ATP Is a Major Determinant of Phototrophic Bacterial Longevity in Growth Arrest

How bacteria transition into growth arrest as part of stationary phase has been well-studied, but our knowledge of features that help cells to stay alive in the following days and weeks is incomplete. Most studies have used heterotrophic bacteria that are growth-arrested by depletion of substrates u...

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Published in:mBio Vol. 14; no. 2; p. e0360922
Main Authors: Yin, Liang, Ma, Hongyu, Fones, Elizabeth M, Morris, David R, Harwood, Caroline S
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States American Society for Microbiology 25-04-2023
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Summary:How bacteria transition into growth arrest as part of stationary phase has been well-studied, but our knowledge of features that help cells to stay alive in the following days and weeks is incomplete. Most studies have used heterotrophic bacteria that are growth-arrested by depletion of substrates used for both biosynthesis and energy generation, making is difficult to disentangle the effects of the two. In contrast, when grown anaerobically in light, the phototrophic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas palustris generates ATP from light via cyclic photophosphorylation, and builds biomolecules from organic substrates, such as acetate. As such, energy generation and carbon utilization are independent from one another. Here, we compared the physiological and molecular responses of R. palustris to growth arrest caused by carbon source depletion in light (energy-replete) and dark (energy-depleted) conditions. Both sets of cells remained viable for 6 to 10 days, at which point dark-incubated cells lost viability, whereas light-incubated cells remained fully viable for 60 days. Dark-incubated cells were depleted in intracellular ATP prior to losing viability, suggesting that ATP depletion is a cause of cell death. Dark-incubated cells also shut down measurable protein synthesis, whereas light-incubated cells continued to synthesize proteins at low levels. Cells incubated in both conditions continued to transcribe genes. We suggest that R. palustris may completely shut down protein synthesis in dark, energy-depleted, conditions as a strategy to survive the nighttime hours of day/night cycles it experiences in nature, where there is a predictable source of energy in the form of sunlight only during the day. The molecular and physiological basis of bacterial longevity in growth arrest is important to investigate for several reasons. Such investigations could improve treatment of chronic infections, advance use of non-growing bacteria as biocatalysts to make high yields of value-added products, and improve estimates of microbial activities in natural habitats, where cells are often growing slowly or not at all. Here, we compared survival of the phototrophic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas palustris under conditions where it generates ATP (incubation in light), and where it does not generate ATP (incubation in dark) to directly assess effects of energy depletion on long-term viability. We found that ATP is important for long-term survival over weeks. However, R. palustris survives 12 h periods of ATP depletion without loss of viability, apparently in anticipation of sunrise and restoration of its ability to generate ATP. Our work suggests that cells respond to ATP depletion by shutting down protein synthesis.
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The authors declare no conflict of interest.
ISSN:2150-7511
2150-7511
DOI:10.1128/mbio.03609-22