4.5 Article

Relationship between fitness and heterogeneity in exponentially growing microbial populations

期刊

BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
卷 121, 期 10, 页码 1919-1930

出版社

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2022.04.012

关键词

-

资金

  1. Marie Sklodowska-Curie [734439]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Despite high single-cell variability, the fitness of microbial populations is influenced by the theoretically optimal boundary defined by minimal reduction of metabolic variability, indicating a trade-off between growth and heterogeneity within bacterial metabolism.
Despite major environmental and genetic differences, microbial metabolic networks are known to generate consistent physiological outcomes across vastly different organisms. This remarkable robustness suggests that, at least in bac-teria, metabolic activity may be guided by universal principles. The constrained optimization of evolutionarily motivated objective functions, such as the growth rate, has emerged as the key theoretical assumption for the study of bacterial metabolism. While conceptually and practically useful in many situations, the idea that certain functions are optimized is hard to validate in data. Moreover, it is not always clear how optimality can be reconciled with the high degree of single-cell variability observed in ex-periments within microbial populations. To shed light on these issues, we develop an inverse modeling framework that connects the fitness of a population of cells (represented by the mean single-cell growth rate) to the underlying metabolic variability through the maximum entropy inference of the distribution of metabolic phenotypes from data. While no clear objective function emerges, we find that, as the medium gets richer, the fitness and inferred variability for Escherichia coli populations follow and slowly approach the theoretically optimal bound defined by minimal reduction of variability at given fitness. These results suggest that bacterial metabolism may be crucially shaped by a population-level trade-off between growth and heterogeneity.

作者

我是这篇论文的作者
点击您的名字以认领此论文并将其添加到您的个人资料中。

评论

主要评分

4.5
评分不足

次要评分

新颖性
-
重要性
-
科学严谨性
-
评价这篇论文

推荐

暂无数据
暂无数据