Literature DB >> 10572304

An assessment of the role of intracellular free Ca2+ in E. coli.

I B Holland1, H E Jones, A K Campbell, A Jacq.   

Abstract

We have previously proposed that fluctuations in Ca(2+) levels should play an important role in bacteria as in eukaryotes in regulating cell cycle events (Norris et al., J. Theor. Biol. 134 (1998) 341-350). This proposal implied the presence of Ca(2+) uptake systems in bacteria, cell cycle mutants simultaneously defective in Ca(2+)-homeostasis, and perturbation of cell cycle processes when cellular Ca(2+) levels are depleted. We review the properties of new cell cycle mutants in E. coli and B. subtilis resistant to inhibitors of calmodulin, PKC or Ca(2+)-channels; the evidence for Ca(2+)-binding proteins including Acp and FtsZ; and Ca(2+)-transporters. In addition, the effects of EGTA and verapamil (a Ca(2+) channel inhibitor) on growth, protein synthesis and cell cycle events in E. coli are described. We also describe new measurements of free Ca(2+)-levels, using aequorin, in E. coli. Several new cell cycle mutants were obtained using this approach, affecting either initiation of DNA replication or in particular cell division at non-permissive temperature. Several of the mutants were also hypersensitive to EGTA and or Ca(2+). However, none of the mutants apparently involved direct alteration of a drug target and surprisingly in some cases involved specific tRNAs or a tRNA synthetase. The results also indicate that the expression of several genes in E. coli may be regulated by Ca(2+). Cell division in particular appears very sensitive to the level of cell Ca(2+), with the frequency of division clearly reduced by EGTA and by verapamil. However, whilst the effect of EGTA was clearly correlated with depletion of cellular Ca(2+) including free Ca(2+), this was not the case with verapamil which appears to change membrane fluidity and the consequent activity of membrane proteins. Measurement of free Ca(2+) in living cells indicated levels of 200-300 nM, tightly regulated in wild type cells in exponential phase, somewhat less so in stationary phase, with apparently La(2+)-sensitive PHB-polyphosphate complexes involved in Ca(2+) influx. The evidence reviewed increasingly supports a role for Ca(2+) in cellular processes in bacteria, however, any direct link to the control of cell cycle events remains to be established.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10572304     DOI: 10.1016/s0300-9084(99)00205-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochimie        ISSN: 0300-9084            Impact factor:   4.079


  30 in total

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5.  Minimization of extracellular space as a driving force in prokaryote association and the origin of eukaryotes.

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7.  LapG, required for modulating biofilm formation by Pseudomonas fluorescens Pf0-1, is a calcium-dependent protease.

Authors:  Chelsea D Boyd; Debashree Chatterjee; Holger Sondermann; George A O'Toole
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8.  Ca2+ -induced orientation of tandem collagen binding domains from clostridial collagenase ColG permits two opposing functions of collagen fibril formation and retardation.

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9.  Mechanisms of activation of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase from Escherichia coli by Ca2+ and of desensitization by trypsin.

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10.  Calcium regulates the expression of a Dictyostelium discoideum asparaginyl tRNA synthetase gene.

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