English

Positive feedback and noise activate the stringent response regulator Rel in mycobacteria

Molecular Networks 2015-05-13 v1 Cell Behavior

Abstract

Phenotypic heterogeneity in an isogenic, microbial population enables a subset of the population to persist under stress. In mycobacteria, stresses like nutrient and oxygen deprivation activate the stress response pathway involving the two-component system MprAB and the sigma factor, SigE. SigE in turn activates the expression of the stringent response regulator, rel. The enzyme polyphosphate kinase 1 (PPK1) regulates this pathway by synthesizing polyphosphate required for the activation of MprB. The precise manner in which only a subpopulation of bacterial cells develops persistence, remains unknown. Rel is required for mycobacterial persistence. Here we show that the distribution of rel expression levels in a growing population of mycobacteria is bimodal with two distinct peaks corresponding to low (L) and high (H) expression states, and further establish that a positive feedback loop involving the mprAB operon along with stochastic gene expression are responsible for the phenotypic heterogeneity. Combining single cell analysis by flow cytometry with theoretical modeling, we observe that during growth, noise-driven transitions take a subpopulation of cells from the L to the H state within a "window of opportunity" in time preceding the stationary phase. We find evidence of hysteresis in the expression of rel in response to changing concentrations of PPK1. Our results provide, for the first time, evidence that bistability and stochastic gene expression could be important for the development of "heterogeneity with an advantage" in mycobacteria.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0802.1580,
  title  = {Positive feedback and noise activate the stringent response regulator Rel in mycobacteria},
  author = {Kamakshi Sureka and Bhaswar Ghosh and Arunava Dasgupta and Joyoti Basu and Manikuntala Kundu and Indrani Bose},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0802.1580},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

Accepted for publication in PLoS One

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