Fig 1.
Simplified mechanisms of inducer uptake and regulation of target gene expression in common E. coli expression systems.
(A) Lac based gene expression via natural (lactose, galactose) or synthetic (TMG, IPTG) inducers. Uptake basically occurs through GalP (mainly galactose) or LacY (all inducers) transport proteins and by passive diffusion (* only synthetic inducers TMG and IPTG). Inducer binding leads to the release of the LacI repressor from the Plac promoter and thus induces gene expression. (B) Arabinose inducible gene expression upon active uptake via AraE and AraFGH transport proteins. In the presence of arabinose AraC positively regulates PBAD promoter activity, whereas in the absence of arabinose AraC tightly represses target gene expression. (C) Pm/XylS regulated gene expression driven by benzoates that are imported via passive diffusion and initiate the XylS regulator-dependent activation of Pm promoter based expression. Abbreviations: galP: galactose permease gene; lacI: lac repressor gene; lacZYA: lactose metabolization and uptake genes; araFGH: arabinose transporter genes; araE: arabinose transporter genes; araC: ara regulator gene; araBAD: arabinose metabolization genes; xylS: xyl regulator gene; tolX-H: toluene degradation operon.
Table 1.
E. coli expression systems characterized in this study.
Fig 2.
Microfluidic single-cell cultivation experiments.
A) Spatiotemporal microfluidic single-cell analysis of isogenic populations enables well-defined environmental conditions (environmental homogeneity) within growth chambers due to constant laminar media flow through nutrient supply channels. B) Exact evaluation of expression systems response, growth behavior and expression phenotype to expose phenotypic heterogeneity (grey box) of analyzed expression systems.
Fig 3.
System responsiveness and growth analysis of characterized E. coli expression systems.
A) Responsiveness was calculated using the initial linear slope of the averaged single-cell fluorescence increase in the first 60 min of cultivation. B) For the correlation between cellular growth and the level of induction, growth rates were calculated for at least 10 populations of microfluidic expression cultures without inducer (light grey), as well as with intermediate (grey) and high inducer concentrations (dark grey). Mean and standard deviations derive from 10 individual colonies. Inductors are labeled by asterisks (*). Double asterisks (**) indicate that no calculation was possible.
Table 2.
System responsiveness, growth interference, basal expression and dynamic range of different E. coli expression systems.
Values were calculated using fluorescence values obtained during microfluidic cultivation of at least 10 microcolonies. All shown data were obtained from highest values (see Fig 3 and S2 Fig for details and respective maxima).
Fig 4.
Box plot analysis depicting cell-to-cell variations in gene expression for different optimally induced E. coli expression systems.
Cell-to-cell fluorescence distributions of optimally induced expression systems are depicted with the total mean (dotted red line) and the spread interval (25% of mean, grey box) for ten individual microcolonies evaluated at the end of each experiment (end point criteria: cultivation chambers fully filled with cells or μmax ~ 0). Exact inducer concentrations for optimal induction were 0.1 mM IPTG (for each system), 1 mM galactose, 1 mM arabinose, 0.1 mM m-toluic acid and 1.5 mM salicylic acid. For each individual colony, medians (bold red line) indicate values above which 50% of cells are located, blue boxes indicate interval into which 50% of fluorescence values fall. Top or bottom of the box show areas, where 25% of cells are located above or below, respectively. Antenna indicate the 1.5-fold interquartile distance (IQR, 1 IQR = box height) or the last data point detected inside the 1.5-fold IQR. Outliers outside of the 1.5-fold IQR were marked as crosses.
Fig 5.
Expression heterogeneity analysis of different E. coli expression systems during microfluidic cultivation for intermediate (grey) and high inducer concentrations (black).
CVs for ten individual colonies (open circles) are plotted together with the respective overall mean (bold dash) and the corresponding standard deviation. The grey dotted line indicates the threshold for expression heterogeneity (CV > 25%) above which colonies are considered as heterogeneous.
Fig 6.
Rare cell-to-cell variation phenomena selected from conducted microfluidic analyses.
(A) Filamentous cells that grow but do not divide. (B) Formation of dark spots indicating aggregates in highly producing cells. (C) Dormant cells, which are significantly delayed or irresponsive in growth and expression. (D) Highly producing cells in an otherwise sparely producing population. (E) Overgrowth of slowly—dividing producer cells by rapidly growing non-producers. (F) Cell lysis of stressed overproducer cells or even rapidly growing non-producer cells. Red arrows indicate cells exhibiting the respective phenomena.
Table 3.
Summary of system specifications of E. coli expression systems during microfluidic cultivation.