Positive feedback and noise activate the stringent response regulator Rel in mycobacteria
Kamakshi Sureka, Bhaswar Ghosh, Arunava Dasgupta, Joyoti Basu,, Manikuntala Kundu, Indrani Bose

TL;DR
This study reveals how positive feedback and stochastic gene expression create phenotypic heterogeneity in mycobacteria, with implications for persistence and stress response regulation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that rel expression heterogeneity arises from bistability driven by positive feedback and noise, advancing understanding of bacterial persistence mechanisms.
Findings
Rel expression is bimodal with low and high states.
Positive feedback and stochasticity drive phenotypic heterogeneity.
Hysteresis observed in rel expression in response to PPK1 levels.
Abstract
Phenotypic heterogeneity in an isogenic, microbial population enables a subset of the population to persist under stress. In mycobacteria, stresses like nutrient and oxygen deprivation activate the stress response pathway involving the two-component system MprAB and the sigma factor, SigE. SigE in turn activates the expression of the stringent response regulator, rel. The enzyme polyphosphate kinase 1 (PPK1) regulates this pathway by synthesizing polyphosphate required for the activation of MprB. The precise manner in which only a subpopulation of bacterial cells develops persistence, remains unknown. Rel is required for mycobacterial persistence. Here we show that the distribution of rel expression levels in a growing population of mycobacteria is bimodal with two distinct peaks corresponding to low (L) and high (H) expression states, and further establish that a positive feedback loop…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
