Noise-driven growth rate gain in clonal cellular populations

Mikihiro Hashimoto(Tokyo University of the Arts), Takashi Nozoe(Tokyo University of the Arts), Hidenori Nakaoka(Tokyo University of the Arts), Reiko Okura(Tokyo University of the Arts), Sayo Akiyoshi(Tokyo University of the Arts), Kunihiko Kaneko(Tokyo University of the Arts), Edo Kussell(New York University), Yuichi Wakamoto(Tokyo University of the Arts)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
March 7, 2016
Cited by 175Open Access
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Abstract

Cellular populations in both nature and the laboratory are composed of phenotypically heterogeneous individuals that compete with each other resulting in complex population dynamics. Predicting population growth characteristics based on knowledge of heterogeneous single-cell dynamics remains challenging. By observing groups of cells for hundreds of generations at single-cell resolution, we reveal that growth noise causes clonal populations of Escherichia coli to double faster than the mean doubling time of their constituent single cells across a broad set of balanced-growth conditions. We show that the population-level growth rate gain as well as age structures of populations and of cell lineages in competition are predictable. Furthermore, we theoretically reveal that the growth rate gain can be linked with the relative entropy of lineage generation time distributions. Unexpectedly, we find an empirical linear relation between the means and the variances of generation times across conditions, which provides a general constraint on maximal growth rates. Together, these results demonstrate a fundamental benefit of noise for population growth, and identify a growth law that sets a "speed limit" for proliferation.


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