Author
Listed:
- Audrey M. Proenca
(University of California, San Diego
CAPES Foundation, Ministry of Education of Brazil)
- Camilla Ulla Rang
(University of California, San Diego)
- Christen Buetz
(University of California, San Diego)
- Chao Shi
(University of California, San Diego)
- Lin Chao
(University of California, San Diego)
Abstract
The physiological asymmetry between daughters of a mother bacterium is produced by the inheritance of either old poles, carrying non-genetic damage, or newly synthesized poles. However, as bacteria display long-term growth stability leading to physiological immortality, there is controversy on whether asymmetry corresponds to aging. Here we show that deterministic age structure landscapes emerge from physiologically immortal bacterial lineages. Through single-cell microscopy and microfluidic techniques, we demonstrate that aging and rejuvenating bacterial lineages reach two distinct states of growth equilibria. These equilibria display stabilizing properties, which we quantified according to the compensatory trajectories of continuous lineages throughout generations. Finally, we show that the physiological asymmetry between aging and rejuvenating lineages produces complex age structure landscapes, resulting in a deterministic phenotypic heterogeneity that is neither an artifact of starvation nor a product of extrinsic damage. These findings indicate that physiological immortality and cellular aging can both be manifested in single celled organisms.
Suggested Citation
Audrey M. Proenca & Camilla Ulla Rang & Christen Buetz & Chao Shi & Lin Chao, 2018.
"Age structure landscapes emerge from the equilibrium between aging and rejuvenation in bacterial populations,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 9(1), pages 1-11, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:9:y:2018:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-018-06154-9
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-06154-9
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