Environment-responsive individual cell growth behavior shapes stochastic and deterministic population establishment in ammonia-oxidizing bacteria

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Environment-responsive individual cell growth behavior shapes stochastic and deterministic population establishment in ammonia-oxidizing bacteria

Authors

Ikeda, S.; Fujitani, H.; Tsuneda, S.

Abstract

Many environmental bacteria do not readily grow under laboratory conditions and population establishment often occurs stochastically. Although the scout hypothesis has been proposed to explain stochastic population establishment in environmental bacteria, how stochastic population establishment is shaped by individual cell growth behaviors in environmental isolates remains unclear. In the present study, we focused on the ammonia-oxidizing bacterium Nitrosomonas sp. PY1 and showed that environmentally responsive individual cell growth behavior, incorporating time-dependent stochastic growth initiation, shapes both deterministic and stochastic population establishment dynamics. Using single-cell observation, we revealed that PY1 altered cell growth behavior in response to surrounding biomass production ({Delta}Vt). These{Delta} Vt-dependent changes in growth behavior were suppressed by the addition of its own cell-free supernatant (CFS), indicating the presence of a growth regulation mechanism via cell-cell communication. Replicate cultures under the same conditions showed that the population establishment of PY1 was stochastic, whereas the model strain Nitrosomonas europaea exhibited synchronized population establishment, consistent with previous reports. This stochasticity in PY1 was also eliminated by the addition of CFS. Finally, a simulation model based on{Delta} Vt-dependent cell growth behavior of PY1 successfully reproduced synchronized population establishment in the presence of CFS. By contrast, the stochastic population establishment observed in the absence of CFS was successfully reproduced by a model incorporating{Delta} Vt-independent growth initiation following a Weibull distribution. Such environmentally responsive changes in population establishment dynamics may contribute to the low isolation success of environmental bacteria and sudden blooms of the rare biosphere.

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