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In vivo kinetics of segregation and polar retention of MS2-GFP-RNA complexes in Escherichia coli.


ABSTRACT: The cytoplasm of Escherichia coli is a crowded, heterogeneous environment. From single cell live imaging, we investigated the spatial kinetics and heterogeneities of synthetic RNA-protein complexes. First, although their known tendency to accumulate at the cell poles does not appear to introduce asymmetries between older and newer cell poles within a cell lifetime, these emerge with cell divisions. This suggests strong polar retention of the complexes, which we verified in their history of positions and mean escape time from the poles. Next, we show that the polar retention relies on anisotropies in the displacement distribution in the region between midcell and poles, whereas the speed is homogeneous along the major cell axis. Afterward, we establish that these regions are at the border of the nucleoid and shift outward with cell growth, due to the nucleoid's replication. Overall, the spatiotemporal kinetics of the complexes, which is robust to suboptimal temperatures, suggests that nucleoid occlusion is a source of dynamic heterogeneities of macromolecules in E. coli that ultimately generate phenotypic differences between sister cells.

SUBMITTER: Gupta A 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4017294 | biostudies-literature | 2014 May

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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In vivo kinetics of segregation and polar retention of MS2-GFP-RNA complexes in Escherichia coli.

Gupta Abhishekh A   Lloyd-Price Jason J   Neeli-Venkata Ramakanth R   Oliveira Samuel M D SM   Ribeiro Andre S AS  

Biophysical journal 20140501 9


The cytoplasm of Escherichia coli is a crowded, heterogeneous environment. From single cell live imaging, we investigated the spatial kinetics and heterogeneities of synthetic RNA-protein complexes. First, although their known tendency to accumulate at the cell poles does not appear to introduce asymmetries between older and newer cell poles within a cell lifetime, these emerge with cell divisions. This suggests strong polar retention of the complexes, which we verified in their history of posit  ...[more]

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