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      What is the benefit to Escherichia coli of having multiple toxin-antitoxin systems in its genome?

      Journal of Bacteriology
      Acids, pharmacology, Adaptation, Physiological, Amino Acids, metabolism, Anti-Bacterial Agents, Apoptosis, Bacterial Toxins, genetics, toxicity, Colony Count, Microbial, DNA-Binding Proteins, physiology, Endoribonucleases, Escherichia coli, growth & development, Escherichia coli Proteins, Gene Deletion, Microbial Viability, Rifampin

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          Abstract

          The Escherichia coli K-12 chromosome encodes at least five proteic toxin-antitoxin (TA) systems. The mazEF and relBE systems have been extensively characterized and were proposed to be general stress response modules. On one hand, mazEF was proposed to act as a programmed cell death system that is triggered by a variety of stresses. On the other hand, relBE and mazEF were proposed to serve as growth modulators that induce a dormancy state during amino acid starvation. These conflicting hypotheses led us to test a possible synergetic effect of the five characterized E. coli TA systems on stress response. We compared the behavior of a wild-type strain and its derivative devoid of the five TA systems under various stress conditions. We were unable to detect TA-dependent programmed cell death under any of these conditions, even under conditions previously reported to induce it. Thus, our results rule out the programmed-cell-death hypothesis. Moreover, the presence of the five TA systems advantaged neither recovery from the different stresses nor cell growth under nutrient-limited conditions in competition experiments. This casts a doubt on whether TA systems significantly influence bacterial fitness and competitiveness during non-steady-state growth conditions.

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