Macromolecular crowding decreases after an osmotic upshift.
To determine the crowding during adaptation to an osmotic upshift, we added 300 mM NaCl to exponentially growing
E. coli BL21(DE3) cells and allowed the cells to adapt to the increased medium osmolarity. To monitor the macromolecular crowding, we expressed the crGE probe under leaky expression of the T7 promoter, which prevents maturation artifacts, as we described previously (
23). To compare our results with literature data, we performed the experiments in morpholinepropanesulfonic (MOPS)-glucose medium (
2,
4,
18). We find that under these conditions, the osmotic upshift initially decreases the optical density at 600 nm (OD
600) of the cell culture, which slowly recovers to preupshift levels over about an hour. After this, the cultures maintain a steady growth rate throughout the experiments (
Fig. 1A).
We took samples from the main culture for analysis by confocal fluorescence microscopy, excited the crGE probe at 405 nm, and determined the emission between 450 and 505 nm for mCerulean3 and between 505 and 795 nm for the FRET channel, as described previously (
19). Before the upshift, the FRET/mCerulean3 ratio is a mean ± standard error of the mean (SEM) of 1.06 ± 0.009 (
n = 98; SD = 0.07), which immediately increases to a mean ± SEM of 1.12 ± 0.01 (
n = 98) upon the addition of 300 mM NaCl (
Fig. 1B). These FRET/mCerulean3 ratios are equivalent to 21% (wt/wt) and 30% (wt/wt) Ficoll, respectively (
19). The FRET/mCerulean3 ratio follows the OD
600 by returning to the preupshift level within 1 h. After this, the FRET/mCerulean3 ratio decreases further to a mean ± SEM of 1.00 ± 0.006 (
n = 90) over an additional 1 to 2 h, where it remains for at least 23 h. This FRET/mCerulean3 ratio is equivalent to 13% (wt/wt) Ficoll (
19). We maintain the cells in the exponential phase of growth by continuously refreshing the medium. The observations are similar for the crG18 sensor that contains a different linker (see Fig. S1 in the supplemental material) (
22). We find that the addition of 100 mM NaCl does not lead to significant changes, while the addition of 500 mM NaCl provides a decrease similar to that with 300 mM NaCl (Fig. S2). This apparent threshold coincides with the occurrence of membrane invaginations when 300 and 500 mM NaCl are added, which do not occur with 100 mM NaCl (see also references
2 and
24).
To confirm that the ratiometric FRET reports genuine changes in excluded volume, rather than, e.g., binding of specific molecules to the sensors, we performed a series of control experiments. We investigated the influence of cell lysate on purified sensor (Fig. S3). We lysed
E. coli strains with or without 300 mM NaCl and did not find an effect of the cell-free lysate of 7 mg of total protein/ml on purified crG18. Hence, cytoplasmic macromolecules do not specifically interact with the sensors. The same applies for small molecules (metabolites and osmolytes) that are abundant in
E. coli (
19,
22,
25). To confirm that the probes are not truncated in osmotically stressed cells, we performed SDS-PAGE analysis. The gels show intact probes in control and osmotically stressed cells (Fig. S4). To assess whether the mCitrine fluorescence is not quenched by acidification of the cells during adaptation, we excited the mCitrine directly at 488 nm, and we did not find a decrease in intensity (Fig. S5). To show that the ratiometric FRET signal is independent of the maturation of the fluorescent proteins (
23), we exchanged the mCerulean3 with the faster-maturing mTurquoise2 (crTC2) and obtained a qualitatively similar readout (Fig. S6). Also, changing the acceptor to cpmVenus (crcpGE) did not lead to a different result, excluding effects specific to the fluorescent proteins.
Next, we benchmarked the diffusion of the probes against GFP under conditions of osmotic stress and adaptation by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) (
Fig. 1E). The median diffusion coefficient decreases from 5.6 (±1.6 [standard deviation]) μm
2/s to 1.6 (±1.3) μm
2/s and subsequently increases 4 h after the addition of NaCl to 4.2 (±0.3) μm
2/s. The changes in diffusion do not reflect the FRET of the sensor precisely, likely because factors such as immobile barriers influence diffusion differently (
26). These diffusion coefficients compare to 14.1 (±3.8), 1.7 (±1.1), and 10.3 (±3.1) μm
2/s, respectively, for the diffusion of GFP (
4). The last data value was obtained at 1.02 osM, while our osmolarity cumulates to 0.88 osM (the osmolarity of MOPS medium plus 300 mM NaCl). The difference in diffusion coefficients of crGE and GFP corresponds with the differences in sizes, but, importantly, the relative changes in mobility indicate that they probe similar biochemical organizations of the cytoplasm.
Macromolecular crowding relates to cell length until cells divide.
Macromolecular crowding should relate to the volume of a cell when the number of inert biomacromolecules is constant. To investigate whether the decrease in crowding indeed relates to volume changes and cell growth, we determined the cell length and volume during adaptation. To estimate the volume of the cells, we performed photoactivated localization microscopy (PALM) measurements using the inner membrane protein LacY fused to YPet. We find that the volume decreases by 30% immediately after adding 300 mM NaCl (
Fig. 1F), while 3 h after the osmotic upshift, the volume recovered to ∼1.8 fl, which is 82% of the value before the upshift. When measuring the length of the cells from brightfield images by confocal microscopy (
Fig. 1C), we find that cells immediately become shorter by 20% upon addition of 300 mM NaCl, and the length returns to the value before the osmotic upshift after 30 min. After 60 to 90 min, the average cell length starts to increase. Afterwards, when most cells divide (doubling time of 2 h), apparently in a synchronized manner, the average cell length decreases. After this, the average length remains short in the adapted cells. The decrease in length is more pronounced than the decrease in volume, which implies that the adapted cells have an increased diameter. Yet, the overall trend is similar for both cell length and volume. We find that the crowding relates reciprocally with cell length and cell volume (
Fig. 1D). After ∼2 h, which coincides with the moment the cells divide, the relationship between crowding and cell volume no longer holds. We find these trends for both the crGE and the crG18 (Fig. S1). Hence, the results indicate that the crowding, as anticipated, is proportional to the cell volume after the osmotic upshift, but the relationship changes when cells adapt to the osmotic stress.
Elongation or division is not needed to change crowding.
To assess whether cell elongation or division is strictly correlated with crowding during adaptation to osmotic stress, we studied individual cells in microfluidics devices. This allows comparison of cells that adapt to those that do not, and we can dissect whether or not cell division influences the levels of crowding.
E. coli cells growing in 0.1× MOPS-glucose medium (supplemented with 160 mM NaCl) in microfluidic devices can be analyzed for at least 6 h (Fig. S7). We observed less fluctuation in apparent crowding when cells grew in 0.1× MOPS-glucose than when they grew in undiluted MOPS-glucose medium, a finding for which we do not have an explanation. Exogenous MOPS accumulates in
E. coli (
27) and may disturb its physiology. We found that the growth rates in 0.1× MOPS-glucose and MOPS-glucose medium are similar in liquid culture, ∼0.5 h
−1. Hence, for all the experiments in the microfluidic chamber, we incubated the cells in 0.1× MOPS-glucose medium supplemented with 160 mM NaCl to obtain the same osmolarity as MOPS-glucose medium.
We incubated the cells in the microfluidic chamber for 2 h, after which we replaced the medium with 0.1× MOPS-glucose with 460 mM NaCl (hence, 300 mM extra). To confirm that crowding changes are independent of the type of crowding sensor, we compared the FRET signals of crGE, crE6G2, and crG18 during the osmotic upshift. We find a similar decrease in ratiometric FRET as observed in the experiments in batch culture. We further applied an osmotic upshift with sorbitol, showing a response similar to that with equiosmolar amounts of sodium chloride (Fig. S8). We counted the cells and noted that the cell number increased steadily until the osmotic upshift, after which the osmotic stress reduced the increase temporally (Fig. S9).
We previously found that of the three probes, crE6G2 was most sensitive to changes in macromolecular crowding (
22). Single-cell analyses provide a significant amount of noise (
Fig. 2A and
C), yet for most cells, the trend in the FRET/mCerulean3 ratio could clearly be distinguished with crE6G2, allowing a comparison of crowding with cell length and division time (
Fig. 2B). The single cells showed a transient decrease in length in the first 5 min after osmotic upshift, which coincides with the presence of membrane invaginations. After 5 to 10 min, the cells started to elongate again. Upon the addition of 300 mM NaCl, the shape of the FRET/mCerulean3 response of individual cells is similar to that of ensemble measurements. Although the single-cell FRET/mCerulean3 data are noisy, we infer that cell division is not strictly correlated with the macromolecular crowding, in that cell division appears to be rather stochastic and unrelated to the FRET/mCerulean3 curve, which is similar for most of the cells. Furthermore, when we compiled data of cells that grew and compared them to data of those that did not grow, we did not observe a significant difference in crowding levels (
Fig. 2D). In both cases, we found the decrease to be significant (
P < 0.05, Student’s
t test). Hence, elongation and division do not necessarily drive the decrease in crowding upon adaptation to 300 mM NaCl, but they coincide with the crowding changes on the population level.
Energy decoupling also decreases crowding.
Next, we determined the crowding in cells that were deprived of energy by using a protonophore [carbonyl cyanide-4-(trifluoromethoxy)phenylhydrazone (FCCP)] to dissipate the electrochemical proton gradient and thereby deplete the cells of ATP. Energy-depleted
E. coli cells undergo a transition in their internal organization that hampers the diffusion of 100-nm but not 10-nm particles (
1). Our probes are in the 10-nm size range, that is, our probes behave as a disordered protein with a distance between the centers of the fluorescent proteins of ∼5 to 10 nm. Therefore, if crowding would be the only factor influencing diffusion, 10-nm particles should not experience a change in crowding because their diffusion does not change. If, on the other hand, native biomacromolecules are assembled into larger structures, e.g., resulting in a transition of the cytoplasm from a fluid into a more solid-like “colloidal glassy” state (
1,
28), an inert 10-nm particle could experience less crowding. Such a state could be enhanced by the depletion of ATP, because ATP has been implicated as biological hydrotrope to enhance the solubility of proteins (
29).
Because the effectiveness of protonophores depends on various factors (e.g., membrane concentration,
E. coli strain, carbon source, and medium pH), we first assessed the FCCP concentration required to halt cell growth and found that 100 μM was necessary under our experimental conditions (
Fig. 3A). Next, we applied FCCP to exponentially growing
E. coli cells that contained the crGE probe and measured the FRET/mCerulean3 ratios (
Fig. 3B). The measurements were performed within 2 min after the addition of FCCP. We find that the FRET/mCerulean3 ratio drops upon the addition of FCCP and reaches values comparable to those of cells adapted to 300 mM NaCl. We thus conclude that the effective excluded volumes probed by crGE of 300 mM NaCl-adapted and energy-depleted cells are similar.