In Vivo water dynamics in Shewanella oneidensis bacteria at high pressure

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Foglia, Fabrizia
Hazael, Rachael
Meersman, Filip
Wilding, Martin C.
Sakai, Victoria García
Rogers, Sarah
Bove, Livia E.
Koza, Michael Marek
Moulin, Martine
Haertlein, Michael

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2045-2322

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Foglia F, Hazael R, Meersman F, Wilding MC, García Sakai V, Rogers S, Bove LE, Marek Koza M, Moulin M, Haertlein M, Forsyth VT and McMillan PF., In Vivo water dynamics in Shewanella oneidensis bacteria at high pressure, Scientific Reports, Volume 9, Article Number 8716

Abstract

Following observations of survival of microbes and other life forms in deep subsurface environments it is necessary to understand their biological functioning under high pressure conditions. Key aspects of biochemical reactions and transport processes within cells are determined by the intracellular water dynamics. We studied water diffusion and rotational relaxation in live Shewanella oneidensis bacteria at pressures up to 500 MPa using quasi-elastic neutron scattering (QENS). The intracellular diffusion exhibits a significantly greater slowdown (by −10–30%) and an increase in rotational relaxation times (+10–40%) compared with water dynamics in the aqueous solutions used to resuspend the bacterial samples. Those results indicate both a pressure-induced viscosity increase and slowdown in ionic/macromolecular transport properties within the cells affecting the rates of metabolic and other biological processes. Our new data support emerging models for intracellular organisation with nanoscale water channels threading between macromolecular regions within a dynamically organized structure rather than a homogenous gel-like cytoplasm.

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