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1.
Upon starvation Bacillus subtilis undergoes a developmental process involving creation of two cell types, the mother cell and forespore. A signal in the form of a serine protease, SpoIVB, is secreted from the forespore and leads to regulated intramembrane proteolysis (RIP) of pro-sigmaK, releasing active sigmaK into the mother cell. RIP of pro-sigmaK is carried out by a membrane-embedded metalloprotease, SpoIVFB, which is inactive when bound by BofA and SpoIVFA. We have investigated the mechanism by which this complex is activated. By expressing components of the signalling pathway in Escherichia coli, we reconstructed complete inhibition of pro-sigmaK RIP by BofA and SpoIVFA, and found that SpoIVB serine protease activity could partially restore RIP, apparently by targeting SpoIVFA. Pulse-chase experiments demonstrated that SpoIVFA synthesized early during B. subtilis sporulation is lost in a SpoIVB-dependent fashion, coincident with the onset of pro-sigmaK RIP, supporting the idea that SpoIVB targets SpoIVFA to trigger RIP of pro-sigmaK. Loss of BofA depended not only on SpoIVB, but also on CtpB, a serine protease secreted from the mother cell. CtpB appeared to cleave BofA near its C-terminus upon coexpression in E. coli, and purified CtpB degraded BofA. We propose that RIP of pro-sigmaK involves a three-step proteolytic cascade in which SpoIVB first cleaves SpoIVFA, CtpB then cleaves BofA and finally SpoIVFB cleaves pro-sigmaK.  相似文献   

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The sigmaK checkpoint coordinates gene expression in the mother cell with signaling from the forespore during Bacillus subtilis sporulation. The signaling pathway involves SpoIVB, a serine peptidase produced in the forespore, which is believed to cross the innermost membrane surrounding the forespore and activate a complex of proteins, including BofA, SpoIVFA, and SpoIVFB, located in the outermost membrane surrounding the forespore. Activation of the complex allows proteolytic processing of pro-sigmaK, and the resulting sigmaK RNA polymerase transcribes genes in the mother cell. To investigate activation of the pro-sigmaK processing complex, the level of SpoIVFA in extracts of sporulating cells was examined by Western blot analysis. The SpoIVFA level decreased when pro-sigmaK processing began during sporulation. In extracts of a spoIVB mutant defective in forespore signaling, the SpoIVFA level failed to decrease normally and no processing of pro-sigmaK was observed. Although these results are consistent with a model in which SpoIVFA inhibits processing until the SpoIVB-mediated signal is received from the forespore, we discovered that loss of SpoIVFA was insufficient to allow processing under certain conditions, including static incubation of the culture and continued shaking after the addition of inhibitors of oxidative phosphorylation or translation. Under these conditions, loss of SpoIVFA was independent of spoIVB. The inability to process pro-sigmaK under these conditions was not due to loss of SpoIVFB, the putative processing enzyme, or to a requirement for ongoing synthesis of pro-sigmaK. Rather, it was found that the requirements for shaking of the culture, for oxidative phosphorylation, and for translation could be bypassed by mutations that uncouple processing from dependence on forespore signaling. This suggests that ongoing translation is normally required for efficient pro-sigmaK processing because synthesis of the SpoIVB signal protein is needed to activate the processing complex. When translation is blocked, synthesis of SpoIVB ceases, and the processing complex remains inactive despite the loss of SpoIVFA. Taken together, the results suggest that SpoIVB signaling activates the processing complex by performing another function in addition to causing loss of SpoIVFA or by causing loss of SpoIVFA in a different way than when translation is blocked. The results also demonstrate that the processing machinery can function in the absence of translation or an electrochemical gradient across membranes.  相似文献   

4.
SpoIVB is the critical determinant for intercompartmental signalling of pro-sigmaK processing during sporulation in Bacillus subtilis. We show here that the SpoIVB serine peptidase can cleave the SpoIVFA protein, which is one component of the pro-sigmaK processing complex. SpoIVFA has been shown elsewhere (Rudner, D.Z., and Losick, R., 2002, Genes Dev 16: 1007-1018) to tether BofA and SpoIVFB in a membrane-embedded heteroligomeric complex in which BofA directly inhibits the activity of SpoIVFB. Cleavage of SpoIVFA would provide the necessary signal to dissolve this complex and release BofA-mediated inhibition on the zinc metalloprotease, SpoIVFB, that is responsible for cleaving pro-sigmaK to its mature form. We also show that the SpoIVB PDZ domain is required for self-recognition and trans cleavage of SpoIVB and is probably also used to target an internal motif within the C-terminal region of SpoIVFA exposed in the space between the inner and outer forespore membranes. This work reveals the mechanism of intercompartmental signalling and provides a unified model as to how sigmaK-directed gene expression in the mother cell is co-ordinated with events in the forespore chamber.  相似文献   

5.
S Lu  S Cutting    L Kroos 《Journal of bacteriology》1995,177(4):1082-1085
Processing of inactive pro-sigma K to active sigma K in the mother cell compartment of sporulating Bacillus subtilis is governed by a signal transduction pathway emanating from the forespore and involving SpoIVFB in the mother cell. Coexpression of spoIVFB and sigK (encoding pro-sigma K) genes in growing B. subtilis or Escherichia coli enhanced pro-sigma K processing in the absence of other sporulation-specific gene products. The simplest explanation of these results is that SpoIVFB is a protease that processes pro-sigma K.  相似文献   

6.
Yu YT  Kroos L 《Journal of bacteriology》2000,182(11):3305-3309
Processing of pro-sigma(K) in the mother cell compartment of sporulating Bacillus subtilis involves SpoIVFB and is governed by a signal from the forespore. SpoIVFB has an HEXXH motif characteristic of metalloproteases embedded in one of its transmembrane segments. Several conservative single amino acid changes in the HEXXH motif abolished function. However, changing the glutamic acid residue to aspartic acid, or changing the isoleucine residue that precedes the motif to proline, permitted SpoIVFB function. Only one other putative metalloprotease, site 2 protease has been shown to tolerate aspartic acid rather than glutamic acid in its HEXXH sequence. Site 2 protease and SpoIVFB share a second region of similarity with a family of putative membrane metalloproteases. A conservative change in this region of SpoIVFB abolished function. Interestingly, SpoIVFA increased the accumulation of certain mutant SpoIVFB proteins but was unnecessary for accumulation of wild-type SpoIVFB.  相似文献   

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The distinguishable cyan and yellow fluorescent proteins (CFP and YFP) enable the simultaneous in vivo visualization of different promoter activities. Here, we report new cloning vectors for the construction of cfp and yfp fusions in Bacillus subtilis. By extending the N-terminal portions of previously described CFP and YFP variants, 20- to 70-fold-improved fluorescent-protein production was achieved. Probably, the addition of sequences encoding the first eight amino acids of the N-terminal part of ComGA of B. subtilis overcomes the slow translation initiation that is provoked by the eukaryotic codon bias present in the original cfp and yfp genes. Using these new vectors, we demonstrate that, within an isogenic population of sporulating B. subtilis cells, expression of the abrB and spoIIA genes is distinct in individual cells.  相似文献   

11.
The BofC protein acts negatively on intercompartmental signalling of pro-sigma(K) processing in the sigma(K)-checkpoint of Bacillus subtilis. Signalling is brought about by the SpoIVB protein, which is synthesized in the forespore and initiates proteolytic processing of pro-sigmaK to its mature and active form in the opposed mother cell chamber of the developing cell. We have shown here that BofC, like SpoIVB, is secreted across the inner forespore membrane and, from the analysis of a bofC deletion and insertion mutant, is likely to interact with SpoIVB. In the absence of BofC, the amount of SpoIVB found in sporulating cells is substantially reduced, although SpoIVB is still able to activate proteolysis of pro-sigma(K). Conversely, in the absence of SpoIVB, the levels of BofC accumulate suggesting that the fate of each molecule is dependent upon their mutual interaction. Our results suggest that BofC could maintain SpoIVB in a stable but inactive form. Supporting this, we have shown that overproduction of BofC inhibits SpoIVB autoproteolysis and leads to a delay in proteolytic cleavage of pro-sigma(K). Based on our work here, we have proposed a model for BofC's functional role in intercompartmental signalling.  相似文献   

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The first alkaline phosphatase (APase) structural gene mutant of Bacillus subtilis 168 was constructed by using a clone identified by hybridization to a synthetic degenerative oligonucleotide. The design of the probe was based on the first 29 amino acids of the sequenced mature APase III protein, which had been isolated from the secreted fraction of vegetative, phosphate-starved cells. DNA sequencing of the clone revealed the first 80 amino acids of the APase III protein, including a typical procaryotic signal sequence of 32 amino acids preceding the start of the mature protein. The 29 amino acids encoded by the predicted open reading frame immediately following the signal sequence are identical to the first 29 amino acids of the sequenced mature protein. This region shows 80% identity to strand A of the beta sheet that is very well conserved in Escherichia coli and mammalian APases. A phoAIII structural mutant was constructed by insertional mutagenesis with a fragment internal to the coding region. The effects of this mutation on APase production in B. subtilis 168 were analyzed under both phosphate starvation and sporulation conditions. The mutation in APase III reduced the total vegetative APase specific activity by approximately 40% and sporulation APase specific activity by approximately 45%. An APase protein was isolated from sporulating cells at stage III and was identified as APase III by protein sequencing of the amino terminus and by its absence in the phoAIII mutant. The APase III gene has been mapped to approximately 50 degrees on the B. subtilis chromosome.  相似文献   

14.
Changes in amino acid permeation during sporulation   总被引:8,自引:6,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Changes in amino acid uptake in Bacillus licheniformis and in the amino acid pools of three Bacillus species were investigated, by use of cells from different stages of the life cycle. B. licheniformis contains catalytic uptake systems for all of the 10 amino acids studied. The apparent maximal velocities of uptake decreased during sporulation but did not fall below the range observed for other microorganisms. In sporulating cells, the apparent affinity constants of the uptake systems for individual amino acids remained about the same as in growing cells, i.e., from 2 x 10(-7)m to 7 x 10(-6)m, whereas, in some cases, the apparent maximal velocities decreased significantly. Because the velocity of uptake showed an atypical dependence on substrate concentration, it was postulated that these cells contain two or more uptake systems for each amino acid. Only one of these systems appeared to be operative at a substrate concentration below 10(-6)m. Working at these low substrate concentrations, catalytic activities producing a net efflux of amino acids were demonstrable in vegetative cells in the presence of chloramphenicol, but these exit systems were lost during sporulation. A pool formed by the addition of radioactive algal hydrolysate will exchange with the external medium in vegetative cells but not in sporulating cells. Glutamic acid and alanine comprise at least 60% of the amino acid pool of B. licheniformis A-5, B. subtilis 23, and B. cereus T during all stages of growth and sporulation. The concentrations of the other amino acids in the pool varied extensively, but reflected, in general, the amino acid turnover known to occur during sporulation.  相似文献   

15.
S Cutting  V Oke  A Driks  R Losick  S Lu  L Kroos 《Cell》1990,62(2):239-250
Gene expression in the mother cell compartment of sporulating cells of B. subtilis is partly governed by the mother cell RNA polymerase sigma factor sigma K. Paradoxically, sigma K-directed gene expression also depends on sigma G, the product of the forespore compartment regulatory gene spoIIIG, and on other forespore regulatory proteins. We now identify mutations in the genes bofA and bofB that relieve the dependence of mother cell gene expression on forespore regulatory proteins but not on sigma K. We establish that the dependence of mother cell gene expression on the forespore regulatory proteins is mediated at the level of the conversion of pro-sigma K to its mature, active form. We propose that the bofA and/or bofB proteins govern this conversion in response to a signal generated by the forespore. Activation of pro-sigma K could be a checkpoint for coordinating gene expression between the mother cell and forespore compartments of the developing sporangium.  相似文献   

16.
Sporulation in Bacillus subtilis begins with an asymmetric cell division giving rise to smaller forespore and larger mother cell compartments. Different programs of gene expression are subsequently directed by compartment-specific RNA polymerase sigma-factors. In the final stages, spore coat proteins are synthesized in the mother cell under the control of RNA polymerase containing sigma(K), (Esigma(K)). sigma(K) is synthesized as an inactive zymogen, pro-sigma(K), which is activated by proteolytic cleavage. Processing of pro-sigma(K) is performed by SpoIVFB, a metalloprotease that resides in a complex with SpoIVFA and bypass of forespore (Bof)A in the outer forespore membrane. Ensuring coordination of events taking place in the two compartments, pro-sigma(K) processing in the mother cell is delayed until appropriate signals are received from the forespore. Cell-cell signaling is mediated by SpoIVB and BofC, which are expressed in the forespore and secreted to the intercompartmental space where they regulate pro-sigma(K) processing by mechanisms that are not yet fully understood. Here we present the three-dimensional structure of BofC determined by solution state NMR. BofC is a monomer made up of two domains. The N-terminal domain, containing a four-stranded beta-sheet onto one face of which an alpha-helix is packed, closely resembles the third immunoglobulin-binding domain of protein G from Streptococcus. The C-terminal domain contains a three-stranded beta-sheet and three alpha-helices in a novel domain topology. The sequence connecting the domains contains a conserved DISP motif to which mutations that affect BofC activity map. Possible roles for BofC in the sigma(K) checkpoint are discussed in the light of sequence and structure comparisons.  相似文献   

17.
Small, acid-soluble spore proteins SASP-alpha, SASP-beta, and SASP-gamma as well as a SASP-beta-lacZ gene fusion product were found only within the forespore compartment of sporulating Bacillus subtilis cells by using immunoelectron microscopy. The alpha/beta-type SASP were associated almost exclusively with the forespore nucleoid, while SASP-gamma was somewhat excluded from the nucleoid. These different locations of alpha/beta-type and gamma-type small, acid-soluble spore proteins within the forespore are consistent with the different roles for these two types of proteins in spore resistance to UV light.  相似文献   

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Bacterial spore heat resistance is primarily dependent upon dehydration of the spore cytoplasm, a state that is maintained by the spore peptidoglycan wall, the spore cortex. A peptidoglycan structural modification found uniquely in spores is the formation of muramic delta-lactam. Production of muramic delta-lactam in Bacillus subtilis requires removal of a peptide side chain from the N-acetylmuramic acid residue by a cwlD-encoded muramoyl-L-Alanine amidase. Expression of cwlD takes place in both the mother cell and forespore compartments of sporulating cells, though expression is expected to be required only in the mother cell, from which cortex synthesis derives. Expression of cwlD in the forespore is in a bicistronic message with the upstream gene ybaK. We show that ybaK plays no apparent role in spore peptidoglycan synthesis and that expression of cwlD in the forespore plays no significant role in spore peptidoglycan formation. Peptide cleavage by CwlD is apparently followed by deacetylation of muramic acid and lactam ring formation. The product of pdaA (yfjS), which encodes a putative deacetylase, has recently been shown to also be required for muramic delta-lactam formation. Expression of CwlD in Escherichia coli results in muramoyl L-Alanine amidase activity but no muramic delta-lactam formation. Expression of PdaA alone in E. coli had no effect on E. coli peptidoglycan structure, whereas expression of CwlD and PdaA together resulted in the formation of muramic delta-lactam. CwlD and PdaA are necessary and sufficient for muramic delta-lactam production, and no other B. subtilis gene product is required. PdaA probably carries out both deacetylation and lactam ring formation and requires the product of CwlD activity as a substrate.  相似文献   

20.
Bacillus subtilis sporulating cells at stage III were fractionated into mother cell and forespore fractions by means of a lysozyme-detergent method. Three forms of DNA-dependent RNA polymerase enzymes, termed M sigma, F sigma, and F delta, in addition to core enzyme (alpha 2, beta', and beta) have been purified from the cell fractions. Enzymes M sigma and F sigma are present in the mother cell and forespore, respectively, and contain sigma factor of 55,000 daltons in addition to the core subunits. On the other hand, enzyme F delta is present specifically in the forespore and contains delta 1 factor of 28,000 daltons instead of the sigma factor. The amount of RNA polymerase in the forespore is about twice that in the mother cell. The enzymes M sigma and F sigma also differed in their elution profiled from DEAE-cellulose columns and in their heat stabilities indicating that the two sigma-containing holoenzyme forms may be different in their structural properties. The enzyme F delta transcribed B. subtilis DNA about 1.6 times more actively than enzyme F sigma, and the enzymes M sigma and F sigma transcribed the DNA about 2.2 times more actively than did core enzyme.  相似文献   

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