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Global pleiotropic effects in adaptively evolved Escherichia coli lacking CRP reveal molecular mechanisms that define the growth physiology

Evolution facilitates emergence of fitter phenotypes by efficient allocation of cellular resources in conjunction with beneficial mutations. However, system-wide pleiotropic effects that redress the perturbations to the apex node of the transcriptional regulatory networks remain unclear. Here, we el...

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Autores principales: Pal, Ankita, Iyer, Mahesh S., Srinivasan, Sumana, Narain Seshasayee, Aswin Sai, Venkatesh, K. V.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8846999/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35167766
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsob.210206
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author Pal, Ankita
Iyer, Mahesh S.
Srinivasan, Sumana
Narain Seshasayee, Aswin Sai
Venkatesh, K. V.
author_facet Pal, Ankita
Iyer, Mahesh S.
Srinivasan, Sumana
Narain Seshasayee, Aswin Sai
Venkatesh, K. V.
author_sort Pal, Ankita
collection PubMed
description Evolution facilitates emergence of fitter phenotypes by efficient allocation of cellular resources in conjunction with beneficial mutations. However, system-wide pleiotropic effects that redress the perturbations to the apex node of the transcriptional regulatory networks remain unclear. Here, we elucidate that absence of global transcriptional regulator CRP in Escherichia coli results in alterations in key metabolic pathways under glucose respiratory conditions, favouring stress- or hedging-related functions over growth-enhancing functions. Further, we disentangle the growth-mediated effects from the CRP regulation-specific effects on these metabolic pathways. We quantitatively illustrate that the loss of CRP perturbs proteome efficiency, as evident from metabolic as well as ribosomal proteome fractions, that corroborated with intracellular metabolite profiles. To address how E. coli copes with such systemic defect, we evolved Δcrp mutant in the presence of glucose. Besides acquiring mutations in the promoter of glucose transporter ptsG, the evolved populations recovered the metabolic pathways to their pre-perturbed state coupled with metabolite re-adjustments, which altogether enabled increased growth. By contrast to Δcrp mutant, the evolved strains remodelled their proteome efficiency towards biomass synthesis, albeit at the expense of carbon efficiency. Overall, we comprehensively illustrate the genetic and metabolic basis of pleiotropic effects, fundamental for understanding the growth physiology.
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spelling pubmed-88469992022-02-17 Global pleiotropic effects in adaptively evolved Escherichia coli lacking CRP reveal molecular mechanisms that define the growth physiology Pal, Ankita Iyer, Mahesh S. Srinivasan, Sumana Narain Seshasayee, Aswin Sai Venkatesh, K. V. Open Biol Research Evolution facilitates emergence of fitter phenotypes by efficient allocation of cellular resources in conjunction with beneficial mutations. However, system-wide pleiotropic effects that redress the perturbations to the apex node of the transcriptional regulatory networks remain unclear. Here, we elucidate that absence of global transcriptional regulator CRP in Escherichia coli results in alterations in key metabolic pathways under glucose respiratory conditions, favouring stress- or hedging-related functions over growth-enhancing functions. Further, we disentangle the growth-mediated effects from the CRP regulation-specific effects on these metabolic pathways. We quantitatively illustrate that the loss of CRP perturbs proteome efficiency, as evident from metabolic as well as ribosomal proteome fractions, that corroborated with intracellular metabolite profiles. To address how E. coli copes with such systemic defect, we evolved Δcrp mutant in the presence of glucose. Besides acquiring mutations in the promoter of glucose transporter ptsG, the evolved populations recovered the metabolic pathways to their pre-perturbed state coupled with metabolite re-adjustments, which altogether enabled increased growth. By contrast to Δcrp mutant, the evolved strains remodelled their proteome efficiency towards biomass synthesis, albeit at the expense of carbon efficiency. Overall, we comprehensively illustrate the genetic and metabolic basis of pleiotropic effects, fundamental for understanding the growth physiology. The Royal Society 2022-02-16 /pmc/articles/PMC8846999/ /pubmed/35167766 http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsob.210206 Text en © 2022 The Authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research
Pal, Ankita
Iyer, Mahesh S.
Srinivasan, Sumana
Narain Seshasayee, Aswin Sai
Venkatesh, K. V.
Global pleiotropic effects in adaptively evolved Escherichia coli lacking CRP reveal molecular mechanisms that define the growth physiology
title Global pleiotropic effects in adaptively evolved Escherichia coli lacking CRP reveal molecular mechanisms that define the growth physiology
title_full Global pleiotropic effects in adaptively evolved Escherichia coli lacking CRP reveal molecular mechanisms that define the growth physiology
title_fullStr Global pleiotropic effects in adaptively evolved Escherichia coli lacking CRP reveal molecular mechanisms that define the growth physiology
title_full_unstemmed Global pleiotropic effects in adaptively evolved Escherichia coli lacking CRP reveal molecular mechanisms that define the growth physiology
title_short Global pleiotropic effects in adaptively evolved Escherichia coli lacking CRP reveal molecular mechanisms that define the growth physiology
title_sort global pleiotropic effects in adaptively evolved escherichia coli lacking crp reveal molecular mechanisms that define the growth physiology
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8846999/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35167766
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsob.210206
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