Logo image
Persistence preserves phenotypic heterogeneity in non-genetic formaldehyde resistance in Escherichia coli
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Persistence preserves phenotypic heterogeneity in non-genetic formaldehyde resistance in Escherichia coli

Isaiah D Jordan, Tomislav Ticak, Jessica A Lee and Christopher J Marx
BMC research notes, Vol.19, 183
03/16/2026
PMID: 41840624

Abstract

Persistence Non-genetic variability Escherichia coli Formaldehyde Stress Response
Objectives Recently, it was discovered that Methylobacterium extorquens possesses a spectrum of phenotypic states conferring non-genetic resistance to formaldehyde. The non-genetic resistance allowed rapid growth on levels of formaldehyde which were lethal to the majority of the population. To investigate whether this is a common phenomenon, we tested the distantly related Escherichia coli for heterogeneity to formaldehyde stress during growth on glucose. Results Like M. extorquens, E. coli populations have a wide, reversible, continuous range of non-genetic resistance to formaldehyde. However, there were differences from what was found for M. extorquens. Most E. coli growth occurred after formaldehyde levels had dropped, suggesting that an effect similar to antibiotic persistence could be the cause. We found the dormant cell state can maintain formaldehyde resistance through the lack of dilution of the proteome caused by growth. These data suggest that dormancy can preserve phenotypic heterogeneities in other traits.
url
Article Landing PageView
Published (Version of record) Open

Metrics

1 Record Views

Details

Logo image