Title of article
The Bacterial Cytoplasm Has Glass-like Properties and Is Fluidized by Metabolic Activity
Author/Authors
Bradley R. Parry، نويسنده , , Ivan V. Surovtsev، نويسنده , , Matthew T. Cabeen، نويسنده , , Corey S. O’Hern، نويسنده , , Eric R. Dufresne، نويسنده , , Christine Jacobs-Wagner، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
12
From page
183
To page
194
Abstract
The physical nature of the bacterial cytoplasm is poorly understood even though it determines cytoplasmic dynamics and hence cellular physiology and behavior. Through single-particle tracking of protein filaments, plasmids, storage granules, and foreign particles of different sizes, we find that the bacterial cytoplasm displays properties that are characteristic of glass-forming liquids and changes from liquid-like to solid-like in a component size-dependent fashion. As a result, the motion of cytoplasmic components becomes disproportionally constrained with increasing size. Remarkably, cellular metabolism fluidizes the cytoplasm, allowing larger components to escape their local environment and explore larger regions of the cytoplasm. Consequently, cytoplasmic fluidity and dynamics dramatically change as cells shift between metabolically active and dormant states in response to fluctuating environments. Our findings provide insight into bacterial dormancy and have broad implications to our understanding of bacterial physiology, as the glassy behavior of the cytoplasm impacts all intracellular processes involving large components.
Journal title
CELL
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
CELL
Record number
1022074
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