Bacterial senescence: stasis results in increased and differential oxidation of cytoplasmic proteins leading to developmental induction of the heat shock regulon

  1. Sam Dukan and
  2. Thomas Nyström1,2,3
  1. 1Department of Microbiology, Lund University, Lund, Sweden; 2Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Göteborg University, 413 90 Göteborg, Sweden

Abstract

Aging, or senescence, is the progressive deterioration of every bodily function over time. A fundamental question that applies to all life forms, including growth-arrested bacteria, is why growing older by necessity causes organisms to grow more fragile. In this work, we demonstrate that the levels of oxidized proteins is correlated to the age of a stationary-phase Escherichia coli culture; both disulfide bridge formation of a cytoplasmic leader-less alkaline phosphatase and protein carbonyl levels increase during stasis. The stasis-induced increase in protein oxidation is enhanced in cells lacking the global regulators OxyR and ςs. Some proteins were found to be specifically susceptible to stasis-induced oxidation; notably several TCA cycle enzymes, glutamine synthetase, glutamate synthase, pyruvate kinase, DnaK, and H-NS. Evidence that oxidation of target proteins during stasis serves as the signal for stationary-phase, developmental, induction of the heat shock regulon is presented by demonstrating that this induction is mitigated by overproducing the superoxide dismutase SodA. In addition, cells lacking cytoplasmic superoxide dismutase activity exhibit superinduction of heat shock proteins. The possibility that oxidative sensitivity of TCA cycle enzymes serves as a feedback mechanism down-regulating toxic respiration is discussed.

Keywords

Footnotes

  • 3 Corresponding author.

  • E-MAIL Thomas.Nystrom{at}mikrbiol.lu.se; FAX 46 046 157839.

    • Received June 16, 1998.
    • Accepted September 2, 1998.
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