Evolution in Long-Term Stationary-Phase Batch Culture: Emergence of Divergent Escherichia coli Lineages over 1,200 Days.

2021 
ABSTRACT In natural environments, bacteria survive conditions of starvation and stress. Long-term batch cultures are an excellent laboratory system to study adaptation during nutrient stress because cells can incubate for months to years without the addition of nutrients. During long-term batch culture, cells adapt to acquire energy from cellular detritus, creating a complex and dynamic environment for mutants of increased relative fitness to exploit. Here, we analyzed the genomes of 1,117 clones isolated from a single long-term batch culture incubated for 1,200 days. A total of 679 mutations included single nucleotide polymorphisms, indels, mobile genetic element movement, large deletions up to 64 kbp, and amplifications up to ∼500 kbp. During the 3.3-year incubation, two main lineages diverged, evolving continuously. At least twice, a previously fixed mutation reverted back to the wild-type allele, suggesting beneficial mutations may later become maladaptive due to the dynamic environment and changing selective pressures. Most of the mutated genes encode proteins involved in metabolism, transport, or transcriptional regulation. Clones from the two lineages are physiologically distinct, based on outgrowth in fresh medium and competition against the parental strain. Similar population dynamics and mutations in hfq, rpoS, paaX, lrp, sdhB, and dtpA were detected in three additional parallel populations sequenced through day 60, providing evidence for positive selection. These data provide new insight into the population structure and mutations that may be beneficial during periods of starvation in evolving bacterial communities. IMPORTANCE Bacteria have remarkable metabolic capabilities and adaptive plasticity, enabling them to survive in changing environments. In nature, bacteria spend a majority of their time in a state of slow growth or maintenance, scavenging nutrients for survival. Here, a population of Escherichia coli cells was incubated for 1,200 days in long-term batch culture, without the addition of new medium, requiring cells to continuously recycle nutrients. Whole-genome resequencing of cells from the evolving population identified two dominant subpopulations that coexisted while continuously acquiring and fixing new mutations. The population dynamics and alleles identified provide insight into adaptation to nutrient stress. Elucidating mechanisms that allow bacteria to adapt through cycles of feast and famine deepens our understanding of their survival mechanisms in nature.
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