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1.
The tubulin homologue FtsZ is well known for its essential function in bacterial cell division. Here, we show that in Caulobacter crescentus, FtsZ also plays a major role in cell elongation by spatially regulating the location of MurG, which produces the essential lipid II peptidoglycan cell wall precursor. The early assembly of FtsZ into a highly mobile ring-like structure during cell elongation is quickly followed by the recruitment of MurG and a major redirection of peptidoglycan precursor synthesis to the midcell region. These FtsZ-dependent events occur well before cell constriction and contribute to cell elongation. In the absence of FtsZ, MurG fails to accumulate near midcell and cell elongation proceeds unperturbed in appearance by insertion of peptidoglycan material along the entire sidewalls. Evidence suggests that bacteria use both a FtsZ-independent and a FtsZ-dependent mode of peptidoglycan synthesis to elongate, the importance of each mode depending on the timing of FtsZ assembly during elongation.  相似文献   

2.
In Caulobacter crescentus, the actin homologue MreB is critical for cell shape maintenance. Despite the central importance of MreB for cell morphology and viability, very little is known about MreB-interacting factors. Here, we use an overexpression approach to identify a novel MreB interactor, MbiA. MbiA interacts with MreB in both biochemical and genetic assays, colocalizes with MreB throughout the cell cycle, and relies on MreB for its localization. MbiA overexpression mimics the loss of MreB function, severely perturbing cell morphology, inhibiting growth and inducing cell lysis. Additionally, mbiA deletion shows a synthetic growth phenotype with a hypomorphic allele of the MreB interactor RodZ, suggesting that these two MreB-interacting proteins either have partially redundant functions or participate in the same functional complex. Our work thus establishes MbiA as a novel cell shape regulator that appears to function through regulating MreB, and opens avenues for discovery of more MreB-regulating factors by showing that overexpression screens are a valuable tool for uncovering potentially redundant cell shape effectors.  相似文献   

3.
Regulation of polar morphogenesis in Caulobacter crescentus.   总被引:10,自引:5,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
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4.
5.
MreB, the bacterial actin-like cytoskeleton, is required for the rod morphology of many bacterial species. Disruption of MreB function results in loss of rod morphology and cell rounding. Here, we show that the widely used MreB inhibitor A22 causes MreB-independent growth inhibition that varies with the drug concentration, culture medium conditions, and bacterial species tested. MP265, an A22 structural analog, is less toxic than A22 for growth yet equally efficient for disrupting the MreB cytoskeleton. The action of A22 and MP265 is enhanced by basic pH of the culture medium. Using this knowledge and the rapid reversibility of drug action, we examined the restoration of rod shape in lemon-shaped Caulobacter crescentus cells pretreated with MP265 or A22 under nontoxic conditions. We found that reversible restoration of MreB function after drug removal causes extensive morphological changes including a remarkable cell thinning accompanied with elongation, cell branching, and shedding of outer membrane vesicles. We also thoroughly characterized the composition of C. crescentus peptidoglycan by high-performance liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry and showed that MreB disruption and recovery of rod shape following restoration of MreB function are accompanied by considerable changes in composition. Our results provide insight into MreB function in peptidoglycan remodeling and rod shape morphogenesis and suggest that MreB promotes the transglycosylase activity of penicillin-binding proteins.Most bacteria have characteristic cell morphologies maintained during growth (67). The peptidoglycan (PG) component of the cell wall represents in most cases the physical support of various bacterial shapes. PG is a mesh-like polymeric macromolecule which opposes the osmotic pressure of the bacterial cytoplasm and prevents lysis in hypotonic growth environments (29). Isolated PG cell walls (sacculi) retain the shapes of the cells from which they originate while PG disruption causes the formation of osmotically labile spheroplasts, underscoring PG''s essential role in cell shape determination and cellular integrity maintenance. PG is composed of long glycan chains that are oriented roughly along the short axis of rod-shaped Gram-negative bacteria and that are connected by short peptide cross-links (21, 60). Bacterial growth and division necessitate the expansion and division of the PG cell wall, which requires the insertion of new PG material in the preexisting, covalently linked mesh (29). New PG synthesis requires two enzymatic reactions performed by penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs). Glycan chain synthesis is achieved by transglycosylation activity while cross-linkage of glycan chains to the existing mesh is achieved by transpeptidation activity (47). Class A PBPs, called bifunctional or bimodular PBPs (e.g., PBP1a and 1b of Escherichia coli), possess both transpeptidase and transglycosylase domains while class B PBPs, such as PBP2 and PBP3 of E. coli, can perform only transpeptidase reactions (47). Controlled degradation of the PG by cell wall hydrolases is necessary for incorporation of new PG material during growth. Tight coordination between PG synthesis and degradation is required to maintain the integrity of the mesh at all times (29).The bacterial cytoskeleton also plays a central role in cell shape determination and maintenance (7). MreB is a bacterial actin homolog that forms dynamic helical structures underneath the cytoplasmic membrane in most rod-shaped bacteria (8, 34, 37, 56). In some species, the spatial distribution of MreB varies during the cell cycle, changing from a helical/patchy localization pattern throughout the cell to a ring-like distribution near midcell (20, 22, 50, 58). MreB is required for rod shape maintenance as deletion of the MreB-encoding gene or depletion of MreB causes loss of rod shape and cell rounding (20, 22, 34, 63). Other proteins, including MreC, MreD, RodA, PBP2, and RodZ, function along with MreB to maintain rod shape as loss of their function also results in cell rounding (2, 5, 33, 48, 62). Among these rod-morphogenic proteins, only PBP2 has a known enzymatic function, being involved in PG synthesis as an elongation-specific transpeptidase; the others are membrane-spanning or integral membrane proteins (2, 5, 15, 48). The overall involvement of these morphogenetic proteins in rod shape maintenance has led to a model in which they are part of the elongase complex, a PG synthesizing machine that elongates the PG side wall (2, 5, 15, 48, 59). The elongase complex would include PG lytic enzymes and at least one bifunctional PBP required for glycan strand synthesis (15, 59). In Bacillus subtilis, MreB homologs were found to associate with the bifunctional PBP1 (36) and to regulate the localization of the PG hydrolase LytE (9). However, it is still unclear how MreB functions in the context of the proposed elongase complex to determine and maintain rod shape.It has been previously shown that repletion of MreB in lemon-shaped, MreB-depleted Caulobacter crescentus cells leads to the formation of cell filaments that present branches and ectopic stalks (64). To examine how MreB can drive de novo rod shape morphogenesis, we followed a similar strategy except that we used drug treatment to interfere with MreB function. The small molecule 3,4-dichlorobenzyl carbamimidothioate, also known as A22, has been shown to rapidly disrupt MreB localization in vivo and to induce growth-dependent rounding in several Gram-negative bacteria (23, 32, 41, 45, 52). Furthermore, genetic and biochemical experiments have shown that MreB is the direct molecular target of A22 and that A22 binds to MreB''s ATP-binding pocket, inducing a state with low affinity for polymerization (3, 23). As removal of A22 is followed within minutes by recovery of the normal MreB localization pattern (23), this drug represents a convenient tool for rapid and reversible inhibition of MreB function. However, A22 was found to inhibit the growth of an mreB deletion mutant of E. coli, suggesting that it can have MreB-independent toxic effects (35). In this study, we show that the toxicity of A22 varies with the drug concentration, culture medium conditions, and Gram-negative species tested. We identify a similarly potent but less toxic structural analog, MP265 (4-chlorobenzyl carbamimidothioate), as well as nontoxic concentrations and conditions for both A22 and MP265 that induce loss of rod cell morphology in C. crescentus. We also show that recovery of rod shape after drug removal is accompanied by intensive remodeling of PG morphology and composition.  相似文献   

6.
Bacterial actin MreB is one of the key components of the bacterial cytoskeleton. It assembles into short filaments that lie just underneath the membrane and organize the cell wall synthesis machinery. Here we show that MreB from both T. maritima and E. coli binds directly to cell membranes. This function is essential for cell shape determination in E. coli and is proposed to be a general property of many, if not all, MreBs. We demonstrate that membrane binding is mediated by a membrane insertion loop in TmMreB and by an N-terminal amphipathic helix in EcMreB and show that purified TmMreB assembles into double filaments on a membrane surface that can induce curvature. This, the first example of a membrane-binding actin filament, prompts a fundamental rethink of the structure and dynamics of MreB filaments within cells.  相似文献   

7.
The growth of a stalked bacterium, Caulobacter crescentus, has been synchronized easily and reproducibly by a new method. When this bacterium is grown to a late log phase in nutrient broth at 30 C with aeration, swarmer cells are accumulated in the culture to 80% of the whole cell population. When this culture is inoculated into fresh pre-warmed broth at twentyfold dilution, it immediately initiates synchronous cell growth. Simultaneously, synchronous cell differentiation is monitored by the susceptibility of the cells to RNA phage infection. The swarmer cells accumulated in the late log phase of growth possess nearly the same susceptibility to RNA phage infection as those in the early log phase of growth while RNA phage-adsorbing capacity is lower in such swarmer cells. It is suggested that the swarmer cells accumulated in the late log phase of growth have lost some pili.  相似文献   

8.
Chlamydiae are obligate intracellular bacterial pathogens that have extensively reduced their genome in adapting to the intracellular environment. The chlamydial genome contains only three annotated cell division genes and lacks ftsZ. How this obligate intracellular pathogen divides is uncharacterized. Chlamydiae contain two high-molecular-weight (HMW) penicillin binding proteins (Pbp) implicated in peptidoglycan synthesis, Pbp2 and Pbp3/FtsI. We show here, using HMW Pbp-specific penicillin derivatives, that both Pbp2 and Pbp3 are essential for chlamydial cell division. Ultrastructural analyses of antibiotic-treated cultures revealed distinct phenotypes: Pbp2 inhibition induced internal cell bodies within a single outer membrane whereas Pbp3 inhibition induced elongated phenotypes with little internal division. Each HMW Pbp interacts with the Chlamydia cell division protein FtsK. Chlamydiae are coccoid yet contain MreB, a rod shape-determining protein linked to Pbp2 in bacilli. Using MreB-specific antibiotics, we show that MreB is essential for chlamydial growth and division. Importantly, co-treatment with MreB-specific and Pbp-specific antibiotics resulted in the MreB-inhibited phenotype, placing MreB upstream of Pbp function in chlamydial cell division. Finally, we showed that MreB also interacts with FtsK. We propose that, in Chlamydia, MreB acts as a central co-ordinator at the division site to substitute for the lack of FtsZ in this bacterium.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Caulobacter crescentus cells treated with amdinocillin, an antibiotic which specifically inhibits the cell elongation transpeptidase penicillin binding protein 2 in Escherichia coli, exhibit defects in stalk elongation and morphology, indicating that stalk synthesis may be a specialized form of cell elongation. In order to investigate this possibility further, we examined the roles of two other proteins important for cell elongation, RodA and MreB. We show that, in C. crescentus, the rodA gene is essential and that RodA depletion leads to a loss of control over stalk and cell body diameter and a stalk elongation defect. In addition, we demonstrate that MreB depletion leads to a stalk elongation defect and conclude that stalk elongation is a more constrained form of cell elongation. Our results strongly suggest that MreB by itself does not determine the diameter of the cell body or stalk. Finally, we show that cells recovering from MreB depletion exhibit a strong budding and branching cell body phenotype and possess ectopic poles, as evidenced by the presence of multiple, misplaced, and sometimes highly branched stalks at the ends of these buds and branches. This phenotype is also seen to a lesser extent in cells recovering from RodA depletion and amdinocillin treatment. We conclude that MreB, RodA, and the target(s) of amdinocillin all contribute to the maintenance of cellular polarity in C. crescentus.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The bacterial cell wall is a complex three-dimensional structure that protects the cell from environmental stress and ensures its shape. The biosynthesis of its main component, the peptidoglycan, involves the coordination of activities of proteins present in the cytoplasm, the membrane, and the periplasm, some of which also interact with the bacterial cytoskeleton. The sheer complexity of the cell wall elongation process, which is the main focus of this review, has created a significant challenge for the study of the macromolecular interactions that regulate peptidoglycan biosynthesis. The availability of new structural and biochemical data on a number of components of peptidoglycan assembly machineries, including a complex between MreB and RodZ as well as structures of penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs) from a number of pathogenic species, now provide novel insight into the underpinnings of an intricate molecular machinery.  相似文献   

13.
MreB, the bacterial actin homologue, is thought to function in spatially co-ordinating cell morphogenesis in conjunction with MreC, a protein that wraps around the outside of the cell within the periplasmic space. In Caulobacter crescentus, MreC physically associates with penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs) which catalyse the insertion of intracellularly synthesized precursors into the peptidoglycan cell wall. Here we show that MreC is required for the spatial organization of components of the peptidoglycan-synthesizing holoenzyme in the periplasm and MreB directs the localization of a peptidoglycan precursor synthesis protein in the cytosol. Additionally, fluorescent vancomycin (Van-FL) labelling revealed that the bacterial cytoskeletal proteins MreB and FtsZ, as well as MreC and RodA, were required for peptidoglycan synthetic activity. MreB and FtsZ were found to be required for morphogenesis of the polar stalk. FtsZ was required for a cell cycle-regulated burst of peptidoglycan synthesis early in the cell cycle resulting in the synthesis of cross-band structures, whereas MreB was required for lengthening of the stalk. Thus, the bacterial cytoskeleton and cell shape-determining proteins such as MreC, function in concert to orchestrate the localization of cell wall synthetic complexes resulting in spatially co-ordinated and efficient peptidoglycan synthetic activity.  相似文献   

14.
In most bacteria, the tubulin‐like GTPase FtsZ forms an annulus at midcell (the Z‐ring) which recruits the division machinery and regulates cell wall remodeling. Although both activities require membrane attachment of FtsZ, few membrane anchors have been characterized. FtsA is considered to be the primary membrane tether for FtsZ in bacteria, however in Caulobacter crescentus, FtsA arrives at midcell after stable Z‐ring assembly and early FtsZ‐directed cell wall synthesis. We hypothesized that additional proteins tether FtsZ to the membrane and demonstrate that in C. crescentus, FzlC is one such membrane anchor. FzlC associates with membranes directly in vivo and in vitro and recruits FtsZ to membranes in vitro. As for most known membrane anchors, the C‐terminal peptide of FtsZ is required for its recruitment to membranes by FzlC in vitro and midcell recruitment of FzlC in cells. In vivo, overproduction of FzlC causes cytokinesis defects whereas deletion of fzlC causes synthetic defects with dipM, ftsE and amiC mutants, implicating FzlC in cell wall hydrolysis. Our characterization of FzlC as a novel membrane anchor for FtsZ expands our understanding of FtsZ regulators and establishes a role for membrane‐anchored FtsZ in the regulation of cell wall hydrolysis.  相似文献   

15.
The bacterial world is full of varying cell shapes and sizes, and individual species perpetuate a defined morphology generation after generation. We review recent findings and ideas about how bacteria use the cytoskeleton and other strategies to regulate cell growth in time and space to produce different shapes and sizes.  相似文献   

16.
In Caulobacter crescentus, intact cables of the actin homologue, MreB, are required for the proper spatial positioning of MurG which catalyses the final step in peptidoglycan precursor synthesis. Similarly, in the periplasm, MreC controls the spatial orientation of the penicillin binding proteins and a lytic transglycosylase. We have now found that MreB cables are required for the organization of several other cytosolic murein biosynthetic enzymes such as MraY, MurB, MurC, MurE and MurF. We also show these proteins adopt a subcellular pattern of localization comparable to MurG, suggesting the existence of cytoskeletal‐dependent interactions. Through extensive two‐hybrid analyses, we have now generated a comprehensive interaction map of components of the bacterial morphogenetic complex. In the cytosol, this complex contains both murein biosynthetic enzymes and morphogenetic proteins, including RodA, RodZ and MreD. We show that the integral membrane protein, MreD, is essential for lateral peptidoglycan synthesis, interacts with the precursor synthesizing enzymes MurG and MraY, and additionally, determines MreB localization. Our results suggest that the interdependent localization of MreB and MreD functions to spatially organize a complex of peptidoglycan precursor synthesis proteins, which is required for propagation of a uniform cell shape and catalytically efficient peptidoglycan synthesis.  相似文献   

17.
Caulobacter crescentus fatty acid-dependent cell cycle mutant.   总被引:7,自引:6,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
A fatty acid auxotroph of Caulobacter crescentus, AE6001, which displays a strict requirement for unsaturated fatty acids to grow on glucose as the carbon source has been isolated. Starvation of AE6001 for unsaturated fatty acids resulted in a block in the cell cycle. Starved cultures accumulated at the predivisional cell stage after a round of DNA replication had been completed and after a flagellum had been assembled at the pole of the cell. Cell division and cell growth failed to occur probably because the mutant was unable to synthesize a membrane. An analysis of double mutants containing the fatB503 allele and other mutations in membrane biogenesis demonstrated that the cell cycle of AE6001 blocked at a homeostatic state. The addition of oleic acid to starved cultures permitted cell division and the initiation of a new round of DNA replication. The coincident block in both the initiation of DNA replication and membrane assembly, exhibited by starved cultures of this mutant, suggests that the fatB503 gene product may be involved in the coordination of these events.  相似文献   

18.
Two distinct protein complexes, the flagellum and the pilus biogenesis machinery, are asymmetrically assembled at one pole of the Caulobacter predivisional cell. Cell division yields dissimilar daughter cells: a stalked cell and a swarmer cell that assembles several pili at the flagellated cell pole. Strains bearing mutations in the pleA gene are pililess and non-flagellated. The PleA protein contains a region that is similar to a peptidoglycan-hydrolytic active site, and a point mutation at this site in PleA results in the loss of flagellum and pili biogenesis. PleA was found to be required for the insertion of the outer membrane pilus secretion channel at the cell pole and for the accumulation of the PilA pilin subunit. PleA is also required for the assembly of substructures of the flagellar basal body hook complex that are located in or traverse the peptidoglycan layer. These results argue that PleA facilitates the assembly of envelope-spanning structures at the cell pole. In support of this, PleA was found to be present only during a short interval in the cell cycle that coincides with the assembly of the flagellum and the pilus secretion apparatus.  相似文献   

19.
MreB proteins are bacterial actin homologues thought to have a role in cell shape determination by positioning the cell wall synthetic machinery. Many bacteria, particularly Gram-positives, have more than one MreB isoform. Bacillus subtilis has three, MreB, Mbl and MreBH, which colocalize in a single helical structure. We now show that the helical pattern of peptidoglycan (PG) synthesis in the cylindrical part of the rod-shaped cell is governed by the redundant action of the three MreB isoforms. Single mutants for any one of mreB isoforms can still incorporate PG in a helical pattern and generate a rod shape. However, after depletion of MreB in an mbl mutant (or depletion of all three isoforms) lateral wall PG synthesis was impaired and the cells became spherical and lytic. Overexpression of any one of the MreB isoforms overcame the lethality as well as the defects in lateral PG synthesis and cell shape. Furthermore, MreB and Mbl can associate with the peptidoglycan biosynthetic machinery independently. However, no single MreB isoform was able to support normal growth under various stress conditions, suggesting that the multiple isoforms are used to allow cells to maintain proper growth and morphogenesis under changing and sometimes adverse conditions.  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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