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1.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Jul 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39026702

ABSTRACT

Organisms must perform sensory-motor behaviors to survive. What bounds or constraints limit behavioral performance? Previously, we found that the gradient-climbing speed of a chemotaxing Escherichia coli is near a bound set by the limited information they acquire from their chemical environments (1). Here we ask what limits their sensory accuracy. Past theoretical analyses have shown that the stochasticity of single molecule arrivals sets a fundamental limit on the precision of chemical sensing (2). Although it has been argued that bacteria approach this limit, direct evidence is lacking. Here, using information theory and quantitative experiments, we find that E. coli's chemosensing is not limited by the physics of particle counting. First, we derive the physical limit on the behaviorally-relevant information that any sensor can get about a changing chemical concentration, assuming that every molecule arriving at the sensor is recorded. Then, we derive and measure how much information E. coli's signaling pathway encodes during chemotaxis. We find that E. coli encode two orders of magnitude less information than an ideal sensor limited only by shot noise in particle arrivals. These results strongly suggest that constraints other than particle arrival noise limit E. coli's sensory fidelity.

2.
Cell Syst ; 15(7): 628-638.e8, 2024 Jul 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38981486

ABSTRACT

In uncertain environments, phenotypic diversity can be advantageous for survival. However, as the environmental uncertainty decreases, the relative advantage of having diverse phenotypes decreases. Here, we show how populations of E. coli integrate multiple chemical signals to adjust sensory diversity in response to changes in the prevalence of each ligand in the environment. Measuring kinase activity in single cells, we quantified the sensitivity distribution to various chemoattractants in different mixtures of background stimuli. We found that when ligands bind uncompetitively, the population tunes sensory diversity to each signal independently, decreasing diversity when the signal's ambient concentration increases. However, among competitive ligands, the population can only decrease sensory diversity one ligand at a time. Mathematical modeling suggests that sensory diversity tuning benefits E. coli populations by modulating how many cells are committed to tracking each signal proportionally as their prevalence changes.


Subject(s)
Chemotaxis , Escherichia coli , Signal Transduction , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Escherichia coli/physiology , Chemotaxis/physiology , Escherichia coli Proteins/metabolism , Escherichia coli Proteins/genetics , Chemotactic Factors/metabolism
3.
ArXiv ; 2024 Jul 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39040643

ABSTRACT

Organisms must perform sensory-motor behaviors to survive. What bounds or constraints limit behavioral performance? Previously, we found that the gradient-climbing speed of a chemotaxing Escherichia coli is near a bound set by the limited information they acquire from their chemical environments (1). Here we ask what limits their sensory accuracy. Past theoretical analyses have shown that the stochasticity of single molecule arrivals sets a fundamental limit on the precision of chemical sensing (2). Although it has been argued that bacteria approach this limit, direct evidence is lacking. Here, using information theory and quantitative experiments, we find that E. coli's chemosensing is not limited by the physics of particle counting. First, we derive the physical limit on the behaviorally-relevant information that any sensor can get about a changing chemical concentration, assuming that every molecule arriving at the sensor is recorded. Then, we derive and measure how much information E. coli's signaling pathway encodes during chemotaxis. We find that E. coli encode two orders of magnitude less information than an ideal sensor limited only by shot noise in particle arrivals. These results strongly suggest that constraints other than particle arrival noise limit E. coli's sensory fidelity.

4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(15): e2211807120, 2023 04 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37014867

ABSTRACT

Intensity-based time-lapse fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) microscopy has been a major tool for investigating cellular processes, converting otherwise unobservable molecular interactions into fluorescence time series. However, inferring the molecular interaction dynamics from the observables remains a challenging inverse problem, particularly when measurement noise and photobleaching are nonnegligible-a common situation in single-cell analysis. The conventional approach is to process the time-series data algebraically, but such methods inevitably accumulate the measurement noise and reduce the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), limiting the scope of FRET microscopy. Here, we introduce an alternative probabilistic approach, B-FRET, generally applicable to standard 3-cube FRET-imaging data. Based on Bayesian filtering theory, B-FRET implements a statistically optimal way to infer molecular interactions and thus drastically improves the SNR. We validate B-FRET using simulated data and then apply it to real data, including the notoriously noisy in vivo FRET time series from individual bacterial cells to reveal signaling dynamics otherwise hidden in the noise.


Subject(s)
Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer , Microscopy , Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer/methods , Bayes Theorem
5.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Feb 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36798398

ABSTRACT

While navigating their environments, cells encounter many different signals at once. In the face of uncertain conditions, diversifying the sensitivity to different signals across the population can be useful. Previous studies established that one of the simplest sensory systems, the chemotaxis network of Escherichia coli , can switch between a high diversity bet-hedging strategy, and a low diversity tracking strategy for a ligand as that ligand becomes prevalent. Here, we combine mathematical modeling and single-cell experiments to show that populations of chemotactic bacteria make this transition for each ligand independently. That is, transitioning to tracking one ligand does not compromise the population’s ability to hedge its bets across other future ligands. Remarkably, we found that this independence holds even if those ligands compete for receptor binding sites with the background ligand being tracked. The independence of this transition between two diversity regimes is explained by a simple allosteric model of chemoreceptor clusters with negative integral feedback, which accurately predicts the observed diversity in sensitivity under various background stimulus conditions. Our mathematical analysis shows that similar transitions from bet-hedging to tracking also arise in feed-forward network architectures capable of precise adaptation, suggesting that environment-dependent modulation of diversity may occur in many cell types.

6.
Int J Mol Sci ; 22(13)2021 Jun 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34203411

ABSTRACT

Non-genetic phenotypic diversity plays a significant role in the chemotactic behavior of bacteria, influencing how populations sense and respond to chemical stimuli. First, we review the molecular mechanisms that generate phenotypic diversity in bacterial chemotaxis. Next, we discuss the functional consequences of phenotypic diversity for the chemosensing and chemotactic performance of single cells and populations. Finally, we discuss mechanisms that modulate the amount of phenotypic diversity in chemosensory parameters in response to changes in the environment.


Subject(s)
Chemotactic Factors/metabolism , Chemotaxis/physiology , Animals , Bacteria/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Chemotactic Factors/genetics , Chemotaxis/genetics , Humans , Signal Transduction/genetics , Signal Transduction/physiology
7.
Genes Genet Syst ; 92(4): 197-203, 2018 Feb 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28674276

ABSTRACT

The brown hagfish (Eptatretus atami) is one of several known hagfish species occurring in Japanese coastal waters. To date, there has been no research studying genetic polymorphisms in the species. In the present study, we analyzed differences in nucleotide sequences between two populations: one from Suruga Bay on the Pacific coast of Honshu, Japan, and the other from the Sea of Japan, off Akita on the northwest coast of Honshu. We sequenced part of the cytochrome oxidase subunit 1 gene (COX1) from the mitochondrial genome, and three G protein-coupled receptor genes from the nuclear genome. Phylogenetic networks of all four genes showed divergence between the two populations. Further, comparison of the COX1 data using a phylogenetic tree for a range of hagfish species indicated clear differences between the populations, suggesting that they differ at the species level. The numbers of their teeth, in particular of fused cusps (anterior/posterior multicusps), also supported these findings. Individuals of the Suruga Bay population had 3/3 fused cusps, as described for E. atami, whereas individuals of the Akita population had 3/2 fused cusps. These results suggest that the brown hagfish from the Sea of Japan, off the northwest coast of Honshu, is a distinct species from E. atami.


Subject(s)
Cytochromes c1/genetics , Hagfishes/genetics , Animals , Base Sequence/genetics , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , Genome/genetics , Japan , Phylogeny
8.
Elife ; 62017 12 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29231170

ABSTRACT

We present in vivo single-cell FRET measurements in the Escherichia coli chemotaxis system that reveal pervasive signaling variability, both across cells in isogenic populations and within individual cells over time. We quantify cell-to-cell variability of adaptation, ligand response, as well as steady-state output level, and analyze the role of network design in shaping this diversity from gene expression noise. In the absence of changes in gene expression, we find that single cells demonstrate strong temporal fluctuations. We provide evidence that such signaling noise can arise from at least two sources: (i) stochastic activities of adaptation enzymes, and (ii) receptor-kinase dynamics in the absence of adaptation. We demonstrate that under certain conditions, (ii) can generate giant fluctuations that drive signaling activity of the entire cell into a stochastic two-state switching regime. Our findings underscore the importance of molecular noise, arising not only in gene expression but also in protein networks.


Subject(s)
Biological Variation, Population , Chemotaxis , Escherichia coli/physiology , Protein Kinases/metabolism , Receptors, Cell Surface/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Escherichia coli/enzymology , Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer , Phosphorylation , Protein Processing, Post-Translational , Single-Cell Analysis
9.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 114(21): E4149-E4157, 2017 05 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28495969

ABSTRACT

Cell-cell signaling is subject to variability in the extracellular volume, cell number, and dilution that potentially increase uncertainty in the absolute concentrations of the extracellular signaling molecules. To direct cell aggregation, the social amoebae Dictyostelium discoideum collectively give rise to oscillations and waves of cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP) under a wide range of cell density. To date, the systems-level mechanism underlying the robustness is unclear. By using quantitative live-cell imaging, here we show that the magnitude of the cAMP relay response of individual cells is determined by fold change in the extracellular cAMP concentrations. The range of cell density and exogenous cAMP concentrations that support oscillations at the population level agrees well with conditions that support a large fold-change-dependent response at the single-cell level. Mathematical analysis suggests that invariance of the oscillations to density transformation is a natural outcome of combining secrete-and-sense systems with a fold-change detection mechanism.


Subject(s)
Cyclic AMP/metabolism , Dictyostelium/physiology , Paracrine Communication
10.
PLoS One ; 11(10): e0164674, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27792738

ABSTRACT

Eukaryotic cells respond to a chemoattractant gradient by forming intracellular gradients of signaling molecules that reflect the extracellular chemical gradient-an ability called directional sensing. Quantitative experiments have revealed two characteristic input-output relations of the system: First, in a static chemoattractant gradient, the shapes of the intracellular gradients of the signaling molecules are determined by the relative steepness, rather than the absolute concentration, of the chemoattractant gradient along the cell body. Second, upon a spatially homogeneous temporal increase in the input stimulus, the intracellular signaling molecules are transiently activated such that the response magnitudes are dependent on fold changes of the stimulus, not on absolute levels. However, the underlying mechanism that endows the system with these response properties remains elusive. Here, by adopting a widely used modeling framework of directional sensing, local excitation and global inhibition (LEGI), we propose a hypothesis that the two rescaling behaviors stem from a single design principle, namely, invariance of the governing equations to a scale transformation of the input level. Analyses of the LEGI-based model reveal that the invariance can be divided into two parts, each of which is responsible for the respective response properties. Our hypothesis leads to an experimentally testable prediction that a system with the invariance detects relative steepness even in dynamic gradient stimuli as well as in static gradients. Furthermore, we show that the relation between the response properties and the scale invariance is general in that it can be implemented by models with different network topologies.


Subject(s)
Chemotaxis/physiology , Eukaryotic Cells/physiology , Chemotactic Factors/physiology , Feedback , Models, Biological , Receptors, Formyl Peptide/physiology , Spatio-Temporal Analysis
11.
Dev Growth Differ ; 53(4): 503-17, 2011 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21585355

ABSTRACT

From hormonal secretion to gene expression, multicellular dynamics are rich in oscillatory regulation. When organized in space and time, periodic cell-cell signaling can give rise to long-range coordination of gene expression and cell movement in tissues. Lack of synchrony of the oscillations on the other hand can serve as a source of initial divergence of cell fate in stem cells. How properties of individual cells can account for collective rhythmic behaviors at the tissue level remains elusive in most cases. Recently, studies in chemical reactions, synthetic gene circuits, yeast and social amoeba Dictyostelium have greatly enhanced our view of collective oscillations in cell populations. From these relatively simple systems, a unified view of how excitable and oscillatory regulations could be tuned and coupled to give rise to tissue-level oscillations is emerging. The review focuses on recent progress in cyclic adenosine monophosphate oscillations in Dictyostelium and highlights similarities and differences with other systems. We will see that the autonomy of single-cell level oscillations and different ways in which cells are coupled influence how group-level information can be encoded in collective oscillations.


Subject(s)
Dictyostelium/cytology , Cells , Cyclic AMP/metabolism , Dictyostelium/metabolism
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