4.7 Article

Mechanical Genomics Identifies Diverse Modulators of Bacterial Cell Stiffness

Journal

CELL SYSTEMS
Volume 2, Issue 6, Pages 402-411

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cels.2016.05.006

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [DP2OD006466, DP2OD008735, P50 GM107615]
  2. National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER [MCB-1149328]
  3. NSF [DMR-1121288]
  4. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship
  5. Stanford Graduate Fellowship
  6. Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation Distinguished Graduate Fellowship
  7. National Science Foundation [PHYS-1066293]
  8. hospitality of the Aspen Center for Physics

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Bacteria must maintain mechanical integrity to withstand the large osmotic pressure differential across the cell membrane and wall. Although maintaining mechanical integrity is critical for proper cellular function, a fact exploited by prominent cell-wall-targeting antibiotics, the proteins that contribute to cellular mechanics remain unidentified. Here, we describe a high-throughput optical method for quantifying cell stiffness and apply this technique to a genome-wide collection of similar to 4,000 Escherichia coli mutants. We identify genes with roles in diverse functional processes spanning cell-wall synthesis, energy production, and DNA replication and repair that significantly change cell stiffness when deleted. We observe that proteins with biochemically redundant roles in cell-wall synthesis exhibit different stiffness defects when deleted. Correlating our data with chemical screens reveals that reducing membrane potential generally increases cell stiffness. In total, our work demonstrates that bacterial cell stiffness is a property of both the cell wall and broader cell physiology and lays the groundwork for future systematic studies of mechanoregulation.

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