Protein aggregates encode epigenetic memory of stressful encounters in individual Escherichia coli cells.

PLoS Biol

KU Leuven, Department of Microbial and Molecular Systems, Leuven, Belgium.

Published: August 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Protein misfolding and aggregation, typically seen as harmful, can actually provide certain bacteria with increased heat resistance after exposure to mild stressors like heat or antibiotics.
  • When the stress is removed, these protein aggregates (PAs) can be inherited asymmetrically by daughter cells for many generations, enhancing their ability to withstand future stress.
  • This study suggests that PAs may act as a form of long-term epigenetic memory, helping cells to develop resilience against various types of proteotoxic challenges by selectively enriching protective components in the descendants.

Article Abstract

Protein misfolding and aggregation are typically perceived as inevitable and detrimental processes tied to a stress- or age-associated decline in cellular proteostasis. A careful reassessment of this paradigm in the E. coli model bacterium revealed that the emergence of intracellular protein aggregates (PAs) was not related to cellular aging but closely linked to sublethal proteotoxic stresses such as exposure to heat, peroxide, and the antibiotic streptomycin. After removal of the proteotoxic stress and resumption of cellular proliferation, the polarly deposited PA was subjected to limited disaggregation and therefore became asymmetrically inherited for a large number of generations. Many generations after the original PA-inducing stress, the cells inheriting this ancestral PA displayed a significantly increased heat resistance compared to their isogenic, PA-free siblings. This PA-mediated inheritance of heat resistance could be reproduced with a conditionally expressed, intracellular PA consisting of an inert, aggregation-prone mutant protein, validating the role of PAs in increasing resistance and indicating that the resistance-conferring mechanism does not depend on the origin of the PA. Moreover, PAs were found to confer robustness to other proteotoxic stresses, as imposed by reactive oxygen species or streptomycin exposure, suggesting a broad protective effect. Our findings therefore reveal the potential of intracellular PAs to serve as long-term epigenetically inheritable and functional memory elements, physically referring to a previous cellular insult that occurred many generations ago and meanwhile improving robustness to a subsequent proteotoxic stress. The latter is presumably accomplished through the PA-mediated asymmetric inheritance of protein quality control components leading to their specific enrichment in PA-bearing cells.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6112618PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.2003853DOI Listing

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