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1.
Recently, electron microscopic studies on the eubacteria Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Thermoanaerobacterium sp., and Escherichia coli have revealed the existence of cytoskeletal elements so far unknown in prokaryotes. The wall-less bacterium M. pneumoniae contains, in close vicinity to the inner face of the cytoplasmic membrane, a helically organized lining composed of protein elements that form a regular network of meshes that encloses the entire cytoplasm. Numerous regularly spaced pin-like structural elements, the stalks with terminal knobs, connect the lining with the cytoplasmic membrane. In this bacterium, a specific rod-like structural element is located in the tip region. Occasionally, it is bent or twisted. It consists of two matching blade-like sub-elements. A number of parallel linkers, extending from the edges of the rod, make contact with the lining. The proximal end of the rod is attached to a wheel-like complex. Fibrils originating from the wheel cross the cytoplasm and make contact with the lining. E. coli contains a similar helically organized lining close to the inner face of the cytoplasmic membrane. Groups of ribosomes (polysomes) were seen to be attached to the helical elements of the lining. A feature that is common to both bacteria and to Thermoanaerobacterium sp. appears to be that the lining and the fibrils crossing the cytoplasm contain a high number of copies of the bacterial elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu). This indicates that this protein may play an important role as a structural element in bacterial cytoskeletons. This notion was supported by experiments in which the cytoskeleton in E. coli was destabilized by induced expression of truncated EF-Tu, with the consequence of cell lysis, and by the finding that in vitro polymerization of monomeric EF-Tu into protofilaments was hindered in a mixture of full-size EF-Tu and truncated EF-Tu consisting of domain 3 only. Current research and developmental efforts are aimed at the design of a new class of antibacterial drugs, acting by destabilization of the EF-Tu-containing bacterial cytoskeleton, and of an innovative mode of inducible lysis of recombinant bacteria by controlled destabilization of the EF-Tu-containing cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

2.
长期以来,人们认为细胞骨架仅为真核生物所特有的结构,但近年来的研究发现它也存在于细菌等原核生物中。目前已经在细菌中发现的FtsZ、MreB和CreS依次与真核细胞骨架蛋白中的微管蛋白、肌动蛋白丝及中间丝类似。FtsZ能在细胞分裂位点装配形成Z环结构,并通过该结构参与细胞分裂的调控;MreB能形成螺旋丝状结构,其主要功能有维持细胞形态、调控染色体分离等;CreS存在于新月柄杆菌中,它在细胞凹面的细胞膜下面形成弯曲丝状或螺旋丝状结构,该结构对维持新月柄杆菌细胞的形态具有重要作用。  相似文献   

3.
In preparation for transmission to its mosquito vector, Plasmodium falciparum, the most virulent of the human malaria parasites, adopts an unusual elongated shape. Here we describe a previously unrecognized actin‐based cytoskeleton that is assembled in maturing P. falciparum gametocytes. Differential extraction reveals the presence of a highly stabilized population of F‐actin at all stages of development. Super‐resolution microscopy reveals an F‐actin cytoskeleton that is concentrated at the ends of the elongating gametocyte but extends inward along the microtubule cytoskeleton. Formin‐1 is also concentrated at the gametocyte ends suggesting a role in actin stabilization. Immunoelectron microscopy confirms that the actin cytoskeleton is located under the inner membrane complex rather than in the sub‐alveolar space. In stage V gametocytes, the actin and microtubule cytoskeletons are reorganized in a coordinated fashion. The actin‐depolymerizing agent, cytochalasin D, depletes actin from the end of the gametocytes, whereas the actin‐stabilizing compound, jasplakinolide, induces formation of large bundles and prevents late‐stage disassembly of the actin cytoskeleton. Long‐term treatment with these compounds is associated with disruption of the normal mitochondrial organization and decreased gametocyte viability.  相似文献   

4.
The Mollicutes (Mycoplasma, Acholeplasma, and Spiroplasma) are the smallest, simplest and most primitive free-living and self-replicating known cells. These bacteria have evolved from Clostridia by regressive evolution and genome reduction to the range of 5.8 x 10(5)-2.2 x 10(6) basepairs (bp). Structurally, the Mollicutes completely lack cell walls and are enveloped by only a cholesterol containing cell membrane. The Mollicutes contain what can be defined as a bacterial cytoskeleton. The Spiroplasmas are unique in having a well-defined, dynamic, helical cell geometry and a flat, monolayered, membrane-bound cytoskeleton, which follows, intracellularly, the shortest helical line on the cellular coil. By applying cryo-electron-microscopy to whole cells, isolated cytoskeletons and cytoskeletal fibrils and subunits, as well as by selective extraction of cellular components, we determined, at a resolution of approximately 25 A, the cellular and molecular organization of the cytoskeleton. The cytoskeleton is assembled from a 59 kDa protein. The 59 kDa protein, has an equivalent sphere diameter of approximately 50 A. Given the approximately 100 A axial and lateral spacings in the cytoskeletal ribbons and the near-circular shape of the subunit, we suggest that the subunit is a tetramer of 59 kDa monomers; the tetramers assemble further into flat fibrils, seven of which form a flat, monolayered, well-ordered ribbon. The cytoskeleton may function as a linear motor by differential and coordinated length-changes of the fibrils driven by conformational changes of the tetrameric subunits, the shape of which changes from near circular to elliptical. The cytoskeleton controls both the dynamic helical shape and the consequent motility of the cell. A stable cluster of proteins co-purifies with the cytoskeleton. These apparent membrane and membrane-associated proteins may function as anchor proteins.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Following parasitization by Plasmodium falciparum, numerous changes take place in the host erythrocyte membrane. In this study, we used the technique of whole cell mount electron microscopy to determine if the ultrastructure of the erythrocyte cytoskeleton changed following parasitization with knobby and knobless strains of P. falciparum. Using this technique, a network of spectrin filaments (3-10 X 45-120 nm) branching from electron dense junctions (15-25 nm in diameter), the presumed site of bands 4.1 and actin, were visualized. The overall architecture of normal and parasitized erythrocyte cytoskeletons was the same: however, additional patches (35 to 60 nm in size) and aggregates (30 X 150 nm) of electron dense material were present in parasitized skeletons. The ultrastructure of knobby and knobless cytoskeletons was similar, except knobless skeletons usually did not possess the larger aggregates of material. Antigens associated with the erythrocyte cytoskeleton of cells infected with knobby and knobless strains, but not uninfected cells, were demonstrated by indirect immunofluorescence. Results suggest that antigens, associated with the erythrocyte cytoskeleton, may contribute to perturbations in the host erythrocyte membrane.  相似文献   

7.
The proposed function of intermediate filaments is to provide a cell type-specific structural framework that maintains cell shape and organelle distribution and mediates signal transduction through its connections with the plasma membrane and the nucleus. Vimentin is the intermediate filament protein expressed in B lymphocytes. Immunocytochemical analysis of the high salt-stable cytoskeletons from B cells stimulated with anti-Ig revealed an increased accumulation of vimentin in the cytoskeleton compared to nontreated controls. This increased accumulation of vimentin in the cytoskeleton was manifested by the organization of vimentin into extensive filamentous arrays (EFA) as viewed in the fluorescent microscope. In contrast to the effects of anti-Ig, activation of B cells with LPS did not induce the organization of vimentin into EFA. This suggested that signals unique to anti-Ig directed EFA formation. Immunocytochemical results were verified by biochemical analysis showing that vimentin was more abundant in isolated cytoskeletons from anti-Ig activated B cells, than cytoskeletons isolated from LPS-activated B cells. These observations established a relationship between increased content of vimentin in the cytoskeleton and the formation of EFA. By testing a wide variety of activating agents, we were able to correlate increased vimentin expression in the cytoskeleton to activating agents that cross-link membrane Ig. It appeared that treatment of B cells with LPS prohibited the induction of EFA by anti-Ig because cotreatment with both anti-Ig and LPS resulted in decreased vimentin accumulation in the cytoskeleton to a level less than that in resting cells. The significance of these results with regard to B cell biology is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
The cell wall provides external support of the plant cells, while the cytoskeletons including the microtubules and the actin filaments constitute an internal framework. The cytoskeletons contribute to the cell wall biosynthesis by spatially and temporarily regulating the transportation and deposition of cell wall components. This tight control is achieved by the dynamic behavior of the cytoskeletons, but also through the tethering of these structures to the plasma membrane. This tethering may also extend beyond the plasma membrane and impact on the cell wall, possibly in the form of a feedback loop. In this review, we discuss the linking components between the cytoskeletons and the plasma membrane, and/or the cell wall. We also discuss the prospective roles of these components in cell wall biosynthesis and modifications, and aim to provide a platform for further studies in this field.  相似文献   

9.
Mechanism of polarization of Listeria monocytogenes surface protein ActA   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The polar distribution of the ActA protein on the surface of the Gram-positive intracellular bacterial pathogen, Listeria monocytogenes, is required for bacterial actin-based motility and successful infection. ActA spans both the bacterial membrane and the peptidoglycan cell wall. We have directly examined the de novo ActA polarization process in vitro by using an ActA-RFP (red fluorescent protein) fusion. After induction of expression, ActA initially appeared at distinct sites along the sides of bacteria and was then redistributed over the entire cylindrical cell body through helical cell wall growth. The accumulation of ActA at the bacterial poles displayed slower kinetics, occurring over several bacterial generations. ActA accumulated more efficiently at younger, less inert poles, and proper polarization required an optimal balance between protein secretion and bacterial growth rates. Within infected host cells, younger generations of L. monocytogenes initiated motility more quickly than older ones, consistent with our in vitro observations of de novo ActA polarization. We propose a model in which the polarization of ActA, and possibly other Gram-positive cell wall-associated proteins, may be a direct consequence of the differential cell wall growth rates along the bacterium and dependent on the relative rates of protein secretion, protein degradation and bacterial growth.  相似文献   

10.
In the absence of an overt cytoskeleton, the external cell wall of bacteria has traditionally been assumed to be the primary determinant of cell shape. In the Gram-positive bacterium Bacillus subtilis, two related genes, mreB and mbl, were shown to be required for different aspects of cell morphogenesis. Subcellular localization of the MreB and Mbl proteins revealed that each forms a distinct kind of filamentous helical structure lying close to the cell surface. The distribution of the proteins in different species of bacteria, and the similarity of their sequence to eukaryotic actins, suggest that the MreB-like proteins have a cytoskeletal, actin-like role in bacterial cell morphogenesis.  相似文献   

11.
The cytoskeleton is a key regulator of cell morphogenesis. Crescentin, a bacterial intermediate filament‐like protein, is required for the curved shape of Caulobacter crescentus and localizes to the inner cell curvature. Here, we show that crescentin forms a single filamentous structure that collapses into a helix when detached from the cell membrane, suggesting that it is normally maintained in a stretched configuration. Crescentin causes an elongation rate gradient around the circumference of the sidewall, creating a longitudinal cell length differential and hence curvature. Such curvature can be produced by physical force alone when cells are grown in circular microchambers. Production of crescentin in Escherichia coli is sufficient to generate cell curvature. Our data argue for a model in which physical strain borne by the crescentin structure anisotropically alters the kinetics of cell wall insertion to produce curved growth. Our study suggests that bacteria may use the cytoskeleton for mechanical control of growth to alter morphology.  相似文献   

12.
When rat red blood cells were incubated in a cadmium (Cd)-free medium following 1-h pretreatment with 0.5 mM CdCl2, incorporated Cd was retained in the cell during 14-h incubation and progressively accumulated in the membrane fraction, especially in the cytoskeleton fraction. In parallel to this accumulation, red cell filterability decreased and echinocytic cells increased, although intracellular ATP was maintained at the control level. The echinocytic shape was maintained in ghosts and cytoskeletons prepared from the Cd-loaded cells. In addition, the association of bands 2.1, 3, 4.2, and 4.5 with cytoskeletons increased and dissociation of cytoskeletal networks at low ionic strength decreased as the incubation time increased. Pretreatment of red blood cells with Cd also induced a release of small vesicles. These vesicles contained hemoglobin but were depleted of spectrin and actin, showing a phospholipid composition similar to that of red cell ghosts. These results suggest that the organization of cell membranes, especially cytoskeletal networks, is altered by Cd accumulation in the cytoskeleton fraction, which results in acceleration of age-related changes of red blood cells such as shape change and decreased filterability.  相似文献   

13.
MreB, MreC and MreD are essential cell shape-determining morphogenetic proteins in Gram-positive and in Gram-negative bacteria. While MreB, the bacterial homologue of the eukaryotic cytoskeletal protein actin, has been extensively studied, the roles of MreC and MreD are less well understood. They both are transmembrane proteins. MreC has a predicted single transmembrane domain and the C-terminal part outside the cell membrane. MreC probably functions as a link between the intracellular cytoskeleton and the cell wall synthesizing machinery which is located at the outer surface of the cell membrane. Also proteins involved in cell wall synthesis participate in cell morphogenesis. How these two processes are coordinated is, however, poorly understood. Bacillus subtilis (BS), a non-pathogenic Gram-positive bacterium, is widely used as a model for Gram-positive pathogens, e.g. Staphylococcus aureus (SA). Currently, the structures of MreC from BS and SA are not known. As part of our efforts to elucidate the structure–function relationships of the morphogenetic protein complexes in Gram-positive bacteria, we present the backbone and side chain resonance assignments of the extracytoplasmic domain of MreC from BS.  相似文献   

14.
The structure and motility of the Mollicutes (Spiroplasma, Mycoplasma, and Acholeplasma) are briefly reviewed. The data are presented from the perspective of prokaryotic and eukaryotic motors, cytoskeletons, and cell motility. The Mollicutes are eubacteria derived from Clostridia by regressive evolution and genome reduction to produce the smallest and simplest free-living and self-replicating cells. Structurally, the Mollicutes are characterized by a complete lack of a cell wall and the presence of an internal cytoskeleton. Spiroplasma, which are helical cells with a flat, ribbon-like cytoskeleton, are amenable to structural and geometrical analysis. Motility and shape changes can be explained and modeled by the cytoskeleton acting as a linear motor.  相似文献   

15.
The aim of this work was to identify the initial binding sites to the bacterial membranes of the antimicrobial peptide alphas2-casein f(183-207) and also to acquire further insight into membrane permeabilization of this peptide. Furthermore, cell morphology was studied by transmission electron microscopy. In all the experiments, bovine LFcin was employed as a comparison. Results showed that initial binding sites of alphas2-casein f(183-207) peptide were lipoteichoic acid in Gram-positive bacteria and lipopolysaccharide in Gram-negative. The peptide was able to permeabilize the outer and inner membranes. Moreover, the alphas2-casein peptide f(183-207) generated pores in the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria and in the cell wall of Gram-positive bacteria. In the Gram-negative bacteria, f(183-207) originated cytoplasm condensation, and in the Gram-positive bacteria the cytoplasmic content leaked into the extracellular medium. Furthermore, the experiments of inner and outer membrane permeabilization performed with LFcin-B showed that this peptide also has the ability to permeabilize both the inner and outer membranes.  相似文献   

16.
Summary The organization of the submembrane cytoskeleton of non-photoreceptive, accessory cells in the honeybee compound eye was examined using light-microscopic (phallotoxin labeling, immunohistochemistry) and electron-microscopic (decoration with myosin fragments) techniques. The crystalline cone cells contain numerous peripheral actin filaments oriented longitudinally with antiparallel polarity. Bundles of microtubules lie under the plasma membrane of primary pigment cells, in close apposition to the crystalline cone; they are interspersed with only a few actin filaments. Pigmented glial cells (secondary pigment cells) contain a two-dimensional filament/particle web lining their entire plasma membranes. Both filamentous actin and -spectrin are localized within the cortex of these cells, indicating that they are web components. The results demonstrate that the three cell types contain different cortical cytoskeletons, implying different functional properties.  相似文献   

17.
An electron microscopic and cytochemical study of the Whipple bacillus in jejunal biopsies from three untreated patients was made using fixation procedures developed for the satisfactory preservation of bacterial ultrastructure. The envelopes of the normal-looking bacilli present free in the lamina propria consisted of the following layers. (i) A cytoplasmic membrane with a triple-layered profile and a mean thickness (peak-to-peak distance) of 6.08 nm. (ii) A thick (20 nm) cell wall containing peptidoglycan; the wall had a hitherto undescribed inner layer that contained polysaccharides, possibly teichoic acids. (iii) Surrounding the cell wall, a surface membrane with a symmetric profile and a mean peak-to-peak distance of 4.74 nm. The ultrastructural pattern of the Whipple bacillus wall corresponds to that of Gram-positive bacteria, but with an additional surface membrane. This membrane is different from the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria because it has a symmetric profile, is thinner and has no periodic acid-Schiff (PAS)-positive components. Normal-looking bacilli were seen very rarely inside jejunal macrophages, but degenerating bacteria were abundant in these phagocytes. Electron microscopy and ultrastructural cytochemistry of Whipple bacilli inside jejunal macrophages of the three untreated patients showed that the degenerative process is a sequence that leads to the loss of bacillary forms and to the accumulation of bacterial remnants resistant to degradation by the macrophage. These remnants correspond to the innermost, polysaccharide-containing portion of the bacillus wall. The progressive accumulation of these PAS-positive wall remnants is the origin of the intramacrophagic inclusions that are important in the histological diagnosis of Whipple's disease. The reported results indicate that in the three patients studied, the Whipple bacillus multiplies extracellularly, the bacteria that are phagocytosed by macrophages being degraded.  相似文献   

18.
Transparency of the ocular lens depends on symmetric packing and membrane organization of highly elongated hexagonal fiber cells. These cells possess an extensive, well-ordered cortical cytoskeleton to maintain cell shape and to anchor membrane components. Periaxin (Prx), a PDZ domain protein involved in myelin sheath stabilization, is also a component of adhaerens plaques in lens fiber cells. Here we show that Prx is expressed in lens fibers and exhibits maturation dependent redistribution, clustering discretely at the tricellular junctions in mature fiber cells. Prx exists in a macromolecular complex with proteins involved in membrane organization including ankyrin-B, spectrin, NrCAM, filensin, ezrin and desmoyokin. Importantly, Prx knockout mouse lenses were found to be softer and more easily deformed than normal lenses, revealing disruptions in fiber cell hexagonal packing, membrane skeleton and membrane stability. These observations suggest a key role for Prx in maturation, packing, and membrane organization of lens fiber cells. Hence, there may be functional parallels between the roles of Prx in membrane stabilization of the myelin sheath and the lens fiber cell.  相似文献   

19.
The bacterial cytoskeleton guides the synthesis of cell wall and thus regulates cell shape. Because spatial patterning of the bacterial cytoskeleton is critical to the proper control of cell shape, it is important to ask how the cytoskeleton spatially self-organizes in the first place. In this work, we develop a quantitative model to account for the various spatial patterns adopted by bacterial cytoskeletal proteins, especially the orientation and length of cytoskeletal filaments such as FtsZ and MreB in rod-shaped cells. We show that the combined mechanical energy of membrane bending, membrane pinning, and filament bending of a membrane-attached cytoskeletal filament can be sufficient to prescribe orientation, e.g., circumferential for FtsZ or helical for MreB, with the accuracy of orientation increasing with the length of the cytoskeletal filament. Moreover, the mechanical energy can compete with the chemical energy of cytoskeletal polymerization to regulate filament length. Notably, we predict a conformational transition with increasing polymer length from smoothly curved to end-bent polymers. Finally, the mechanical energy also results in a mutual attraction among polymers on the same membrane, which could facilitate tight polymer spacing or bundling. The predictions of the model can be verified through genetic, microscopic, and microfluidic approaches.  相似文献   

20.
Two hallmarks of the Firmicute phylum, which includes the Bacilli and Clostridia classes, are their ability to form endospores and their "Gram-positive" single-membraned, thick-cell-wall envelope structure. Acetonema longum is part of a lesser-known family (the Veillonellaceae) of Clostridia that form endospores but that are surprisingly "Gram negative," possessing both an inner and outer membrane and a thin cell wall. Here, we present macromolecular resolution, 3D electron cryotomographic images of vegetative, sporulating, and germinating A. longum cells showing that during the sporulation process, the inner membrane of the mother cell is inverted and transformed to become the outer membrane of the germinating cell. Peptidoglycan persists throughout, leading to a revised, "continuous" model of its role in the process. Coupled with genomic analyses, these results point to sporulation as a mechanism by which the bacterial outer membrane may have arisen and A. longum as a potential "missing link" between single- and double-membraned bacteria.  相似文献   

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