Repetitive Short-Term Stimuli Imposed in Poor Mixing Zones Induce Long-Term Adaptation of E. coli Cultures in Large-Scale Bioreactors: Experimental Evidence and Mathematical Model

Rapidly changing concentrations of substrates frequently occur during large-scale microbial cultivations. These changing conditions, caused by large mixing times, result in a heterogeneous population distribution. Here, we present a powerful and efficient modeling approach to predict the influence o...

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Main Authors: Alexander Nieß, Michael Löffler, Joana D. Simen, Ralf Takors
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2017-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Microbiology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmicb.2017.01195/full
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spelling doaj-734f5b04032d4ea2bd28694c3bba58c32020-11-24T23:19:35ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Microbiology1664-302X2017-06-01810.3389/fmicb.2017.01195276168Repetitive Short-Term Stimuli Imposed in Poor Mixing Zones Induce Long-Term Adaptation of E. coli Cultures in Large-Scale Bioreactors: Experimental Evidence and Mathematical ModelAlexander NießMichael LöfflerJoana D. SimenRalf TakorsRapidly changing concentrations of substrates frequently occur during large-scale microbial cultivations. These changing conditions, caused by large mixing times, result in a heterogeneous population distribution. Here, we present a powerful and efficient modeling approach to predict the influence of varying substrate levels on the transcriptional and translational response of the cell. This approach consists of two parts, a single-cell model to describe transcription and translation for an exemplary operon (trp operon) and a second part to characterize cell distribution during the experimental setup. Combination of both models enables prediction of transcriptional patterns for the whole population. In summary, the resulting model is not only able to anticipate the experimentally observed short-term and long-term transcriptional response, it further allows envision of altered protein levels. Our model shows that locally induced stress responses propagate throughout the bioreactor, resulting in temporal, and spatial population heterogeneity. Stress induced transcriptional response leads to a new population steady-state shortly after imposing fluctuating substrate conditions. In contrast, the protein levels take more than 10 h to achieve steady-state conditions.http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmicb.2017.01195/fullscale-downhybrid modelingpopulation heterogeneityadaptation timesEscherichia coli
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alexander Nieß
Michael Löffler
Joana D. Simen
Ralf Takors
spellingShingle Alexander Nieß
Michael Löffler
Joana D. Simen
Ralf Takors
Repetitive Short-Term Stimuli Imposed in Poor Mixing Zones Induce Long-Term Adaptation of E. coli Cultures in Large-Scale Bioreactors: Experimental Evidence and Mathematical Model
Frontiers in Microbiology
scale-down
hybrid modeling
population heterogeneity
adaptation times
Escherichia coli
author_facet Alexander Nieß
Michael Löffler
Joana D. Simen
Ralf Takors
author_sort Alexander Nieß
title Repetitive Short-Term Stimuli Imposed in Poor Mixing Zones Induce Long-Term Adaptation of E. coli Cultures in Large-Scale Bioreactors: Experimental Evidence and Mathematical Model
title_short Repetitive Short-Term Stimuli Imposed in Poor Mixing Zones Induce Long-Term Adaptation of E. coli Cultures in Large-Scale Bioreactors: Experimental Evidence and Mathematical Model
title_full Repetitive Short-Term Stimuli Imposed in Poor Mixing Zones Induce Long-Term Adaptation of E. coli Cultures in Large-Scale Bioreactors: Experimental Evidence and Mathematical Model
title_fullStr Repetitive Short-Term Stimuli Imposed in Poor Mixing Zones Induce Long-Term Adaptation of E. coli Cultures in Large-Scale Bioreactors: Experimental Evidence and Mathematical Model
title_full_unstemmed Repetitive Short-Term Stimuli Imposed in Poor Mixing Zones Induce Long-Term Adaptation of E. coli Cultures in Large-Scale Bioreactors: Experimental Evidence and Mathematical Model
title_sort repetitive short-term stimuli imposed in poor mixing zones induce long-term adaptation of e. coli cultures in large-scale bioreactors: experimental evidence and mathematical model
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Microbiology
issn 1664-302X
publishDate 2017-06-01
description Rapidly changing concentrations of substrates frequently occur during large-scale microbial cultivations. These changing conditions, caused by large mixing times, result in a heterogeneous population distribution. Here, we present a powerful and efficient modeling approach to predict the influence of varying substrate levels on the transcriptional and translational response of the cell. This approach consists of two parts, a single-cell model to describe transcription and translation for an exemplary operon (trp operon) and a second part to characterize cell distribution during the experimental setup. Combination of both models enables prediction of transcriptional patterns for the whole population. In summary, the resulting model is not only able to anticipate the experimentally observed short-term and long-term transcriptional response, it further allows envision of altered protein levels. Our model shows that locally induced stress responses propagate throughout the bioreactor, resulting in temporal, and spatial population heterogeneity. Stress induced transcriptional response leads to a new population steady-state shortly after imposing fluctuating substrate conditions. In contrast, the protein levels take more than 10 h to achieve steady-state conditions.
topic scale-down
hybrid modeling
population heterogeneity
adaptation times
Escherichia coli
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmicb.2017.01195/full
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