Quantifying microbial robustness in dynamic environments using microfluidic single-cell cultivation
Journal article, 2024

BACKGROUND: Microorganisms must respond to changes in their environment. Analysing the robustness of functions (i.e. performance stability) to such dynamic perturbations is of great interest in both laboratory and industrial settings. Recently, a quantification method capable of assessing the robustness of various functions, such as specific growth rate or product yield, across different conditions, time frames, and populations has been developed for microorganisms grown in a 96-well plate. In micro-titer-plates, environmental change is slow and undefined. Dynamic microfluidic single-cell cultivation (dMSCC) enables the precise maintenance and manipulation of microenvironments, while tracking single cells over time using live-cell imaging. Here, we combined dMSCC and a robustness quantification method to a pipeline for assessing performance stability to changes occurring within seconds or minutes.
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

More information

Latest update

8/7/2024 9