PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Adam Z. Rosenthal AU - Yutao Qi AU - Sahand Hormoz AU - Jin Park AU - Sophia Hsin-Jung Li AU - Michael Elowitz TI - Metabolic Interactions Between Dynamic Bacterial Subpopulations AID - 10.1101/208686 DP - 2017 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 208686 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/10/25/208686.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/10/25/208686.full AB - Within multi-species microbial communities, individual species are known to occupy distinct metabolic niches. By contrast, it has remained largely unclear whether and how metabolic specialization occurs within clonal bacterial populations. The possibility of such metabolic specialization in clonal populations raises several questions: Does specialization occur, and if it does, which metabolic processes are involved? How is specialization coordinated? How rapidly do cells switch between states? And finally, what functions might metabolic specialization provide? One potential function of metabolic specialization could be to manage overflow metabolites such as acetate, which presents a toxic challenge due to low pH, and protective pH-neutral overflow metabolites. Here we show that exponentially dividing Bacillus subtilis cultures divide into distinct interacting metabolic subpopulations including one population that produces acetate, and another population that differentially expresses metabolic genes for the production of acetoin, a pH-neutral storage molecule. These subpopulations grew at distinct rates, and cells switched dynamically between states, with acetate influencing the relative sizes of the different subpopulations. These results show that clonal populations can use metabolic specialization to control the environment through a process of dynamic, environmentally-sensitive state-switching.