Takano Sotaro, Pawlowska Bogna J, Gudelj Ivana, Yomo Tetsuya, Tsuru Saburo
Department of Bioinformatic Engineering, Graduate School of information Science and Technology Osaka University, Osaka, Japan.
Biosciences, University of Exeter, Exeter, United Kingdom.
mBio. 2017 Feb 7;8(1):e02336-16. doi: 10.1128/mBio.02336-16.
The amount of natural resources in the Earth's environment is in flux, which can trigger catastrophic collapses of ecosystems. How populations survive under nutrient-poor conditions is a central question in ecology. Curiously, some bacteria persist for a long time in nutrient-poor environments. Although this survival may be accomplished through cell death and the recycling of dead cells, the importance of these processes and the mechanisms underlying the survival of the populations have not been quantitated. Here, we use microbial laboratory experiments and mathematical models to demonstrate that death and recycling are essential activities for the maintenance of cell survival. We also show that the behavior of the survivors is governed by population density feedback, wherein growth is limited not only by the available resources but also by the population density. The numerical simulations suggest that population density-dependent recycling could be an advantageous behavior under starvation conditions.
How organisms survive after exhaustion of resources is a central question in ecology. Starving Escherichia coli constitute a model system to understand survival mechanisms during long-term starvation. Although death and the recycling of dead cells might play a key role in the maintenance of long-term survival, their mechanisms and importance have not been quantitated. Here, we verified the significance of social recycling of dead cells for long-term survival. We also show that the survivors restrained their recycling and did not use all available nutrients released from dead cells, which may be advantageous under starvation conditions. These results indicate that not only the utilization of dead cells but also restrained recycling coordinate the effective utilization of limited resources for long-term survival under starvation.
地球环境中自然资源的数量处于不断变化之中,这可能引发生态系统的灾难性崩溃。种群如何在营养匮乏的条件下生存是生态学中的核心问题。奇怪的是,一些细菌能在营养匮乏的环境中长时间存活。尽管这种存活可能通过细胞死亡和死细胞的循环利用来实现,但这些过程的重要性以及种群存活背后的机制尚未得到量化。在此,我们利用微生物实验室实验和数学模型来证明死亡和循环利用是维持细胞存活的基本活动。我们还表明,存活者的行为受种群密度反馈的支配,其中生长不仅受到可用资源的限制,还受到种群密度的限制。数值模拟表明,在饥饿条件下,种群密度依赖性循环利用可能是一种有利行为。
生物体在资源耗尽后如何生存是生态学中的核心问题。饥饿的大肠杆菌构成了一个理解长期饥饿期间生存机制的模型系统。尽管细胞死亡和死细胞的循环利用可能在维持长期存活中起关键作用,但其机制和重要性尚未得到量化。在此,我们验证了死细胞的社会循环利用对长期存活的重要性。我们还表明,存活者会抑制其循环利用,并不利用死细胞释放的所有可用营养物质,这在饥饿条件下可能是有利的。这些结果表明,不仅死细胞的利用,而且抑制循环利用都能协调有限资源的有效利用,以在饥饿状态下实现长期存活。