Genetic manipulation of glycogen allocation affects replicative lifespan in E coli
Boehm A, Arnoldini M, Bergmiller T, Röösli T, Bigosch C, Ackermann M. 2016. Genetic manipulation of glycogen allocation affects replicative lifespan in E coli. PLoS Genetics. 12(4), e1005974.
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Author
Boehm, Alex;
Arnoldini, Markus;
Bergmiller, TobiasISTA ;
Röösli, Thomas;
Bigosch, Colette;
Ackermann, Martin
Department
Abstract
In bacteria, replicative aging manifests as a difference in growth or survival between the two cells emerging from division. One cell can be regarded as an aging mother with a decreased potential for future survival and division, the other as a rejuvenated daughter. Here, we aimed at investigating some of the processes involved in aging in the bacterium Escherichia coli, where the two types of cells can be distinguished by the age of their cell poles. We found that certain changes in the regulation of the carbohydrate metabolism can affect aging. A mutation in the carbon storage regulator gene, csrA, leads to a dramatically shorter replicative lifespan; csrA mutants stop dividing once their pole exceeds an age of about five divisions. These old-pole cells accumulate glycogen at their old cell poles; after their last division, they do not contain a chromosome, presumably because of spatial exclusion by the glycogen aggregates. The new-pole daughters produced by these aging mothers are born young; they only express the deleterious phenotype once their pole is old. These results demonstrate how manipulations of nutrient allocation can lead to the exclusion of the chromosome and limit replicative lifespan in E. coli, and illustrate how mutations can have phenotypic effects that are specific for cells with old poles. This raises the question how bacteria can avoid the accumulation of such mutations in their genomes over evolutionary times, and how they can achieve the long replicative lifespans that have recently been reported.
Publishing Year
Date Published
2016-04-19
Journal Title
PLoS Genetics
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Acknowledgement
This manuscript is dedicated to the memory of Alex Böhm, who was a great friend and a passionate biologist. Alex passed away after the initial submission of this manuscript. We thank Vesna Olivera and Ursula Sauder from the Zentrum für Mikroskopie Uni Basel for excellent service, and Olin Silander, Nikki Freed, and Nela Nikolic for helpful discussions. This work was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation grants to M. Ackermann and Urs Jenal (supporting AB).
Volume
12
Issue
4
Article Number
e1005974
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Cite this
Boehm A, Arnoldini M, Bergmiller T, Röösli T, Bigosch C, Ackermann M. Genetic manipulation of glycogen allocation affects replicative lifespan in E coli. PLoS Genetics. 2016;12(4). doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1005974
Boehm, A., Arnoldini, M., Bergmiller, T., Röösli, T., Bigosch, C., & Ackermann, M. (2016). Genetic manipulation of glycogen allocation affects replicative lifespan in E coli. PLoS Genetics. Public Library of Science. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1005974
Boehm, Alex, Markus Arnoldini, Tobias Bergmiller, Thomas Röösli, Colette Bigosch, and Martin Ackermann. “Genetic Manipulation of Glycogen Allocation Affects Replicative Lifespan in E Coli.” PLoS Genetics. Public Library of Science, 2016. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1005974.
A. Boehm, M. Arnoldini, T. Bergmiller, T. Röösli, C. Bigosch, and M. Ackermann, “Genetic manipulation of glycogen allocation affects replicative lifespan in E coli,” PLoS Genetics, vol. 12, no. 4. Public Library of Science, 2016.
Boehm A, Arnoldini M, Bergmiller T, Röösli T, Bigosch C, Ackermann M. 2016. Genetic manipulation of glycogen allocation affects replicative lifespan in E coli. PLoS Genetics. 12(4), e1005974.
Boehm, Alex, et al. “Genetic Manipulation of Glycogen Allocation Affects Replicative Lifespan in E Coli.” PLoS Genetics, vol. 12, no. 4, e1005974, Public Library of Science, 2016, doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1005974.
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