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Colloidal Physics Modeling Reveals How Per-Ribosome Productivity Increases with Growth Rate in Escherichia coli

Faster-growing cells must synthesize proteins more quickly. Increased ribosome abundance only partly accounts for increases in total protein synthesis rates. The productivity of individual ribosomes must increase too, almost doubling by an unknown mechanism. Prior models point to diffusive transport...

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Autores principales: Maheshwari, Akshay J., Sunol, Alp M., Gonzalez, Emma, Endy, Drew, Zia, Roseanna N.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9973364/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36537810
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.02865-22
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author Maheshwari, Akshay J.
Sunol, Alp M.
Gonzalez, Emma
Endy, Drew
Zia, Roseanna N.
author_facet Maheshwari, Akshay J.
Sunol, Alp M.
Gonzalez, Emma
Endy, Drew
Zia, Roseanna N.
author_sort Maheshwari, Akshay J.
collection PubMed
description Faster-growing cells must synthesize proteins more quickly. Increased ribosome abundance only partly accounts for increases in total protein synthesis rates. The productivity of individual ribosomes must increase too, almost doubling by an unknown mechanism. Prior models point to diffusive transport as a limiting factor but raise a paradox: faster-growing cells are more crowded, yet crowding slows diffusion. We suspected that physical crowding, transport, and stoichiometry, considered together, might reveal a more nuanced explanation. To investigate, we built a first-principles physics-based model of Escherichia coli cytoplasm in which Brownian motion and diffusion arise directly from physical interactions between individual molecules of finite size, density, and physiological abundance. Using our microscopically detailed model, we predicted that physical transport of individual ternary complexes accounts for ~80% of translation elongation latency. We also found that volumetric crowding increases during faster growth even as cytoplasmic mass density remains relatively constant. Despite slowed diffusion, we predicted that improved proximity between ternary complexes and ribosomes wins out, illustrating a simple physics-based mechanism for how individual elongating ribosomes become more productive. We speculate that crowding imposes a physical limit on growth rate and undergirds cellular behavior more broadly. Unfitted colloidal-scale modeling offers systems biology a complementary “physics engine” for exploring how cellular-scale behaviors arise from physical transport and reactions among individual molecules.
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spelling pubmed-99733642023-03-01 Colloidal Physics Modeling Reveals How Per-Ribosome Productivity Increases with Growth Rate in Escherichia coli Maheshwari, Akshay J. Sunol, Alp M. Gonzalez, Emma Endy, Drew Zia, Roseanna N. mBio Research Article Faster-growing cells must synthesize proteins more quickly. Increased ribosome abundance only partly accounts for increases in total protein synthesis rates. The productivity of individual ribosomes must increase too, almost doubling by an unknown mechanism. Prior models point to diffusive transport as a limiting factor but raise a paradox: faster-growing cells are more crowded, yet crowding slows diffusion. We suspected that physical crowding, transport, and stoichiometry, considered together, might reveal a more nuanced explanation. To investigate, we built a first-principles physics-based model of Escherichia coli cytoplasm in which Brownian motion and diffusion arise directly from physical interactions between individual molecules of finite size, density, and physiological abundance. Using our microscopically detailed model, we predicted that physical transport of individual ternary complexes accounts for ~80% of translation elongation latency. We also found that volumetric crowding increases during faster growth even as cytoplasmic mass density remains relatively constant. Despite slowed diffusion, we predicted that improved proximity between ternary complexes and ribosomes wins out, illustrating a simple physics-based mechanism for how individual elongating ribosomes become more productive. We speculate that crowding imposes a physical limit on growth rate and undergirds cellular behavior more broadly. Unfitted colloidal-scale modeling offers systems biology a complementary “physics engine” for exploring how cellular-scale behaviors arise from physical transport and reactions among individual molecules. American Society for Microbiology 2022-12-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9973364/ /pubmed/36537810 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.02865-22 Text en Copyright © 2022 Maheshwari et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Maheshwari, Akshay J.
Sunol, Alp M.
Gonzalez, Emma
Endy, Drew
Zia, Roseanna N.
Colloidal Physics Modeling Reveals How Per-Ribosome Productivity Increases with Growth Rate in Escherichia coli
title Colloidal Physics Modeling Reveals How Per-Ribosome Productivity Increases with Growth Rate in Escherichia coli
title_full Colloidal Physics Modeling Reveals How Per-Ribosome Productivity Increases with Growth Rate in Escherichia coli
title_fullStr Colloidal Physics Modeling Reveals How Per-Ribosome Productivity Increases with Growth Rate in Escherichia coli
title_full_unstemmed Colloidal Physics Modeling Reveals How Per-Ribosome Productivity Increases with Growth Rate in Escherichia coli
title_short Colloidal Physics Modeling Reveals How Per-Ribosome Productivity Increases with Growth Rate in Escherichia coli
title_sort colloidal physics modeling reveals how per-ribosome productivity increases with growth rate in escherichia coli
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9973364/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36537810
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.02865-22
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