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GENES & DEVELOPMENT 19:3083-3094, 2005
©2005 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press; ISSN 0890-9369/ $5.00
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RESEARCH PAPER

Cell population heterogeneity during growth of Bacillus subtilis

Daniel B. Kearns1,2 and Richard Losick1,3

1 Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA; 2 Department of Biology, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana 47405, USA

We have discovered that cells of Bacillus subtilis at the mid-exponential phase of growth are a mixed population of two strikingly different cell types. One type is single swimming cells (or cell doublets) in which the transcription factor for motility, {sigma}D, is active ({sigma}D ON). The other type is long chains of sessile cells in which {sigma}D is inactive ({sigma}D OFF). The population is strongly biased toward {sigma}D-ON cells by the action of a novel regulatory protein called SwrA. SwrA stimulates the transcription of a large operon (the flagellum/chemotaxis operon), which includes the genes for {sigma}D and an activator of {sigma}D-directed gene expression, SwrB. Cell population heterogeneity could enable B. subtilis to exploit its present location through the production of sessile cells as well as to explore new environmental niches through the generation of nomadic cells.

[Keywords: Motility; bistability; SwrA; {sigma}D; swarming; flagella]

Received September 12, 2005; revised version accepted October 27, 2005.


Supplemental material is available at http://www.genesdev.org.

Article and publication are at http://www.genesdev.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gad.1373905.

3 Corresponding author.

E-MAIL losick{at}mcb.harvard.edu; FAX (617) 496-4642.


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