Quantifying microbial robustness in dynamic environments using microfluidic single-cell cultivation
Journal article, 2024
RESULTS: Saccharomyces cerevisiae CEN.PK113-7D, harbouring a biosensor for intracellular ATP levels, was exposed to glucose feast-starvation cycles, with each condition lasting from 1.5 to 48 min over a 20 h period. A semi-automated image and data analysis pipeline was developed and applied to assess the performance and robustness of various functions at population, subpopulation, and single-cell resolution. We observed a decrease in specific growth rate but an increase in intracellular ATP levels with longer oscillation intervals. Cells subjected to 48 min oscillations exhibited the highest average ATP content, but the lowest stability over time and the highest heterogeneity within the population. C
ONCLUSION: The proposed pipeline enabled the investigation of function stability in dynamic environments, both over time and within populations. The strategy allows for parallelisation and automation, and is easily adaptable to new organisms, biosensors, cultivation conditions, and oscillation frequencies. Insights on the microbial response to changing environments will guide strain development and bioprocess optimisation.
Microfluidic single-cell cultivation
Dynamic environments
Population heterogeneity
Scale-down
Biosensors
Nutrient oscillation
Live-cell imaging
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Author
Luisa Blöbaum
Bielefeld University
Luca Torello Pianale
Chalmers, Life Sciences, Industrial Biotechnology
Lisbeth Olsson
Chalmers, Life Sciences, Industrial Biotechnology
Alexander Grünberger
Bielefeld University
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)
Microbial Cell Factories
14752859 (eISSN)
Vol. 23 1 44-Subject Categories
Analytical Chemistry
Bioenergy
Microbiology
DOI
10.1186/s12934-024-02318-z
PubMed
38336674