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Long-term positioning and polar preference of chemoreceptor clusters in E. coli.

Moriah KolerEliran PeretzChetan AdityaThomas S ShimizuAdy Vaknin
Published in: Nature communications (2018)
The bacterial chemosensory arrays are a notable model for studying the basic principles of receptor clustering and cellular organization. Here, we provide a new perspective regarding the long-term dynamics of these clusters in growing E. coli cells. We demonstrate that pre-existing lateral clusters tend to avoid translocation to pole regions and, therefore, continually shuttle between the cell poles for many generations while being static relative to the local cell-wall matrix. We also show that the polar preference of clusters results fundamentally from reduced clustering efficiency in the lateral region, rather than a developmental-like progression of clusters. Furthermore, polar preference is surprisingly robust to structural alterations designed to probe preference due to curvature sorting, perturbing the cell envelope physiology affects the cluster-size distribution, and the size-dependent mobility of receptor complexes differs between polar and lateral regions. Thus, distinct envelope physiology in the polar and lateral cell regions may contribute to polar preference.
Keyphrases
  • single cell
  • ionic liquid
  • minimally invasive
  • cell therapy
  • escherichia coli
  • rna seq
  • cell wall
  • induced apoptosis
  • oxidative stress
  • living cells
  • cell death
  • quantum dots
  • endoplasmic reticulum stress