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Quantitative morphological analysis of elucidates complex dose-dependent nucleoid condensation during recovery from ionizing radiation. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on an extremophile that maintains a highly organized nucleoid, which may help it tolerate ionizing radiation (IR).
  • A new high-throughput method combining confocal microscopy and computational modeling is introduced to quantitatively analyze nucleoid and cell geometry under IR stress.
  • Results show that IR exposure leads to nucleoid compaction, alters cell morphology, and suggests potential roles for nucleoid-associated proteins in regulating these changes.

Article Abstract

The extremophile maintains a highly organized and condensed nucleoid as its default state, possibly contributing to its high tolerance to ionizing radiation (IR). Previous studies of the nucleoid were limited by reliance on manual image annotation and qualitative metrics. Here, we introduce a high-throughput approach to quantify the geometric properties of cells and nucleoids using confocal microscopy, digital reconstructions of cells, and computational modeling. We utilize this novel approach to investigate the dynamic process of nucleoid condensation in response to IR stress. Our quantitative analysis reveals that at the population level, exposure to IR induced nucleoid compaction and decreased the size of cells. Morphological analysis and clustering identified six distinct sub-populations across all tested experimental conditions. Results indicate that exposure to IR induced fractional redistributions of cells across sub-populations to exhibit morphologies associated with greater nucleoid condensation and decreased the abundance of sub-populations associated with cell division. Nucleoid-associated proteins (NAPs) may link nucleoid compaction and stress tolerance, but their roles in regulating compaction in are unknown. Imaging of genomic mutants of known and suspected NAPs that contribute to nucleoid condensation found that deletion of nucleic acid-binding proteins, not previously described as NAPs, can remodel the nucleoid by driving condensation or decondensation in the absence of stress and that IR increased the abundance of these morphological states. Thus, our integrated analysis introduces a new methodology for studying environmental influences on bacterial nucleoids and provides an opportunity to further investigate potential regulators of nucleoid condensation.IMPORTANCE, an extremophile known for its stress tolerance, constitutively maintains a highly condensed nucleoid. Qualitative studies have described nucleoid behavior under a variety of conditions. However, a lack of quantitative data regarding nucleoid organization and dynamics has limited our understanding of the regulatory mechanisms controlling nucleoid organization in . Here, we introduce a quantitative approach that enables high-throughput quantitative measurements of subcellular spatial characteristics in bacterial cells. Applying this to wild-type or single-protein-deficient populations of subjected to ionizing radiation, we identified significant stress-responsive changes in cell shape, nucleoid organization, and morphology. These findings highlight this methodology's adaptability and capacity for quantitatively analyzing the cellular response to stressors for screening cellular proteins involved in bacterial nucleoid organization.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11323932PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/aem.00108-24DOI Listing

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