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The coiled-coil domain of Escherichia coli FtsLB is a structurally detuned element critical for modulating its activation in bacterial cell division
Authors:Samuel J Craven  Samson GF Condon  Gladys Díaz Vzquez  Qiang Cui  Alessandro Senes
Institution:1.Department of Biochemistry, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA;2.Integrated Program in Biochemistry, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA;3.Biophysics Graduate Program, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA;4.Department of Chemistry, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Abstract:The FtsLB complex is a key regulator of bacterial cell division, existing in either an off state or an on state, which supports the activation of septal peptidoglycan synthesis. In Escherichia coli, residues known to be critical for this activation are located in a region near the C-terminal end of the periplasmic coiled-coil domain of FtsLB, raising questions about the precise role of this conserved domain in the activation mechanism. Here, we investigate an unusual cluster of polar amino acids found within the core of the FtsLB coiled coil. We hypothesized that these amino acids likely reduce the structural stability of the domain and thus may be important for governing conformational changes. We found that mutating these positions to hydrophobic residues increased the thermal stability of FtsLB but caused cell division defects, suggesting that the coiled-coil domain is a “detuned” structural element. In addition, we identified suppressor mutations within the polar cluster, indicating that the precise identity of the polar amino acids is important for fine-tuning the structural balance between the off and on states. We propose a revised structural model of the tetrameric FtsLB (named the “Y-model”) in which the periplasmic domain splits into a pair of coiled-coil branches. In this configuration, the hydrophilic terminal moieties of the polar amino acids remain more favorably exposed to water than in the original four-helix bundle model (“I-model”). We propose that a shift in this architecture, dependent on its marginal stability, is involved in activating the FtsLB complex and triggering septal cell wall reconstruction.
Keywords:bacterial cell division  membrane proteins  computational modeling  coiled coils  protein stability
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