Litcius/Paper detail

Energetic scaling in microbial growth

Salvatore Calabrese, Arjun Chakrawal, Stefano Manzoni, Philippe Van Cappellen

2021Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences42 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Microbial growth is a clear example of organization and structure arising in nonequilibrium conditions. Due to the complexity of the microbial metabolic network, elucidating the fundamental principles governing microbial growth remains a challenge. Here, we present a systematic analysis of microbial growth thermodynamics, leveraging an extensive dataset on energy-limited monoculture growth. A consistent thermodynamic framework based on reaction stoichiometry allows us to quantify how much of the available energy microbes can efficiently convert into new biomass while dissipating the remaining energy into the environment and producing entropy. We show that dissipation mechanisms can be linked to the electron donor uptake rate, a fact leading to the central result that the thermodynamic efficiency is related to the electron donor uptake rate by the scaling law [Formula: see text] and to the growth yield by [Formula: see text] These findings allow us to rederive the Pirt equation from a thermodynamic perspective, providing a means to compute its coefficients, as well as a deeper understanding of the relationship between growth rate and yield. Our results provide rather general insights into the relation between mass and energy conversion in microbial growth with potentially wide application, especially in ecology and biotechnology.

Topics & Concepts

BiosphereScalingBiochemical engineeringNon-equilibrium thermodynamicsBacterial growthMicrobial metabolismBioremediationEnvironmental scienceChemistryEcologyThermodynamicsBiologyPhysicsBacteriaMathematicsGeometryGeneticsEngineeringContaminationAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanicsthermodynamics and calorimetric analysesMicrobial Metabolic Engineering and Bioproduction