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1.
Shigella surface protein IcsA and its cytoplasmic derivatives are localized to the old pole of rod-shaped cells when expressed in Escherichia coli. In spherical mreB cells, IcsA is targeted to ectopic sites and close to one extremity of actin-like MamK filament. To gain insight into the properties of the sites containing polar material, we studied the IcsA localization in spherical cells. GFP was exported into the periplasm via the Tat pathway and used as a periplasmic space marker. GFP displayed zonal fluorescence in both mreB and rodA-pbpA spherical E. coli cells, indicating an uneven periplasmic space. Deconvolution images revealed that the cytoplasmic IcsA fused to mCherry was localized outside or at the edge of the GFP zones. These observations strongly suggest that polar material is restricted to the positions where the periplasm possesses particular structural or biochemical properties.  相似文献   

2.
Localization of proteins to specific sites within bacterial cells is often critical to their function. In rod-shaped bacteria, proteins involved in diverse and important cell processes localize to the cell poles. The molecular mechanisms by which these proteins are targeted to the pole, however, are poorly understood. The Shigella autotransporter protein IcsA, which is localized to the pole on the surface of the bacterium, is targeted to the pole in the cytoplasm by a mechanism that is conserved across multiple Gram-negative bacterial species and has thus served as an important and informative model for studying polar localization. We present evidence that in Escherichia coli, the establishment of polar positional information recognized by IcsA requires the activity of the cytoplasmic membrane protein insertase YidC. We show that the role of YidC in IcsA localization is independent of the cell septation and cytokinesis proteins FtsQ and FtsEX. FtsQ is required for polar localization of IcsA and, based on cross-linking studies, is inserted in the vicinity of YidC, but, we find, is not dependent on YidC for membrane insertion. FtsEX is a YidC substrate, but we find that it is not required for polar localization of IcsA. These findings indicate that polar positional information recognized by IcsA depends on one or more membrane proteins that require YidC for proper membrane insertion.  相似文献   

3.
MreB is thought to be a bacterial actin homolog that defines the morphology of rod-shaped bacteria. Rhodobacter sphaeroides changes shape, from a rod to coccobacillus, and undergoes extensive cytoplasmic membrane invagination when it switches from aerobic to photoheterotrophic growth. The role of MreB in defining R. sphaeroides shape was therefore investigated. Attempts at deleting or insertionally inactivating mreB were unsuccessful under all growth conditions. Immunofluorescence microscopy showed MreB localized to mid-cell in elongating cells under both aerobic and photoheterotrophic conditions. Three-dimensional reconstruction showed that MreB formed a ring at mid-cell. MreB remained at mid-cell as septation began but localized to new sites in the daughter cells before the completion of septation. MreB localized to putative septation sites in cephalexin-treated filamentous cells. Genomic single-copy mreB was replaced with gfp-mreB, and green fluorescent protein (GFP)-MreB localized in the same pattern, as seen with immunofluorescence microscopy. Some of the cells expressing GFP-MreB were abnormal, principally displaying an increase in cell width, suggesting that the fusion was not fully functional in all cells. GFP-MreB localized to swellings at mid-cell in cells treated with the penicillin-binding protein 2 inhibitor amdinocillin. These data suggest that MreB is essential in R. sphaeroides, performing a role at mid-cell in elongating cells, and in early septation, putatively in the cytoplasmic control of the peptidoglycan synthetic complexes.  相似文献   

4.
MreB shares a common prokaryotic ancestor with actin and is present in almost all rod-shaped bacteria. MreB proteins have been implicated in a range of important cell processes, including cell morphogenesis, chromosome segregation and cell polarity. The mreB gene frequently lies at the beginning of a cluster of genes, immediately upstream of the conserved mreC and mreD genes. RNA analysis showed that in Bacillus subtilis mreB is co-transcribed with mreC and that these genes form part of an operon under the control of a promoter(s) upstream of mreB. Construction of an in-frame deletion of mreB and its complementation by mreB(+) only, in trans, established that the gene is important for maintenance of cell width and cell viability under normal growth conditions, independent of polar effects on downstream genes. Remarkably, virtually normal growth was restored to the mreB null mutant in the presence of high concentrations of magnesium, especially when high concentrations of the osmoprotectant, sucrose were also present. Under these conditions, cells could be maintained in the complete absence of an mreB gene, with almost normal morphology. No detectable effect on chromosome segregation was evident in the mutant, nor was there an effect on the topology of nascent peptidoglycan insertion. A GFP-MreB fusion was used to look at the localization of MreB in live cells. The pattern of localization was similar to that previously described, but no tight linkage to nucleoid positioning was evident. Propagation of the mreB null mutant in the absence of magnesium and sucrose led to a progressive increase in cell width, culminating in cell lysis. Cell division was also perturbed but this effect may be secondary to the disturbance in cell width. These results suggest that the major role of MreB in B. subtilis lies in the control of cell diameter.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Certain mutants in Escherichia coli lacking multiple penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs) produce misshapen cells containing kinks, bends and branches. These deformed regions exhibit two structural characteristics of normal cell poles: the peptidoglycan is inert to dilution by new synthesis or turnover, and a similarly stable patch of outer membrane caps the sites. To test the premise that these aberrant sites represent biochemically functional but misplaced cell poles, we assessed the intracellular distribution of proteins that localize specifically to bacterial poles. Green fluorescent protein (GFP) hybrids containing polar localization sequences from the Shigella flexneri IcsA protein or from the Vibrio cholerae EpsM protein formed foci at the poles of wild-type E. coli and at the poles and morphological abnormalities in PBP mutants. In addition, secreted wild-type IcsA localized to the outer membrane overlying these aberrant domains. We conclude that the morphologically deformed sites in these mutants represent fully functional poles or pole fragments. The results suggest that prokaryotic morphology is driven, at least in part, by the controlled placement of polar material, and that one or more of the low-molecular-weight PBPs participate in this process. Such mutants may help to unravel how particular proteins are targeted to bacterial poles, thereby creating important biochemical and functional asymmetries.  相似文献   

7.
Asymmetric localization of proteins is essential to many biological functions of bacteria. Shigella IcsA, an outer membrane protein, is localized to the old pole of the bacillus, where it mediates assembly of a polarized actin tail during infection of mammalian cells. Actin tail assembly provides the propulsive force for intracellular movement and intercellular dissemination. Localization of IcsA to the pole is independent of the amino-terminal signal peptide (Charles, M., Perez, M., Kobil, J.H., and Goldberg, M.B., 2001, Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 98: 9871-9876) suggesting that IcsA targeting occurs in the bacterial cytoplasm and that its secretion across the cytoplasmic membrane occurs only at the pole. Here, we characterize the mechanism by which IcsA is secreted across the cytoplasmic membrane. We present evidence that IcsA requires the SecA ATPase and the SecYEG membrane channel (translocon) for secretion. Our data suggest that YidC is not required for IcsA secretion. Furthermore, we show that polar localization of IcsA is independent of SecA. Finally, we demonstrate that while IcsA requires the SecYEG translocon for secretion, components of this apparatus are uniformly distributed within the membrane. Based on these data, we propose a model for coordinate polar targeting and secretion of IcsA at the bacterial pole.  相似文献   

8.
Bacterial actin-like proteins play a key role in cell morphology and in chromosome segregation. Many bacteria, like Bacillus subtilis, contain three genes encoding actin-like proteins, called mreB, mbl and mreBH in B. subtilis. We show that MreB and Mbl colocalize extensively within live cells, and that all three B. subtilis actin paralogues interact with each other underneath the cell membrane. A mutation in the phosphate 2 motif of MreB had a dominant negative effect on cell morphology and on chromosome segregation. Expression of this mutant allele of MreB interfered with the dynamic localization of Mbl. These experiments show that the interaction between MreB and Mbl has physiological significance. An mreB deletion strain can grow under special media conditions, however, depletion of Mbl in this mutant background abolished growth, indicating that actin paralogues can partially complement each other. The membrane protein MreC was found to interact with Mbl, but not with MreB, revealing a clear distinction between the function of the two paralogues. The phosphate 2 mutant MreB protein allowed for filament formation of mutant or wild-type MreB, but abolished the dynamic reorganization of the filaments. The latter mutation led to a strong reduction, but not complete loss, of function of MreB, both in terms of chromosome segregation and of cell morphology. Our work shows that that the dynamic localization of MreB is essential for the proper activity of the actin-like protein and that the interactions between MreB paralogues have important physiological significance.  相似文献   

9.
The bacterial actin homologue MreB plays a key role in cell morphogenesis. In Bacillus subtilis MreB is essential under normal growth conditions and mreB mutants are defective in the control of cell diameter. However, the precise role of MreB is still unclear. Analysis of the lethal phenotypic consequences of mreB disruption revealed an unusual bulging phenotype that precedes cell death. A similar phenotype was seen in wild-type cells at very low Mg2+ concentrations. We found that inactivation of the major bi-functional penicillin-binding protein (PBP) PBP1 of B. subtilis restored the viability of an mreB null mutant as well as preventing bulging in both mutant and wild-type backgrounds. Bulging was associated with delocalization of PBP1. We show that the normal pattern of localization of PBP1 is dependent on MreB and that the proteins can physically interact using in vivo pull-down and bacterial two-hybrid approaches. Interactions between MreB and several other PBPs were also detected. Our results suggest that MreB filaments associate directly with the peptidoglycan biosynthetic machinery in B. subtilis as part of the mechanism that brings about controlled cell elongation.  相似文献   

10.
The YvcK protein was previously shown to be dispensable when B. subtilis cells are grown on glycolytic carbon sources but essential for growth and normal shape on gluconeogenic carbon sources. Here, we report that YvcK is localized as a helical-like pattern in the cell. This localization seems independent of the actin-like protein, MreB. A YvcK overproduction restores a normal morphology in an mreB mutant strain when bacteria are grown on PAB medium. Reciprocally, an additional copy of mreB restores a normal growth and morphology in a yvcK mutant strain when bacteria are grown on a gluconeogenic carbon source like gluconate. Furthermore, as already observed for the mreB mutant, the deletion of the gene encoding the penicillin-binding protein PBP1 restores growth and normal shape of a yvcK mutant on gluconeogenic carbon sources. The PBP1 is delocalized in an mreB mutant grown in the absence of magnesium and in a yvcK mutant grown on gluconate medium. Interestingly, its proper localization can be rescued by YvcK overproduction. Therefore, in gluconeogenic growth conditions, YvcK is required for the correct localization of PBP1 and hence for displaying a normal rod shape.  相似文献   

11.
【目的】在大肠杆菌中克隆表达蜜蜂螺原体细胞骨架相关基因mreB1?5,并预测所编码蛋白的理化性质,分析这些基因在螺原体螺旋状和非螺旋状时的表达水平,为进一步分析该基因的功能奠定基础。【方法】通过PCR扩增,从Spiroplasma melliferum CH-1基因组中获得mreB1?5基因,构建的重组表达载体pETmreB1?5分别在大肠杆菌BL21中诱导表达,利用镍亲和树脂纯化重组蛋白,通过在线工具预测MreB蛋白质的理化性质和功能域。利用Real-Time PCR比较螺原体CH-1在两种不同形态时mreB1?5基因的表达量。【结果】成功克隆到5个mreB基因,并在大肠杆菌BL21中高效表达。MreB蛋白分子量分别为36、23、23、37和25 kD,可能均为疏水性的蛋白,属于MreB/Mbl蛋白质家族。荧光定量PCR结果显示,螺原体在非螺旋状时mreB1?5基因的表达水平均远低于在螺旋状时基因的表达水平。【结论】本文第一次克隆表达了螺原体细胞骨架相关基因mreB1?5,初步表明这些基因在螺原体形态方面可能具有重要作用,为后续研究螺原体mreB基因在其运动和形态方面的功能提供了重要信息。  相似文献   

12.
This report describes a new transposon designed to facilitate the combined use of beta-galactosidase and alkaline phosphatase gene fusions in the analysis of protein localization. The transposon, called TnlacZ, is a Tn5 derivative that permits the generation of gene fusions encoding hybrid proteins carrying beta-galactosidase at their C termini. In tests with plasmids, TnlacZ insertions that led to high cellular beta-galactosidase activity were restricted to sequences encoding either cytoplasmic proteins or cytoplasmic segments of a membrane protein. The fusion characteristics of TnlacZ are thus complementary to those of TnphoA, a transposon able to generate alkaline phosphatase fusions whose high-activity insertion sites generally correspond to periplasmic sequences. The structure of TnlacZ allows the conversion of a TnlacZ fusion into the corresponding TnphoA fusion (and vice versa) through recombination or in vitro manipulation in a process called fusion switching. Fusion switching was used to generate the following two types of fusions with unusual properties: a low-specific-activity beta-galactosidase-alkaline phosphatase gene fusion and two toxic periplasmic-domain serine chemoreceptor-beta-galactosidase gene fusions. The generation of both beta-galactosidase and alkaline phosphatase fusions at exactly the same site in a protein permits a comparison of the two enzyme activities in evaluating the subcellular location of the site, such as in studies of membrane protein topology. In addition, fusion switching makes it possible to generate gene fusions whose properties should facilitate the isolation of mutants defective in the export or membrane anchoring of different cell envelope proteins.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Establishment of an axis of cell polarity and differentiation of the cell poles are fundamental aspects of cellular development in many organisms. We compared the effects of two bacterial cytoskeletal-like systems, the MreB and MinCDE systems, on these processes in Escherichia coli. We report that the Min proteins are capable of establishing an axis of oscillation that is the initial step in establishment of polarity in spherical cells, in a process that is independent of the MreB cytoskeleton. In contrast, the MreB system is required for establishment of the rod shape of the cell and for polar targeting of other polar constituents, such as the Shigella virulence factor IcsA and the aspartate chemoreceptor Tar, in a process that is independent of the Min system. Thus, the two bacterial cytoskeletal-like systems act independently on different aspects of cell polarization.  相似文献   

15.
Autotransporters are outer membrane proteins that are widely distributed among gram-negative bacteria. Like other autotransporters, the Shigella autotransporter IcsA, which is required for actin assembly during infection, is secreted at the bacterial pole. In the bacterial cytoplasm, IcsA localizes to poles and potential cell division sites independent of the cell division protein FtsZ. To identify bacterial proteins involved in the targeting of IcsA to the pole in the bacterial cytoplasm, we screened a genome-scale library of Escherichia coli proteins tagged with green fluorescent protein (GFP) for those that displayed a localization pattern similar to that of IcsA-GFP in cells that lack functional FtsZ using a strain carrying a temperature-sensitive ftsZ allele. For each protein that mimicked the localization of IcsA-GFP, we tested whether IcsA localization was dependent on the presence of the protein. Although these approaches did not identify a polar receptor for IcsA, the cytoplasmic chaperone DnaK both mimicked IcsA localization at elevated temperatures as a GFP fusion and was required for the localization of IcsA to the pole in the cytoplasm of E. coli. DnaK was also required for IcsA secretion at the pole in Shigella flexneri. The localization of DnaK-GFP to poles and potential cell division sites was dependent on elevated growth temperature and independent of the presence of IcsA or functional FtsZ; native DnaK was found to be enhanced at midcell and the poles. A second Shigella autotransporter, SepA, also required DnaK for secretion, consistent with a role of DnaK more generally in the chaperoning of autotransporter proteins in the bacterial cytoplasm.The Shigella outer membrane protein IcsA is unusual in that it is secreted at the bacterial old pole (9, 13, 24). The secreted protein forms a cap at the old pole (Fig. (Fig.1A),1A), where during the infection of host cells, it interacts with cellular actin cytoskeletal proteins to induce the formation of propulsive actin tails (6, 43, 70). Actin tail formation is essential to the spread of Shigella spp. through cell monolayers and mammalian tissues (6, 43, 47) and is critical for Shigella virulence (15, 60). IcsA is a member of the autotransporter family of secreted proteins in gram-negative bacteria. Approximately 700 autotransporter proteins are predicted to be encoded within bacterial genomes that had been annotated as of 2003 (54). All autotransporter proteins for which the site of secretion has been determined are, like IcsA, secreted at the bacterial old pole (35).Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Design of screen for proteins that, like IcsA, localize to potential division sites independent of FtsZ. (A) Localization of IcsA on the surface of S. flexneri. Immunofluorescence using antibody to IcsA. (B) Localization of IcsA507-620-GFP (expressed from pBAD24-icsA507-620::gfp) to poles of single cells of E. coli MC4100 leu::Tn10 ftsZ84(Ts) grown at the permissive temperature (30°C). (C) Localization of IcsA507-620-GFP to potential cell division sites of E. coli MC4100 leu::Tn10 ftsZ84(Ts) grown at the nonpermissive temperature (42°C). (D) Diagram of the strategy used to identify proteins of E. coli that localize to potential cell division sites independent of FtsZ, displaying a localization pattern similar to that shown for IcsA in panel C. Image from DnaK-GFP localization (expressed from leaky promoter on pCA24N-dnaK, without induction) in screen well; incomplete overlay of GFP with phase-contrast microscopy is due to the movement of cells between capturing the two images, as cells were imaged live. Size bars = 2 μm (A and B) and 5 μm (C and D). Images are representative. O/N, overnight.Several other secreted bacterial proteins are also localized to one or both cell poles; these include the Listeria monocytogenes actin assembly protein ActA (39), components of the chemotaxis apparatus in Escherichia coli and Caulobacter crescentus (1, 46, 66), the Legionella pneumophila and Agrobacterium tumifaciens type IV secretion systems (14, 40), Pseudomonas aeruginosa type IV pili (8), protein components of the cell cycle regulatory pathways in C. crescentus (reviewed in reference 72), the DNA transfer apparatus in Bacillus subtilis and Streptomyces spp. (26, 28), and polar flagella in Vibrio cholerae, Campylobacter spp., Helicobacter spp., C. crescentus, and other gram-negative bacteria. In L. monocytogenes, the polarity of ActA is established after ActA secretion and likely depends on differential growth rates of the cell wall along the length of the bacterium (56). In C. crescentus, TipN serves as a polar developmental landmark (31, 42), and RcdA provides temporal and spatial specificity in the regulated proteolysis of key factors involved in polar asymmetry (50). Beyond these studies, relatively little is known about the molecular mechanisms that mediate the proper localization of polar bacterial proteins.Chemical or genetic blockade of cell division leads to the formation of filamentous cells without septa. In cells that have been filamented by either blocking FtsI or depleting functional FtsZ, a cytoplasmic derivative of IcsA localizes at or near potential cell division sites (36), which represent the sites of future cell poles. IcsA also localizes to potential division sites independent of nucleoid occlusion (36), together indicating that the positional information directing IcsA polarity is independent of these cell division proteins and chromosome positioning. The molecules that are required for the localization of IcsA to the cell pole have not been identified.One model of IcsA localization to the pole is that freely diffusing cytoplasmic IcsA recognizes and binds a protein receptor that is present at poles and future poles. Although icsA is present only in Shigella spp., upon heterologous expression, IcsA localizes to the poles of other Enterobacteriaceae (13, 58, 59), indicating that if targeting occurs via binding to a polar receptor, the receptor is likely conserved among members of this family. In addition, since IcsA localizes independently of FtsZ and FtsI, the localization of a putative polar receptor to the pole must also be independent of these cell division proteins. To find proteins that might serve as a polar receptor for IcsA, we first conducted a genome-wide screen designed to identify the subset of E. coli proteins that localize to poles and to potential cell division sites independently of functional FtsZ. For each conserved protein that displayed this localization pattern, we then tested whether it played a role in the polar localization of IcsA. We found that, under the conditions of our screen, a green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusion to the cytoplasmic chaperone DnaK localizes to cell poles and potential cell division sites. Although DnaK is not a polar receptor for IcsA, we demonstrated that it was required for the localization of IcsA to the pole in the bacterial cytoplasm in E. coli and for the secretion of both IcsA and a second Shigella autotransporter, SepA, in native Shigella flexneri, consistent with a critical role of DnaK in the chaperoning of IcsA and SepA, and perhaps autotransporter proteins more generally, in the bacterial cytoplasm.  相似文献   

16.
Shigella flexneri is an intracellular pathogen that is able to move within the cytoplasm of infected cells by the continual assembly of actin onto one pole of the bacterium. IcsA, an outer membrane protein, is localized to the old pole of the bacterium and is both necessary and sufficient for actin assembly. IcsA is slowly cleaved from the bacterial surface by the protease IcsP (SopA). Absence of IcsP leads to an alteration in the distribution of surface IcsA, such that the polar cap is maintained and some IcsA is distributed along the lateral walls of the bacillus. The mechanism of unipolar localization of IcsA and the role of IcsP in its unipolar localization are incompletely understood. Here, we demonstrate that cleavage of IcsA occurs exclusively in the outer membrane and that IcsP is localized to the outer membrane. In addition, we show that IcsA at the old pole is susceptible to cleavage by IcsP and that native IcsP is active at the pole. Taken together, these data indicate that IcsP cleaves IcsA over the entire bacterial surface. Finally, we show that, immediately after induction from a tightly regulated promoter, IcsA is expressed exclusively at the old pole in both the icsP- icsA- and the icsA- background. These data demonstrate that unipolar localization of IcsA results from its direct targeting to the pole, followed by its diffusion laterally in the outer membrane.  相似文献   

17.
We present a cryo-electron tomographic analysis of the three-dimensional architecture of a strain of the Gram-negative bacterium Bdellovibrio bacteriovorus in which endogenous MreB2 was replaced with monomeric teal fluorescent protein (mTFP)-labeled MreB2. In contrast to wild-type Bdellovibrio cells that predominantly displayed a compact nucleoid region, cells expressing mTFP-labeled MreB2 displayed a twisted spiral organization of the nucleoid. The more open structure of the MreB2-mTFP nucleoids enabled clear in situ visualization of ribosomes decorating the periphery of the nucleoid. Ribosomes also bordered the edges of more compact nucleoids from both wild-type cells and mutant cells. Surprisingly, MreB2-mTFP localized to the interface between the spiral nucleoid and the cytoplasm, suggesting an intimate connection between nucleoid architecture and MreB arrangement. Further, in contrast to wild-type cells, where a single tight chemoreceptor cluster localizes close to the single polar flagellum, MreB2-mTFP cells often displayed extended chemoreceptor arrays present at one or both poles and displayed multiple or inaccurately positioned flagella. Our findings provide direct structural evidence for spiral organization of the bacterial nucleoid and suggest a possible role for MreB in regulation of nucleoid architecture and localization of the chemotaxis apparatus.  相似文献   

18.
May KL  Morona R 《Journal of bacteriology》2008,190(13):4666-4676
The IcsA (VirG) protein of Shigella flexneri is a polarly localized, outer membrane protein that is essential for virulence. Within host cells, IcsA activates the host actin regulatory protein, neural Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein (N-WASP), which in turn recruits the Arp2/3 complex, which nucleates host actin to form F-actin comet tails and initiate bacterial motility. Linker insertion mutagenesis was undertaken to randomly introduce 5-amino-acid in-frame insertions within IcsA. Forty-seven linker insertion mutants were isolated and expressed in S. flexneri Delta icsA strains. Mutants were characterized for IcsA protein production, cell surface expression and localization, intercellular spreading, F-actin comet tail formation, and N-WASP recruitment. Using this approach, we have identified a putative autochaperone region required for IcsA biogenesis, and our data suggest an additional region, not previously identified, is required for N-WASP recruitment.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Bacterial chemotaxis depends on signalling through large protein complexes. Each cell must inherit a complex on division, suggesting some co‐ordination with cell division. In Escherichia coli the membrane‐spanning chemosensory complexes are polar and new static complexes form at pre‐cytokinetic sites, ensuring positioning at the new pole after division and suggesting a role for the bacterial cytoskeleton. Rhodobacter sphaeroides has both membrane‐associated and cytoplasmic, chromosome‐associated chemosensory complexes. We followed the relative positions of the two chemosensory complexes, FtsZ and MreB in aerobic and in photoheterotrophic R. sphaeroides cells using fluorescence microscopy. FtsZ forms polar spots after cytokinesis, which redistribute to the midcell forming nodes from which FtsZ extends circumferentially to form the Z‐ring. Membrane‐associated chemosensory proteins form a number of dynamic unit‐clusters with mature clusters containing about 1000 CheW3 proteins. Individual clusters diffuse randomly within the membrane, accumulating at new poles after division but not colocalizing with either FtsZ or MreB. The cytoplasmic complex colocalizes with FtsZ at midcells in new‐born cells. Before cytokinesis one complex moves to a daughter cell, followed by the second moving to the other cell. These data indicate that two homologous complexes use different mechanisms to ensure partitioning, and neither complex utilizes FtsZ or MreB for positioning.  相似文献   

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