general rate of cell syntheses). Both rates increased as the culture entered domain 3. When the culture was given a 4-fold nutrient upshift the secretion rate of LT measured as specific activity fell (i.e. when the upshift returned the culture to domain 1 growth rates, the rate of synthesis of general cell constituents was upshifted more than was the rate of LT secretion). Very similar features of LT secretion were exhibited by E. coli 711P307 spoT, except that they occurred sooner in elapsed time because domain 2 is foreshortened by the spoT mutation. The observation that secretion of LT is'domain 2 - 3 dependent, at least in these two strains, explains why the toxin is generally understood to be produced poorly in laboratory culture u n d e r anaerobic conditions, in synthetic media,, or in 110 7" v o~ co 20Oi . . . . . . . . 18o1 Z 1401 " >~ 120] ..J t.u 80' z 60' ; ,00 u.I o ,- .ti" 40 0 -20 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 HOURS Fig. 5. Changes in amounts of heat-labile toxin secreted by Escheriehia coli H10407 growing anaerobically in a recycling fermentor in a glucose-limiting minimal medium held at pH 6.8-7.0 and 30°C. A nutrient upshift was made 63 h after seeding the reactor by increasing the nutrient inflow rate 4-fold. The shaded zone contains the second growth rate region which separates the first and third regions by growth rate changes under bacterial control at constant nutrient inflow rate. Toxin was measured by an ELISA method ([3) or by CHO cell activity (O). The former measured volumetric secretion of the toxin and the latter specific activity secreted. chemo.,,tat culture. The laboratory cultures used have been batch cultures which emphasize domain 1 behavior, or chemostat cultures wl.i~, are steady-state cultures only at doma:.~ 1 t d and infrequently at t a longer than 14 h. Consequently, the first requirement for toxin production, that the culture be at the appropriate growth rate in domain 2 or 3, was poorly met in batch culture and not at all in chemostat culture. Van Verseveld et al. [17] studied synthesis of attachment antigens K99 and F41 by E. co# in the three domains and found that synthesis of the antigens occurred only in domain 1. When the domain 1 synthesis of attachment antigen and the domain 2 synthesis of LT are considered together, a life cycle may be suggested for the pathogen by considering the host enteric tract an example of the sub~trate closed-biomass open case, the external environment a substrate open-biomass open case, and applying the domain concept. The pathogen passes into the substrate-rich habitat of the host enteric tract from a domain 3 state in the environment and its growth rate ,ises to domain 1 rates. Attachment antigens are elaborated and the bacterium proliferates until it exhausts the nutritional carrying capacity of the host habitat. Its t d then falls to domain 2 values, synthesis of attachmet,: antigen ceases, LT toxin is secreted and the resultant diarrhea returns the pathogen to the external environment to seek new hosts. If its,alternative life styles were unknown, enterotoxigenic E. col;, might be diagnosed as an r-strategist [30] and copiotroph [31,32] in the host's enteric tract, and a K-strategist [30] and oligotroph [31,32] in the environment external to the host. The growth rate domain concept plus the mass transfer model, however, provide particulars of the pathogen's survival strategy, aid in selecting in vitro techniques for studying the disease, direct attention to ~he roles of regulatory nucleotides in adapting the pathogen to its alternate environments, and show, in a slight extens;_on of Goldman's [33] description of some mic:obial species as, "efficient nomads who spend a significant fraction of their time as wanderers", ~hat "nomadic looter" is an accurate description of the enterotoxigenic E. coli. 5. STARVATION, CELL DIVISION A N D T H E CELL CYCLE IN T H E T H R E E D O M A I N S 5.1. Experimentally distinguishing chronic starvation from starvation Chronic starvation has been defined as nutrient limitation and starvation as complete lack of nutrients [34]. In the experiments performed in the recycling fermentor, the bacterial population was being subjected to progessively more severe chronic starvation. To experimentally test the deftnitional distinction between chronic starvation and starvation, a domain 3 population of E. coli NF161 was subjected to starvation by stopping the nutrient flow to the fermentor. Viable counts were made before and after the nutrient shutoff. The outcome is shown in Fig. 6. The viable count had decreased 30% by 30 rain after the shutoff. The count then remained stable for the next 12 h. At the end of this time, the count commenced falling 11l 9' ~ 30C ~ 2sc v- 20C ~- ---30% cell death 8- ~ 2 : °o 7- ::::) 15C ~ 10C 5C 6~ 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 Ht'JO~ Fig. 6. Changes in viable counts and turbidity occurrilig in Eschenchia coli NF161 spoT growing anaerobically in a recycling fermentor in a FMUcoae-ul~tttlil~ l l l l l a l m a l medium held at pH 6.8-7.0 and 30°C. When the culture was in domain 3, 49 h after seeding the fermentor, nutrient inflow to the fermentor was stopped. with first-order kinetics and 50 h later 99% of the population was dead. Starvation was clearly distinguishable from chronic starvation, not surprising in that a d o m a i n 3 p o p u l a t i o n is employing 75% or more of its energy flow for maintenance, but it was also apparent that the d o m a i n 3 population was heterogeneous in its response to starvation. 5.2. Changes in cell morphology in progressive chronic starvation Although it was not apparent at that point in the study in what way morphological changes might relate to the heterogeneous response to starvation, other experiments had shown that cell morphology changed as populations traversed domain 2. Escherichia colt B cells which were bacillary in d o m a i n 1 became coccoid after passing into domain 2 [14]. The change in geometry from cylinders to spheres allowed the d o m a i n 2 cells to retain much of the volume they had possessed in domain 1. Escherichia colt K strains, however, became coccobacillary upon passage to domain 2 then, as they traversed d o m a i n 2 into 3, regained mean length in a way dependent on their rel genotype. Table 2 contains measurements of mean lengths and widths of a K12 tel + strain and an isogenic sooT mutant. The ~ o T strains regained mean length much more rapidly than the rel + strain as both traversed domains 2 and 3. In the spoT strain, p p G p p accumulates more rapidly in the cell in d o m a i n 2 and as a result it enters the fully stringent state, domain 3, much sooner in elapsed time a n d at a shorter t d. It seemed likely therefore that p p G p p was acting in some way to restore mean length to the population. The fraction of cells showing constrictions was al;o measured, since this is a direct way to estimate the fraction of the population that is in the latter part of the D period (the cell cycle stage between completion of chromosome replication and cell division) [35]. The fraction of the population in this cell cycle stage changed relatively little with domain (Table 2). This was unexpected, since the fraction of the population in the latter part of the D period was anticipated to become negligible in domain 2, and vanishingly small to undetect- i Table 2 Len~h, width and visiblyconstricted fraction of Eseherichia coii populations growingacross a wide growth rate range E. colt strain Hours postseeding Nominal mass-doubling time (t a) (h) Domain Mean cell length (#M(S.D.)) Mean celt width (~tM(SD.)) NF161 (spoT) 3.5 19 54 5 54 99.5 1.5 24 130 1.3 55 210 1" 2 3 1 2 3 2.36 (0.66) 1.99 (0.88) 2.32 (0.66) 2.42 (0.79) 1.78 (0.49) 1.90 (0.56) 0.90 (0.09) 0.88 (0.10) 0.79 (0.09) 0.79 (0.11) 0.92 (0.14) 0.95 (0.11) NF859, wild type * Biomass increasingexponentially Percent of cells showing constrictions 9 8 10 6 5 7 Number of cells measured 85 129 159 62 90 121 112 able in domain 3, for reasons to be presented shortly. ...... In a presumably genetically homogeneous population with all cells having a uniform physiological history, heterogeneous response to stress could still arise from subpopulations containing ceils in different stages of the cell cycle if stress resistance varied between the stages. For this reason, and because of the unexpected constancy of the constricted cell fraction in the three domains, the effect of chronic starvation and progressively slower growth rates on stages in the cell cycle was considered. Cell cycle stages as they are understood to occur in E. coli provided a paradigm for relating the domain-dependent (and likely ppGpp-dependent) changes in morphology to the cycle stages. Figure 7 is a schematic presentation of the cell cycle modified from that of Nanninga et al. [35]. Periods designated by the letters on the left are identified primarily by the status of chromosome replication. The B period is the interval after cell division and before chromosome replication initiates, while the C period is the interval during which the chromosome replicates. Periods on the right in Fig. 7 refer primarily to intervals involving formation of the division plane. The D period is the interval from completion of chromosome replication to cell division and contains within it a final substage, T, in which the cell becomes visibly constricted in advance of completing division. A period of indeterminate length, the R period, preceding the D period has been ad3ed. I n the R period synthesis of the precursors of the division plane, or its assembly, " - ~'"'~" are v,e~u,,,cu to be regulated in a way connected to the cell's growth rate. The reason for supposing such regulation must exist comes from the observation of Helmstetter and his collaborators [3,4,8] that, in their experiments, as r increased from 20 min to 2 h the C period lengthened progressively and a B period appeared at the start of the cycle but the D period ,:)41.....T.iD ,:- 5.3. Interaction between cell stages during progressive, chronic starvation reduces mean ceil volume to a minimum and causes a problem in completing cell division in domains 2 and 3 requiring growth ratedependent regulation of the interaction ........ [ . ! 4 .... i.. ':I. '. q:.-.:...; I;:..:. a ,--:.?=. 12' i , ..-;--.) | .......... . a i t....:.:-, k.'-...':, ,?.;.:...:;..,, u.-...-. i......-.., R q:::..:., ,:'---:-, !.:.".:h ,.-, . ; . . ! w .~ ,..-::--, r-.:.:.:, ~-':-':"' P.:/.'./s -,:-,:..../ Fig. 7. Cell cycle scheme modified from [35] i~y addition of an R pericd in which it is supposed that the synthesis, assembly, or both of the transverse wall precursors is under regulation by ppGpp. Periods associated with the replication, of the chromosome are represented by letters anti aasned lines on the left, and periods associated with synthesis of the trans-erse wall similarly represented on the right. The extension of the lateral wall in a bilinear manner is indicated by the series of cartoons in the center, commencing with the new-born cell at the bottom and progressing to cell division at the top. remained at about the same length, 22-24 min. Kubitschek and Newman [9] extended these observations to a ~" of 12 h. They found that the C and B periods lengthened with lengthening $, with each approaching 40% of ~- as an asymptote, but the D period did not lengthen and remained 22-24 min long. This latter finding explains the apparent mean shortening in length commonly observed in populations as ~- extends from less than 1 h to longer times and implies that a partic~.ilar problem develops in cell division as the growth rate falls. Surprisingly, the finding seems to have gone unremarked in the literature on cell division from its publication until recently [10]. Figure 8 schematically attempts to present the basis for the mean length of cells shortemng as the growth rate falls. In Figs. 7 and 8, bilinear growth of the lateral wall [35] has been assumed with the more rapid rate occurring in the D period, but it is not critical to the model whether the lateral wall 113 extends in this way, in an exponential way, or in a linear fashion. At a • of 80 min, a cell is in the D period for about 25% of ~-. Thus 25% of r is available in the D period for lateral wall extension before the cell divides. Whatever the kinetics by which lateral wall extension proce, ds, a substantial part of the length and therefore the volume of newborn cells is attained during the D period in rapidly growing cultures. However, as r reaches 10 h, when the C period is completed and the 22-24 rain D period begins, only about 4% of ~" is available for lateral wall extension before the D period completes and division occurs. (Since the D period becomes an increasingly small fraction of as the growth rate falls, it had been expected that in domain 3 a corresponding, increasingly small fraction of the population, approaching indetectability, would be in the T substage of the D period, contrary to the roughly constant and relatively large fraction actually observed (Table 2)). With cells dividing at a shorter mean length, newborns are therefore shorter, and consequently the mean length of the population decreases as its growth rate falls. When the transition to domain 2 at a t d of 12-14 h occurs and the t a abruptly increases to 20 h, the problem of the growth rate-independent length of the D period becomes even more acute and should raise a particular difficult~¢ fc~r dividing cells. The basis for the modei shown in Figs. 7 and 8 is the ' I + C + D' cell sequence devised by Helmstetter and his colleagues [8] in explanation Comparison of cell cycle stages at 2 interdivision times (x) x =! 80 min ! ,.... -.o.- x = | 600 min i ~ D 1 B !. . . . ! t C C .4 B B ~~1----- ......... Fig. 8. Illustration of the problem incurred in cell division as the longer limit to growth rate domain 1 is approached if D period processes remain growth rate independent while other cell cycle processes are growth rate dependent. Notation is the same as in Fig. 7, except that the interdivision time is denoted as ~'. ll4 of their observations on cells with ~ of 2 h o~ less. At growth rates that rapid, the problem of inadequate time for further lateral wall extension during the D period does not occur as it does for the cell at a ~" of 10 h illustrated in Fig. 8. However, for cells at any ~" the first part of the D period must include whatever time is necessary for adequate separation of the completed chromosomes. At the longer t d of domain 1 and the beginning of domain 2, the growth rate-dependent extension of the lateral wall could become too slow to generate the cytoplasmic volume necessary to accommodate both the separated nucleoids and the growth rate-independent deposition of the transverse wall before the cell enters the final, T substage of the D period. The problem this disproportion in the length of cell cycle stages makes for dividing cells is revealed in electron micrographs of Eo coli H10407 entering, and in, domain 2 (Fig. 9 A - C ) . In domain 1 cells there was adequate volume to accommodate the separated chromosomes while deposition of the division plane was completed (Fig. 9A). As the growth rate approached domain 2 values the cells shortened, becoming distinctly barrel shaped (Fig. 9B). In the shortened ceils, deposition of the transverse wall started, producing a visible constriction in the cell periphery, before O I Fig. 9. Electron micrcgraphs of Escherichia coli H10407: (A) thin section of T-period, domain 1 cell stained by the Kellenberger technique, nucleoids separated; (B) negatively stained domain 2 cells; (C) thin section of T-period, domain 2 cell stained by the Kellenberger technique, nucleokls unseparated; (D) thin section of T-period. domain 3 cell stained by the Kellenberger technique, nucleoids unseparated, cell regaining length at division. Bar corresponds to 0.5 ~ra. See text for discussion. 115 the replicated chromosomes were separated into daughter nucleoids (Fig. 9C). Completion of the division plane was mechanically prevented how-ever because the unseparated chromosomes occupied the necessary space, and the D period was arrested in the substage in this cell. The concept of a minimum size requirement for the successful division of the bacterial cell has been considered both genetically and geometrically [36,37]. The basis of the minimum size requirement is brought to view by again considering the disparity between the growth rate-independent length of the D period and the growth rate-dependent length of t~he other periods. Cells must possess the minimum volume necessary to accommodate the separated nucleoids at their poles if the division plane is to be completed near ti,eir centers. As they approach slower, domain 2 growth rates, division is completed by the growth rate-inaependent, D period processes as soon as the growth rate-dependent, lateral wall extension has i~:creased the cell volume to this minimum. However, as the strain H10407 population progressed into domain 3, cells blocked in the T substage were less apparent and constricted cells assumed an appearance more like that of domain 1 cells (Fig. 9D). Like Escherichia coli K strains (Table 2), strain H10407 also regained length as it proceeded through the domains. This led to postulating an R period (Fig. 7) during which regulation is likely to be acting in domain 2 and 3 cells to restore a balance among the lengths of cell cycle stages tha~ would permit ce!!s to reach sizes larger than the minimum before dividing. The synthesis of cell wall precursors is known to be affected by p p G p p [38]. Results ~4th the K strain~ in which length regain was dependent on the status of their rel genes, along with the presence of elevated p p G p p levels in domain 2 and 3 cells [11], argues strongly for this nucleotide as the R period effector. 5.4. Population fractions in different cell cycle stages in domain 3 and their significance for szress resistance and mean cell composition Changes in mean cell length suggested that the distribution of the population among the cell cycle stages was different in the three domains and that this was a possible source of heterogeneous response to starvation stress. An approach to estimate the proportion of a domain 3 population in each stage was developed by taking advantage of tile observation that D period cells of many E. coli s~lrains exhibit chloramphenicol-resistant division ~ 9 ] and that lysogenic ?~ phage becomes lytic in cells ~hen the replicating fork of the chromosome is blocked. Table 3 shows the results of measuring chloramphenicol-resistant division in a spoT strain in the three domains. In domain 3, 20-35% of the population was estimated to be in the D period. To measure C period cells by provoking vegetative phage in lysogenized cells, the ability of nalidixic acid to block the replicating chromosome fork in a reversible fasbAo~ and thus evoke the SOS response, was first tested using strain ATCC 33311 in which lacZ is joined to the left promoter of ~ [40]. The strain was grown to domain 3, and the reactor pulsed first with L-tryptophan to induce tryptophanase as a marker of cell integrity. The reactor was next pulsed with sufficient nalidixic acid to give an initial concentration of 15 btg/ml, fi-Galactosidase was measured throughout the experiment, tryptophanase measured before and after the tryptophan pulse, and indole was measured in the filtrate to determine when the inducing tryptophan puise was e~hausted. The results are shown in Fig. 10. Biomass increase halted after the antibiotic pulse and the level of fl-galactosidase rose above a rather high backgroand level. The enzyme increase ceased 7 h after the pulse. By 15 h after the pulse, washout of Table 3 Increase in particle counts of slowly growing Escherichia coli NF161 after chloramphenicol treatment Hours postseeding 5.5 12 15 28.5 41 46 Nominalmass doublingtime ,,td ) (h) 1.3 15 19 80 108 124 Domain Percentincrease in particle count 1" 2 2 3 3 3 * Biomass increasing exponentially. 10 ll 10 30 20 35 116 . . . . . . . . b . . . . . .~ ~= ~ o~ 3501 ~ ~ ~ 300 z 3 4, ~ ~ 250. ~ ~ ~ 2001 100. E- Z _ 0 0 ' 0 ....................... 13 20 30 40 50 60 70 90 80 100 110 HOURS Fig. 10. Escherichia coil ATCC 33311, in which the left promoter of ~ is fused to lacZ, pulsed in domain 3 with 0.0015 M L-tryptophan at (a) and at (b) with sufficient nalidixic acid to produce an initial concentration of 15 /~g/ml while growing anaerobically in a recycling fermentor in a glucose-limiting minimal medium held at pH 6.8-7.0 and 30 o C. See text for discussion. 4°°l . . a°°t 7~ . . a . . . . . \ / 250 t 2 150! I00" 1 50., / O ' " . • 0 10 - . 20 - , 30 . . • 40 . , 50 . - . , 60 . - , 70 . , 80 90 100 HOURS Fig. 11. Excherichia coil NF161 (3,) spoT pulsed in domain 3 with nalidixic acid (a) and N'-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (b) while growing anaerobically in a recycling fermentor in a glucose-limiting minimal medium held at pH 6.8-7.0 and 30°C. See text for discussion. 1!7 the antibiotic through the cell recycling membrane had lowered its level enough for growth to resume. With the resumption of growth, fl-galactosidase activity resumed its increase in parallel with the bioma.'ss increase. The level of tryptophanase remained constant after reaching a maximum at the exhaustion of the inducing pulse (signalled by the dowr,,ward inflection in indole level in the filtrate stream), indicating that lysis of the culture was unlikely to have occurred as a consequence of exposure to the antibiotic. The experiment demonstrated that nalidixic acid reversibly inhibited the domain 3 population and instigated the recA-lexA-dependent SOS system. Eseherichia coil NF161 spoT was lysogenized with X and the nalidixic acid experiment reprised with this strain. Fig. 11 shows the outcome. Five h after the antibiotic pulse was administered, phage appeared in the filtrate and over the next 4 h the viable cc,unt in the reactor fell by 41%. The washout kinetics shown by phage indicated that release of new phage had ceased by 4 h after the pulse. At 15 h post addition of nalidixate the culture resumed growth. To test the functionality of the SOS system and the presence of latent phage in this surviving population, N'-methylN'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine was added to the fermentor: at the level of 10/~g/ml. This mutagen inflicts; double strand damage throughout the chromosome as well as at the replication fork, so that the SOS system is activated in all cells whether or not their chromosome has a replicating fork. As Fig. l l shows, the mutagen provoked general release of phage and lysis of the remaining cells. Tb.e experiment is taken to mean that in domair~ 3 approximately 40% of the population was replicating a chromosome, i.e. in the C period. The results of this experiment taken together with the chloramphenicol experiment, in which an average of approximately 30% of the population was in the D period, places 40% of the domain 3 population in the C period, 30% in the D, and the remainder, 30%, therefore into the B period. The experiments with nalidixate revealed heterogeneous susceptibility to this antibiotic and probably also to others that act at the replication fork in slowly growing, chronically starved bacteria. This differential susceptibility would not be apparent in cells at their mi.nimum • and maximum growth rate in a hospitable milieu containing er~ough :mtrients to saturate their uptake systems because these cells will multiply, initiating chromosome replication, as pointed out in the Introduction. Cells near their maximum growth rates pass quickly enough from one period of the cycle 'to the next so that an antibiotic pulse can affect the e~atire population since all cells will reach the stage of maximum susceptibility during the course of the pulse. The nalidixate experiments showed that as much as 60% of the population can be immune to at least this kind of provocation of the SOS system, and since the SOS system is the major route for fixation of mutations in bacterial populations, the slowly growing population is less prone to mutagenesis from this source. The differential response of D period cells to chloramphenicol serves as another example, in this case well known, of the influence of cell cycle stage on response to antibiotic stress. As the experiment reported in Table 3 showed, the population fraction resistant to chloramphenicol inhibition of cell division also changed with domain, i.e. with the degree of chronic starvation. Returning to the observation on the heterogeneous response of domain 3 cells to sta,,wation, it is likely that one of the cell cycle stages is more susceptible to energy loss than the others. However, the proportion of starvation-susceptible cells, 30%, is too close to the population proportions of all the three stages in domain 3 to warrant even a preliminary assignment of starvation susceptibility to one or another stage. Table 1 concludes with a summary of domaindependent changes in distribution of the population among the cell cycle stages. The kinds and proportions of protein species present alter as a cell passes through the cycle. At the least, ameunts of precursors of the division plane will differ in B, C, and D cells. This should be reflected in changes in the mean protein composition of populations in the different domains because the proportiong of B, C, D, and T period cells in the population differ within and between domains. A consequence of this analysis is that neither qualitative nor quantitative differences between protein 118 species f o u n d in s t a r v e d p o p u l a t i o n s a n d t h o s e f o u n d in p o p u l a t i o n s g r o w i n g in a h o s p i t a b l e , n u t r i e n t - r e p l e t e milieu c a n b e s i m p l y i d e n t i f i e d as revealing stress r e s p o n s e s to s t a r v a t i o n b e c a u s e in s o m e d e g r e e these d i f f e r e n c e s will n e c e s s a r i l y also be d o e t o the d i f f e r e n t p r o p o r t i o n s o f B, C, a n d D cells in the s t a r v e d a n d r e p l e t e p o p u l a t i o n s . ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS N a n n e N a n n i n g a a n d C o n r a d W o l d r i n g h o f the U n i v e r s i t y o f A m s t e r d a m p r o v i d e d a substatitial a m o u n t o f their t i m e a n d t h o u g h t s for us, to o u r c o n s i d e r a b l e b e n e f i t . T h e w o r k o f R. Eifert, M. A r b i g e , a n d W. 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