“…Intracellular PA movement serves as a proxy for the metabolic status of the cell Although intracellular PA (re)assembly and movement was initially thought to be strictly diffusion-based and thus energy-independent (Winkler et al, 2010;Coquel et al, 2013), more-detailed insights into the physical nature of the bacterial cytoplasm and its glass-like properties have indicated that the mobility of such larger intracellular structures is progressively constrained with increasing size, and that cellular metabolism is required to fluidize the cytoplasm, in order to allow these structures to escape their local environment and explore larger regions of the cytoplasm (Parry et al, 2014). Recently, polar segregation of PAs has been shown to be hampered in conditions of increased cytoplasmic viscosity (Oliveira et al, 2016), indicating the latter, modulated by factors such as metabolic activity, temperature and osmolality (Weber et al, 2012;Parry et al, 2014;Oliveira et al, 2016), can indeed affect PA behavior. In order to fully examine the impact of these metabolism-dependent glass-like dynamics of the bacterial cytoplasm on PAs, we monitored live E. coli MG1655 ibpAyfp cells, in which PAs are fluorescently traceable (Lindner et al, 2008), in different environments and quantified their macromolecular motion (Fig.…”