Damage dynamics and the role of chance in the timing of E. coli cell death
Genetically identical cells in the same stressful condition die at different times. The origin of this stochasticity is unclear; it may arise from different initial conditions that affect the time of demise, or from a stochastic damage accumulation mechanism that erases the initial conditions and in...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature communications 2023-04, Vol.14 (1), p.2209-2209, Article 2209 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Genetically identical cells in the same stressful condition die at different times. The origin of this stochasticity is unclear; it may arise from different initial conditions that affect the time of demise, or from a stochastic damage accumulation mechanism that erases the initial conditions and instead amplifies noise to generate different lifespans. To address this requires measuring damage dynamics in individual cells over the lifespan, but this has rarely been achieved. Here, we used a microfluidic device to measure membrane damage in 635 carbon-starved
Escherichia coli
cells at high temporal resolution. We find that initial conditions of damage, size or cell-cycle phase do not explain most of the lifespan variation. Instead, the data points to a stochastic mechanism in which noise is amplified by a rising production of damage that saturates its own removal. Surprisingly, the relative variation in damage drops with age: cells become more similar to each other in terms of relative damage, indicating increasing determinism with age. Thus, chance erases initial conditions and then gives way to increasingly deterministic dynamics that dominate the lifespan distribution.
To understand why genetically identical cells die at different times the authors measured damage dynamics in individual cells. They report lifespan variation comes not from initial conditions but from stochastic accumulation of damage that saturates repair systems. |
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ISSN: | 2041-1723 2041-1723 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41467-023-37930-x |