» Articles » PMID: 10471695

Mutational Adaptation of Escherichia Coli to Glucose Limitation Involves Distinct Evolutionary Pathways in Aerobic and Oxygen-limited Environments

Overview
Journal Genetics
Specialty Genetics
Date 1999 Sep 3
PMID 10471695
Citations 18
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Mutational adaptations leading to improved glucose transport were followed with Escherichia coli K-12 growing in glucose-limited continuous cultures. When populations were oxygen limited as well as glucose limited, all bacteria within 280 generations contained mutations in a single codon of the ptsG gene. V12F and V12G replacements in the enzyme IIBC(Glc) component of the glucose phosphotransferase system were responsible for improved transport. In stark contrast, ptsG mutations were uncommon in fully aerobic glucose-limited cultures, in which polygenic mutations in mgl, mlc, and malT (regulating an alternate high-affinity Mgl/LamB uptake pathway) spread through the adapted population. Hence the same organism adapted to the same selection (glucose limitation) by different evolutionary pathways depending on a secondary environmental factor. The clonal diversity in the adapted populations was also significantly different. The PtsG V12F substitution under O(2) limitation contributed to a universal "winner clone" whereas polygenic, multiallelic changes led to considerable polymorphism in aerobic cultures. Why the difference in adaptive outcomes? E. coli physiology prevented scavenging by the LamB/Mgl system under O(2) limitation; hence, ptsG mutations provided the only adaptive pathway. But ptsG mutations in aerobic cultures are overtaken by mgl, mlc, and malT adaptations with better glucose-scavenging ability. Indeed, when an mglA::Tn10 mutant with an inactivated Mgl/LamB pathway was introduced into two independent aerobic chemostats, adaptation of the Mgl(-) strain involved the identical ptsG mutation found under O(2)-limited conditions with wild-type or Mgl(-) bacteria.

Citing Articles

Evolutionary dynamics and structural consequences of de novo beneficial mutations and mutant lineages arising in a constant environment.

Kinnersley M, Schwartz K, Yang D, Sherlock G, Rosenzweig F BMC Biol. 2021; 19(1):20.

PMID: 33541358 PMC: 7863352. DOI: 10.1186/s12915-021-00954-0.


A shifting mutational landscape in 6 nutritional states: Stress-induced mutagenesis as a series of distinct stress input-mutation output relationships.

Maharjan R, Ferenci T PLoS Biol. 2017; 15(6):e2001477.

PMID: 28594817 PMC: 5464527. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.2001477.


Dynamics and genetic diversification of during experimental adaptation to an anaerobic environment.

Finn T, Shewaramani S, Leahy S, Janssen P, Moon C PeerJ. 2017; 5:e3244.

PMID: 28480139 PMC: 5419217. DOI: 10.7717/peerj.3244.


The functional basis of adaptive evolution in chemostats.

Gresham D, Hong J FEMS Microbiol Rev. 2014; 39(1):2-16.

PMID: 25098268 PMC: 4391987. DOI: 10.1111/1574-6976.12082.


Adaptive laboratory evolution -- principles and applications for biotechnology.

Dragosits M, Mattanovich D Microb Cell Fact. 2013; 12:64.

PMID: 23815749 PMC: 3716822. DOI: 10.1186/1475-2859-12-64.


References
1.
Notley-McRobb L, Ferenci T . The generation of multiple co-existing mal-regulatory mutations through polygenic evolution in glucose-limited populations of Escherichia coli. Environ Microbiol. 2001; 1(1):45-52. DOI: 10.1046/j.1462-2920.1999.00003.x. View

2.
Ferenci T . Regulation by nutrient limitation. Curr Opin Microbiol. 1999; 2(2):208-13. DOI: 10.1016/S1369-5274(99)80036-8. View

3.
Curtis S, Epstein W . Phosphorylation of D-glucose in Escherichia coli mutants defective in glucosephosphotransferase, mannosephosphotransferase, and glucokinase. J Bacteriol. 1975; 122(3):1189-99. PMC: 246176. DOI: 10.1128/jb.122.3.1189-1199.1975. View

4.
Hansen S, Hubbell S . Single-nutrient microbial competition: qualitative agreement between experimental and theoretically forecast outcomes. Science. 1980; 207(4438):1491-3. DOI: 10.1126/science.6767274. View

5.
Dykhuizen D, Hartl D . Selection in chemostats. Microbiol Rev. 1983; 47(2):150-68. PMC: 281569. DOI: 10.1128/mr.47.2.150-168.1983. View