Department of Biotechnology
inStem (Institute for Stem Cell Science and Regenerative Medicine)

Metabolic constraints drive self-organization of specialized cell groups.

Publication Type

Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Date of Publication

June 26, 2019

Journal

eLife

Volume/Issue

8

ISSN

2050-084X

How phenotypically distinct states in isogenic cell populations appear and stably co-exist remains unresolved. We find that within a mature, clonal yeast colony developing in low glucose, cells arrange into metabolically disparate cell groups. Using this system, we model and experimentally identify metabolic constraints sufficient to drive such self-assembly. Beginning in a uniformly gluconeogenic state, cells exhibiting a contrary, high pentose phosphate pathway activity state, spontaneously appear and proliferate, in a spatially constrained manner. Gluconeogenic cells in the colony produce and provide a resource, which we identify as trehalose. Above threshold concentrations of external trehalose, cells switch to the new metabolic state and proliferate. A self-organized system establishes, where cells in this new state are sustained by trehalose consumption, which thereby restrains other cells in the trehalose producing, gluconeogenic state. Our work suggests simple physico-chemical principles that determine how isogenic cells spontaneously self-organize into structured assemblies in complimentary, specialized states.

Alternate Journal

Elife

PubMed ID

31241462

PubMed Central ID

PMC6658198

Authors

Sriram Varahan
Adhish Walvekar
Vaibhhav Sinha
Sandeep Krishna
Sunil Laxman

Keywords

Models, Biological
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Trehalose