Death Rate of E. coli during Starvation Is Set by Maintenance Cost and Biomass Recycling

Severin J. Schink, Elena Biselli, Constantin Ammar, Ulrich Gerland

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

64 Scopus citations

Abstract

To break down organismal fitness into molecular contributions, costs and benefits of cellular components must be analyzed in all phases of the organism's life cycle. Here, we establish the required quantitative approach for the death phase of the model bacterium Escherichia coli. We show that in carbon starvation, an exponential decay of viability emerges as a collective phenomenon, with viable cells recycling nutrients from cell carcasses to maintain viability. The observed collective death rate is determined by the maintenance rate of viable cells and the amount of nutrients recovered from dead cells. Using this relation, we study the cost of a wasteful enzyme during starvation and the benefit of the stress response sigma factor RpoS. While the enzyme increases maintenance and thereby the death rate, RpoS improves biomass recycling, decreasing the death rate. Our approach thus enables quantitative analyses of how cellular components affect the survival of non-growing cells.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)64-73.e3
JournalCell Systems
Volume9
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 24 Jul 2019

Keywords

  • bacterial fitness
  • bacterial physiology
  • bacterial survival
  • bacterial systems biology
  • death rate
  • quantitative physiology

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