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1.
Penicillin G at low concentrations blocked cell division in Caulobacter crescentus without inhibiting cell growth. The long filamentous cells formed after two to three generations under these conditions had a stalk at one pole and usually one or more flagella at the opposite pole. The failure of the filaments to form a second stalk at the flagellated pole indicates that stalk formation was dependent upon completion of a step that was also required for cell division. Two observations support this conclusion. (i) Penicillin did not stop the normal development of synchronous swarmer cells into stalked initiation and stalk elongation. (ii) When the action of penicillin was reversed by the addition of penicillinase to cultures of filaments, stalks were not formed at the nonstalked pole until after cell division had occurred; thus the normal order of development events was maintained: cell division leads to stalk formation. These results are consistent with a model in which the organization of the developmental program for stalk formation occurs before cell division as a consequence of steps that branch from the cell division pathway.  相似文献   

2.
Indirect immunoferritin labeling provided evidence for the de novo synthesis of antigenic cell-surface components of the daughter cell (bud) of a freshwater isolate belonging to morphotype IV of theBlastocaulis-Planctomyces group of budding and nonprosthecately appendaged prokaryotes. The cell surfaces of the buds produced by immunoferritin-labeled mother cells remained unlabeled through development to flagellated swarmers. Double-labeling experiments verified the de novo synthesis of cell-surface antigens over the entire bud, and also showed a labeling pattern indicative of intercalation of newly formed sites on the surface of the mother cell during the later stages of its maturation.  相似文献   

3.
Vibrio parahaemolyticus exists as swimmer and swarmer cells, specialized for growth in liquid and on solid environments respectively. Swarmer cells are characteristically highly elongated due to an inhibition of cell division, but still need to divide in order to proliferate and expand the colony. It is unknown how long swarmer cells divide without diminishing the population of long cells required for swarming behavior. Here we show that swarmer cells divide but the placement of the division site is cell length‐dependent; short swarmers divide at mid‐cell, while long swarmers switch to a specific non‐mid‐cell placement of the division site. Transition to non‐mid‐cell positioning of the Z‐ring is promoted by a cell length‐dependent switch in the localization‐dynamics of the division regulator MinD from a pole‐to‐pole oscillation in short swarmers to a multi‐node standing‐wave oscillation in long swarmers. Regulation of FtsZ levels restricts the number of divisions to one and SlmA ensures sufficient free FtsZ to sustain Z‐ring formation by preventing sequestration of FtsZ into division deficient clusters. By limiting the number of division‐events to one per cell at a specific non‐mid‐cell position, V. parahaemolyticus promotes the preservation of long swarmer cells and permits swarmer cell division without the need for dedifferentiation.  相似文献   

4.
In many rod‐shaped bacteria, the Min system is well‐known for generating a cell‐pole to cell‐pole standing wave oscillation with a single node at mid‐cell to align cell division. In filamentous E. coli cells, the single‐node standing wave transitions into a multi‐nodal oscillation. These multi‐nodal dynamics have largely been treated simply as an interesting byproduct of artificially elongated cells. However, a recent in vivo study by Muraleedharan et al. shows how multi‐nodal Min dynamics are used to align non‐mid‐cell divisions in the elongated swarmer cells of Vibrio parahaemolyticus. The authors propose a model where the combined actions of cell‐length dependent Min dynamics, in concert with nucleoid occlusion along the cell length and regulation of FtsZ levels ensures Z ring formation and complete chromosome segregation at a single off‐center position. By limiting the number of cell division events to one per cell at an off‐center position, long swarmer cells are preserved within a multiplying population. The findings unveil an elegant mechanism of cell‐division regulation by the Min system that allows long swarmer cells to divide without the need to ‘dedifferentiate’.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The duration of various morphologically distinct phases in the division cycle of the marine heterotroph Cryptothecodinium cohnii was measured in cultures initiated with synchronously excysted swarmer cells. Parent cysts were selectively isolated on plastic surfaces and progeny of a narrow age distribution harvested in a specifically conditioned medium. The swarmer phase, an interval of predivisional encystment, daughter cell formation and excystment were 5.0, 3.0 and 2.0 h respectively. Two major kinds of cytokinesis (production of 2 and 4 daughter cells) were observed resulting in a mean daughter cell number of 2.7 under these conditions. Other growth parameters for this dinoflagellate are described.  相似文献   

6.
The pattern of asymmetric division has been examined in Caulobacter crescentus (gram-negative aquatic bacteria) by determining the position of the “division site” on cells of different ages. Measurements of cell width and length at this site, which corresponds to the point of eventual cell separation, were made on electron micrographs of cells stained with phosphotungstic acid. The results show that (i) the division site is formed early in the cell cycle and it constitutes the first visible feature on the growing stalked cell to differentiate the incipient swarmer cell, (ii) the division site is located asymmetrically (closer to the swarmer pole than the stalked pole) on the dividing cell, (iii) its position relative to the stalked and swarmer poles does not change during the cell cycle, and (iv) division is consequently unequal, with the swarmer cell always smaller than the stalked cell. The implications of these findings for general models of unequal cell division and stem cell development are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
ABSTRACT. A sessile, tentacle-bearing protozoon, Heliophrya sp. (Suctoria, Ciliata), reproduces asexually by evaginative budding to form a ciliated swarmer, which begins metamorphosis to the adult form within 30 min of its release from the parent cell. Morphological features of embryogenesis were investigated using transmission and scanning electron microscopy and found to correspond, with certain exceptions, to the few previous reports concerning evaginative budding in suctorians. Following invagination of a portion of the pellicle to form an embryonic cavity within the parent cell, numerous kinetosomes, apparently formed de novo, organize into rows which surround the embryonic cavity and eventually develop cilia that project into the cavity. When the cavity is complete, its walls are extruded through an opening in the parent cell surface. Parent cell cytoplasm streams into the incipient swarmer, thus supplying it with at least the minimum requirement of all cytoplasmic organelles. The ciliated swarmer remains attached to its parent cell for several minutes before it detaches. A complete pellicle is formed in both parent and swarmer prior to detachment. The numerous mitochondria underlying the parent cell pellicle in the vicinity of the attachment area suggest that cross wall formation is an energy-dependent process.  相似文献   

8.
Summary A unique form of cell division is reported for the cellsKomma caudata andCryptomonas ovata (Cryptophyceae). During cytokinesis, the posterior tail-like region of each daughter cell develops from the anterior region of the parental cell. This process, termed pole reversal, involves a major realignment in overall cell polarity as well as alterations to cytoplasmic and surface components. Pole reversal may be a consequence of flagellar apparatus transformation and reorientation during division, and pole reversal may facilitate the development of the asymmetric cell shape in daughter cells.  相似文献   

9.
Asymmetric cell division in Caulobacter crescentus produces two cell types, a stalked cell and a new swarmer cell, with characteristics surface structures. We have examined the role of the cell cycle in the differentiation of these two cells using the adsorption of bacteriophage øLC72, the assembly of the polar flagellum, and stalk formation as assays for changes in surface morphology. Previous studies of this aquatic bacterium [17, 25] have suggested that the replicating chromosome acts as a 'clock' in timing the formation of the flagellar filament at one pole of the new swarmer cell. The analysis of conditional cell cycle mutants presented here extends these results by showing that DNA synthesis is also required for adsorption of phage øLC72 and, more importantly, they also suggest that a late cell division step is involved in determining the spatial pattern in which the phage receptors and flagella are assembled. We propose that this cell division step is required for formation of 'organizational' centers which direct the assembly of surface structures at the new cell poles, and for the polarity reversal in assembly that accompanies swarmer cell to stalked cell development.  相似文献   

10.
Swarmer cells of Caulobacter crescentus are devoid of the cell division initiation protein FtsZ and do not replicate DNA. FtsZ is synthesized during the differentiation of swarmer cells into replicating stalked cells. We show that FtsZ first localizes at the incipient stalked pole in differentiating swarmer cells. FtsZ subsequently localizes at the mid-cell early in the cell cycle. In an effort to understand whether Z-ring formation and cell constriction are driven solely by the cell cycle-regulated increase in FtsZ concentration, FtsZ was artificially expressed in swarmer cells at a level equivalent to that found in predivisional cells. Immunofluorescence microscopy showed that, in these swarmer cells, simply increasing FtsZ concentration was not sufficient for Z-ring formation; Z-ring formation took place only in stalked cells. Expression of FtsZ in swarmer cells did not alter the timing of cell constriction initiation during the cell cycle but, instead, caused additional constrictions and a delay in cell separation. These additional constrictions were confined to sites close to the original mid-cell constriction. These results suggest that the timing and placement of Z-rings is tightly coupled to an early cell cycle event and that cell constriction is not solely dependent on a threshold level of FtsZ.  相似文献   

11.
Lateral root initiation: one step at a time   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Plant growth relies heavily on a root system that is hidden belowground, which develops post-embryonically through the formation of lateral roots. The de novo formation of lateral root organs requires tightly coordinated asymmetric cell division of a limited number of pericycle cells located at the xylem pole. This typically involves the formation of founder cells, followed by a number of cellular changes until the cells divide and give rise to two unequally sized daughter cells. Over the past few years, our knowledge of the regulatory mechanisms behind lateral root initiation has increased dramatically. Here, I will summarize these recent advances, focusing on the prominent role of auxin and cell cycle activity, and elaborating on the three key steps of pericycle cell priming, founder cell establishment and asymmetric cell division. Taken together, recent findings suggest a tentative model in which successive auxin response modules are crucial for lateral root initiation, and additional factors provide more layers of control.  相似文献   

12.
Regulation of polar development and cell division in Caulobacter crescentus relies on the dynamic localization of several proteins to cell poles at specific stages of the cell cycle. The polar organelle development protein, PodJ, is required for the synthesis of the adhesive holdfast and pili. Here we show the cell cycle localization of PodJ and describe a novel role for this protein in controlling the dynamic localization of the developmental regulator PleC. In swarmer cells, a short form of PodJ is localized at the flagellated pole. Upon differentiation of the swarmer cell into a stalked cell, full length PodJ is synthesized and localizes to the pole opposite the stalk. In late predivisional cells, full length PodJ is processed into a short form which remains localized at the flagellar pole after cell division and is degraded during swarmer to stalked cell differentiation. Polar localization of the developmental regulator PleC requires the presence of PodJ. In contrast, the polar localization of PodJ is not dependent on the presence of PleC. These results indicate that PodJ is an important determinant for the localization of a major regulator of cell differentiation. Thus, PodJ acts directly or indirectly to target PleC to the incipient swarmer pole, to establish the cellular asymmetry that leads to the synthesis of holdfasts and pili at their proper subcellular location.  相似文献   

13.
An essential event in developmental processes is the introduction of asymmetry into an otherwise undifferentiated cell population. Cell division in Caulobacter is asymmetric; the progeny cells are structurally different and follow different sequences of development, thus providing a useful model system for the study of differentiation. Because the progeny cells are different from one another, there must be a segregation of morphogenetic and informational components at some time in the cell cycle. We have examined the pattern of specific protein segregation between Caulobacter stalked and swarmer daughter cells, with the rationale that such a progeny analysis would identify both structurally and developmentally important proteins. To complement the study, we have also examined the pattern of protein synthesis during synchronous growth and in various cellular fractions. We show here, for the first time, that the association of proteins with a specific cell type may result not only from their periodicity of synthesis, but also from their pattern of distribution at the time of cell division. Several membrane-associated and soluble proteins are segregated asymmetrically between progeny stalked and swarmer cells. The data further show that a subclass of soluble proteins becomes associated with the membrane of the progeny stalked cells. Therefore, although the principal differentiated cell types possess different synthetic capabilities and characteristic proteins, the asymmetry between progeny stalked and swarmer cells is generated primarily by the preferential association of specific soluble proteins with the membrane of only one daughter cell. The majority of the proteins which exhibit this segregation behavior are synthesized during the entire cell cycle and exhibit relatively long, functional messenger RNA half-lives.  相似文献   

14.
The budding yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, was grown exponentially at different rates in the presence of growth rate-limiting concentrations of a protein synthesis inhibitor, cycloheximide. The volumes of the parent cell and the bud were determined as were the intervals of the cell cycle devoted to the unbudded and budded periods. We found that S. cerevisiae cells divide unequally. The daughter cell (the cell produced at division by the bud of the previous cycle) is smaller and has a longer subsequent cell cycle than the parent cell which produced it. During the budded period most of the volume increase occurs in the bud and very little in the parent cell, while during the unbudded period both the daughter and the parent cell increase significantly in volume. The length of the budded interval of the cell cycle varies little as a function of population doubling time; the unbudded interval of the parent cell varies moderately; and the unbudded interval for the daughter cell varies greatly (in the latter case an increase of 100 min in population doubling time results in an increase of 124 min in the daughter cell's unbudded interval). All of the increase in the unbudded period occurs in that interval of G1 that precedes the point of cell cycle arrest by the S. cerevisiae alpha-mating factor. These results are qualitatively consistent with and support the model for the coordination of growth and division (Johnston, G. C., J. R. Pringle, and L. H. Hartwell. 1977. Exp. Cell. Res. 105:79-98.) This model states that growth and not the events of the DNA division cycle are rate limiting for cellular proliferation and that the attainment of a critical cell size is a necessary prerequisite for the "start" event in the DNA-division cycle, the event that requires the cdc 28 gene product, is inhibited by mating factor and results in duplication of the spindle pole body.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Mesosomes in Escherichia coli   总被引:14,自引:10,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
When Escherichia coli was grown in a synthetic medium and fixed with osmium, sections of the cells revealed clearly defined mesosomes. These mesosomes appeared to develop, in dividing cells, as coiled infoldings of the cytoplasmic membrane. Mature mesosomes formed a link between the cytoplasmic membrane and the nucleus of the cell. The arrangement of the mesosomes in dividing cells led to the hypothesis that division of the nucleus in these cells is accomplished by two separate polar mesosomes. One mesosome is derived from the parent cell and is present at one pole of the daughter cell. The other is freshly synthesized at or near the newly forming pole of the daughter cell. While the old mesosome remains attached to the chromosome received from the parent cell, the newly synthesized mesosome becomes attached to and initiates replication of the new chromosome. As the cell grows and elongates, the two mesosomes, attached to their respective chromosomes move apart, thus effecting nuclear division.  相似文献   

17.
Two unusual budding bacteria isolated from a swimming pool   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Two unusual strains of budding bacteria were isolated on a Millipore Pseudomonas Count Water Tester during routine monitoring of Pseudomonas aeruginosa counts in a swimming pool. The first isolate has been identified as Blastobacter sp. It was a yellow-pigmented, Gram negative rod-shaped organism with a polar holdfast by which it attached to solid surfaces or other cells to form rosettes. The cells reproduced by asymmetric division or budding at the free pole of the cell, producing motile daughter cells with a single polar flagellum. The second isolate, which has not yet been identified, was a red-pigmented, Gram negative rod-shaped organism which produced one or more buds at each pole of the cell. Cell division appears to occur by both binary fission and by budding. Both organisms were strict aerobes, catalase and oxidase positive and did not produce acid from glucose in Hugh and Leifson medium.  相似文献   

18.
Filamentous cells of Salmonella typhimurium, obtained after treatment with nalidixic acid in the exponential phase of growth, elongated up to 10 micron, corresponding to 4 unit cell lengths, per nucleoid. During elongation, division of nucleoids and septum formation did not occur, but de novo formation of flagella continued. Most of the filamentous cells were motile, and flagella were evenly distributed on their surface.  相似文献   

19.
Rod-shaped bacteria such as Escherichia coli divide by binary fission. They inherit an old pole from the parent cell. The new pole is recently derived from the septum. Because the chemoreceptor accumulates linearly with time on the cell pole, the old pole carries more receptors than does the new pole. Here, further evidence is provided that the old pole appears more frequently at the rear when bacteria swim. This phenomenon had been observed, yet not extensively explored in the literature. The biased swimming orientation is the consequence of the asymmetric distribution of flagella over the cell surface. On about 75% of cells, there are more flagella on the old-pole half of the cell than on the new-pole half, regardless of growth conditions. Most flagella are lateral, and few were found on the cell pole per se. The asymmetric flagellar distribution makes cells more efficient in chemotaxis. Both swimming orientation and receptor localization are components of chemotaxis, by which bacteria follow environmental stimuli. If unipolarly flagellated cells, such as the swarmer cells of Caulobacter crescentus, are regarded as 100% polar with respect to chemotaxis, E. coli is about 75%. The difference is quantitative. The peritrichous flagellation might enhance the motility and chemotaxis in the viscous environment of enteric bacteria.  相似文献   

20.
During swarmer cell differentiation in Caulobacter crescentus, morphogenesis at the swarmer pole is characterized by the loss of the flagellum, by the loss of phage receptor activity (PRA) (the ability of the cell to adsorb phage phi CbK), and finally by the initiation of stalk outgrowth at the site formerly occupied by the flagellum and the PRA. We show here that each of these events is a cell cycle-dependent event requiring continuous protein synthesis for its execution but occurring normally in the absence of DNA synthesis or phospholipid synthesis. During stalked-cell differentiation, the flagellum and PRA reappear and the stalk elongates considerably. We show here that these events are also cell cycle dependent, requiring not only de novo protein synthesis but also DNA and phospholipid syntheses. When synchronous cells dividing 160 min after collection were used, PRA reappearance occurred at 110 min. This PRA reappearance was dependent on a phospholipid synthesis-requiring event occurring at 70 min, a DNA synthesis-requiring event occurring at 95 min, and a protein synthesis-requiring event occurring at 108 min. In the absence of net phospholipid synthesis, stalk elongation appeared more or less normal, but the stalks eventually became fragile, and by 240 min, most of the stalks had broken off, leaving only stubs attached to the cell body.  相似文献   

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