Metabolomic rearrangement controls the intrinsic microbial response to temperature changes

Benjamin D. Knapp,Lisa Willis,Carlos Gutiérrez González,Harsh Vashistha, Jaoudat Touma, Mikhail Tikhonov, Jeffrey L. Ram,Hanna Salman, Josh E. Elias,Kerwyn Casey Huang

bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)(2023)

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摘要
Temperature is one of the key determinants of microbial behavior and survival, whose impact is typically studied under heat- or cold-shock conditions that elicit specific regulation to combat lethal stress. At intermediate temperatures, cellular growth rate varies according to the Arrhenius law of thermodynamics without stress responses, a behavior whose origins have not yet been elucidated. Using single-cell microscopy during temperature perturbations, we show that bacteria exhibit a highly conserved, gradual response to temperature upshifts with a time scale of ~1.5 doublings at the higher temperature, regardless of initial/final temperature or nutrient source. We find that this behavior is coupled to a temperature memory, which we rule out as being neither transcriptional, translational, nor membrane dependent. Instead, we demonstrate that an autocatalytic enzyme network incorporating temperature-sensitive Michaelis-Menten kinetics recapitulates all temperature-shift dynamics through metabolome rearrangement, which encodes a temperature memory and successfully predicts alterations in the upshift response observed under simple-sugar, low-nutrient conditions, and in fungi. This model also provides a mechanistic framework for both Arrhenius-dependent growth and the classical Monod Equation through temperature-dependent metabolite flux.
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关键词
metabolomic rearrangement,intrinsic microbial response,temperature
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