The bio-physics of condensation of divalent cations into the bacterial wall has implications for growth of Gram-positive bacteria

Background: The anionic-polyelectrolyte nature of the wall of Gram-positive bacteria has long been suspected to be involved in homeostasis of essential cations and bacterial growth. A better understanding of the coupling between the biophysics and the biology of the wall is essential to understand s...

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Main Authors: Rauch, Cyril, Cherkaoui-Rbati, Mohammed, Egan, Sharon A., Leigh, James A.
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39194/
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author Rauch, Cyril
Cherkaoui-Rbati, Mohammed
Egan, Sharon A.
Leigh, James A.
author_facet Rauch, Cyril
Cherkaoui-Rbati, Mohammed
Egan, Sharon A.
Leigh, James A.
author_sort Rauch, Cyril
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Background: The anionic-polyelectrolyte nature of the wall of Gram-positive bacteria has long been suspected to be involved in homeostasis of essential cations and bacterial growth. A better understanding of the coupling between the biophysics and the biology of the wall is essential to understand some key features at play in ion-homeostasis in this living system. Methods: We consider the wall as a polyelectrolyte gel and balance the long-range electrostatic repulsion within this structure against the penalty entropy required to condense cations around wall polyelectrolytes. The resulting equations define how cations interact physically with the wall and the characteristic time required for a cation to leave the wall and enter into the bacterium to enable its usage for bacterial metabolism and growth. Results: The model was challenged against experimental data regarding growth of Gram-positive bacteria in the presence of varying concentration of divalent ions. The model explains qualitatively and quantitatively how divalent cations interact with the wall as well as how the biophysical properties of the wall impact on bacterial growth (in particular the initiation of bacterial growth). Conclusion: The interplay between polymer biophysics and the biology of Gram positive bacteria is defined for the first time as a new set of variables that contribute to the kinetics of bacterial growth. General significance: Providing an understanding of how bacteria capture essential metal cations in way that does not follow usual binding laws has implications when considering the control of such organisms and their ability to survive and grow in extreme environments.
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spelling nottingham-391942020-05-04T19:58:47Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39194/ The bio-physics of condensation of divalent cations into the bacterial wall has implications for growth of Gram-positive bacteria Rauch, Cyril Cherkaoui-Rbati, Mohammed Egan, Sharon A. Leigh, James A. Background: The anionic-polyelectrolyte nature of the wall of Gram-positive bacteria has long been suspected to be involved in homeostasis of essential cations and bacterial growth. A better understanding of the coupling between the biophysics and the biology of the wall is essential to understand some key features at play in ion-homeostasis in this living system. Methods: We consider the wall as a polyelectrolyte gel and balance the long-range electrostatic repulsion within this structure against the penalty entropy required to condense cations around wall polyelectrolytes. The resulting equations define how cations interact physically with the wall and the characteristic time required for a cation to leave the wall and enter into the bacterium to enable its usage for bacterial metabolism and growth. Results: The model was challenged against experimental data regarding growth of Gram-positive bacteria in the presence of varying concentration of divalent ions. The model explains qualitatively and quantitatively how divalent cations interact with the wall as well as how the biophysical properties of the wall impact on bacterial growth (in particular the initiation of bacterial growth). Conclusion: The interplay between polymer biophysics and the biology of Gram positive bacteria is defined for the first time as a new set of variables that contribute to the kinetics of bacterial growth. General significance: Providing an understanding of how bacteria capture essential metal cations in way that does not follow usual binding laws has implications when considering the control of such organisms and their ability to survive and grow in extreme environments. Elsevier 2017-02 Article PeerReviewed Rauch, Cyril, Cherkaoui-Rbati, Mohammed, Egan, Sharon A. and Leigh, James A. (2017) The bio-physics of condensation of divalent cations into the bacterial wall has implications for growth of Gram-positive bacteria. BBA - Biomembranes, 1859 (2). pp. 282-288. ISSN 0005-2736 Gram-positive bacteria; teichoic acid; cell wall; metal cations; polyelectrolytes; Manning’s Theory http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S000527361630387X doi:10.1016/j.bbamem.2016.12.002 doi:10.1016/j.bbamem.2016.12.002
spellingShingle Gram-positive bacteria; teichoic acid; cell wall; metal cations; polyelectrolytes; Manning’s Theory
Rauch, Cyril
Cherkaoui-Rbati, Mohammed
Egan, Sharon A.
Leigh, James A.
The bio-physics of condensation of divalent cations into the bacterial wall has implications for growth of Gram-positive bacteria
title The bio-physics of condensation of divalent cations into the bacterial wall has implications for growth of Gram-positive bacteria
title_full The bio-physics of condensation of divalent cations into the bacterial wall has implications for growth of Gram-positive bacteria
title_fullStr The bio-physics of condensation of divalent cations into the bacterial wall has implications for growth of Gram-positive bacteria
title_full_unstemmed The bio-physics of condensation of divalent cations into the bacterial wall has implications for growth of Gram-positive bacteria
title_short The bio-physics of condensation of divalent cations into the bacterial wall has implications for growth of Gram-positive bacteria
title_sort bio-physics of condensation of divalent cations into the bacterial wall has implications for growth of gram-positive bacteria
topic Gram-positive bacteria; teichoic acid; cell wall; metal cations; polyelectrolytes; Manning’s Theory
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39194/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39194/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/39194/