Correlation of Intracellular Trehalose Concentration with Desiccation Resistance of Soil Escherichia coli Populations
ABSTRACTNaturalized soilEscherichia colipopulations need to resist common soil desiccation stress in order to inhabit soil environments. In this study, four representative soilE. colistrains and one lab strain, MG1655, were tested for desiccation resistance via die-off experiments in sterile quartz sand under a potassium acetate-induced desiccation condition. The desiccation stress caused significantly lower die-off rates of the four soil strains (0.17 to 0.40 day−1) than that of MG1655 (0.85 day−1). Cellular responses, including extracellular polymeric substance (EPS) production, exogenous glycine betaine (GB) uptake, and intracellular compatible organic solute synthesis, were quantified and compared under the desiccation and hydrated control conditions. GB uptake appeared not to be a specific desiccation response, while EPS production showed considerable variability among theE. colistrains. AllE. colistrains produced more intracellular trehalose, proline, and glutamine under the desiccation condition than the hydrated control, and only the trehalose concentration exhibited a significant correlation with the desiccation-contributed die-off coefficients (Spearman's ρ = −1.0;P= 0.02).De novotrehalose synthesis was further determined for 15E. colistrains from both soil and nonsoil sources to determine its prevalence as a specific desiccation response. MostE. colistrains (14/15) synthesized significantly more trehalose under the desiccation condition, and the soilE. colistrains produced more trehalose (106.5 ± 44.9 μmol/mg of protein [mean ± standard deviation]) than the nonsoil reference strains (32.5 ± 10.5 μmol/mg of protein).