Engineering plasmid copy number heterogeneity for dynamic microbial adaptation.
Shalni KumarAndrew LeziaJeff HastyPublished in: Nature microbiology (2024)
Natural microbial populations exploit phenotypic heterogeneity for survival and adaptation. However, in engineering biology, limiting the sources of variability is a major focus. Here we show that intentionally coupling distinct plasmids via shared replication mechanisms enables bacterial populations to adapt to their environment. We demonstrate that plasmid coupling of carbon-metabolizing operons facilitates copy number tuning of an essential but burdensome construct through the action of a stably maintained, non-essential plasmid. For specific cost-benefit situations, incompatible two-plasmid systems can stably persist longer than compatible ones. We also show using microfluidics that plasmid coupling of synthetic constructs generates population-state memory of previous environmental adaptation without additional regulatory control. This work should help to improve the design of synthetic populations by enabling adaptive engineered strains to function under changing growth conditions without strict fine-tuning of the genetic circuitry.