Osigwe Esue1, Laura Rupprecht, Sean X Sun, Denis Wirtz. 1. Department of Pharmaceutical Development, Genentech, South San Francisco, California, United States of America. esue.osigwe@gene.com
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Crescentin, the recently discovered bacterial intermediate filament protein, organizes into an extended filamentous structure that spans the length of the bacterium Caulobacter crescentus and plays a critical role in defining its curvature. The mechanism by which crescentin mediates cell curvature and whether crescentin filamentous structures are dynamic and/or polar are not fully understood. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Using light microscopy, electron microscopy and quantitative rheology, we investigated the mechanics and dynamics of crescentin structures. Live-cell microscopy reveals that crescentin forms structures in vivo that undergo slow remodeling. The exchange of subunits between these structures and a pool of unassembled subunits is slow during the life cycle of the cell however; in vitro assembly and gelation of C. crescentus crescentin structures are rapid. Moreover, crescentin forms filamentous structures that are elastic, solid-like, and, like other intermediate filaments, can recover a significant portion of their network elasticity after shear. The assembly efficiency of crescentin is largely unaffected by monovalent cations (K(+), Na(+)), but is enhanced by divalent cations (Mg(2+), Ca(2+)), suggesting that the assembly kinetics and micromechanics of crescentin depend on the valence of the ions present in solution. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These results indicate that crescentin forms filamentous structures that are elastic, labile, and stiff, and that their low dissociation rate from established structures controls the slow remodeling of crescentin in C. crescentus.
BACKGROUND: Crescentin, the recently discovered bacterial intermediate filament protein, organizes into an extended filamentous structure that spans the length of the bacterium Caulobacter crescentus and plays a critical role in defining its curvature. The mechanism by which crescentin mediates cell curvature and whether crescentin filamentous structures are dynamic and/or polar are not fully understood. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Using light microscopy, electron microscopy and quantitative rheology, we investigated the mechanics and dynamics of crescentin structures. Live-cell microscopy reveals that crescentin forms structures in vivo that undergo slow remodeling. The exchange of subunits between these structures and a pool of unassembled subunits is slow during the life cycle of the cell however; in vitro assembly and gelation of C. crescentus crescentin structures are rapid. Moreover, crescentin forms filamentous structures that are elastic, solid-like, and, like other intermediate filaments, can recover a significant portion of their network elasticity after shear. The assembly efficiency of crescentin is largely unaffected by monovalent cations (K(+), Na(+)), but is enhanced by divalent cations (Mg(2+), Ca(2+)), suggesting that the assembly kinetics and micromechanics of crescentin depend on the valence of the ions present in solution. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These results indicate that crescentin forms filamentous structures that are elastic, labile, and stiff, and that their low dissociation rate from established structures controls the slow remodeling of crescentin in C. crescentus.
The discovery of an intermediate filament (IF)-like protein in the bacterium
Caulobacter crescentus, crescentin [1], [2], suggests that all
three major types of cytoskeletal filamentous proteins are represented in the
prokaryotic world: actin homologs (MreB/Mbl/ParM) [3]–[5], a
tubulin homolog (FtsZ) [6]–[9], and an IF homolog
(FilP/Crescentin) [10], [11]. The amino acid
sequence of crescentin shares 25% identity and 40% similarity
with that of IF cytoplasmic protein keratin 19, and 24% identity and
40% similarity with that of IF nuclear protein lamin A. This sequence
similarity stems mainly from a regular 7-residues repetitive pattern of alternative
hydrophobic and hydrophilic residues [1], [10].Similar to FilP in Streptomyces [10], crescentin plays a critical shape-determining
function in wild-type crescent-shaped C. crescentus
[12],
[13]. In
young cultures of C. crescentus, crescentin forms a continuous
filamentous structure along the inner concave side of the cells [1], [11]. In
old stationary phase cultures, C. crescentus cells become helical
and crescentin organizes into a helical structure. C. crescentus
cells lacking crescentin lose their curvature and become straight-rod shaped. The
mechanism by which crescentin causes cell curvature is not fully understood however
studies suggest that when crescentin interacts with the cell wall during growth, it
creates an elongation rate differential that contributes to cell curvature [2], [12].
Another possible mechanism of curvature could be explained by the mislocalization of
crescentin filaments following the disruption of peptidoglycan synthesis [1].
Whether crescentin forms structures that are dynamic or polar are largely unanswered
questions. In vitro, crescentin assembles into filaments of
morphology and diameter similar to those formed by eukaryotic IFs [1],
including vimentin and keratin. However, little is known about the mode and kinetics
of crescentin filament assembly in vitro and whether crescentin structures feature
the mechanical properties required for affecting bacterial cell mechanics.Despite the important mechanical function that IFs have to perform, they form
structures that are relatively dynamic [14]–[17], albeit much less dynamic than actin and microtubule
structures [18]–[25]. For example, IF
vimentin-GFP in fibroblasts forms networks that continuously change their
organization. Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) studies show that
vimentin-GFP rapidly recovers its fluorescence with a half lifetime of
5–14 min [15]. Keratin-GFP also recovers its fluorescence, but
with a much longer halftime of ∼100 min [14]. It is unknown whether
crescentin, like its eukaryotic counterparts, forms dynamic structures that would
exchange subunits with a pool of unpolymerized crescentin in vivo.Here we present a biochemical and biophysical characterization of the dynamics of
crescentin in vitro and in vivo. Electron
microscopy (EM) and quantitative rheology in vitro are combined
with FRAP, fluorescence loss in photobleaching (FLIP), and kinetics modeling
in vivo to investigate the assembly, disassembly, organization,
dynamics, and micromechanics of crescentin filaments. These studies indicate that,
in vivo, crescentin forms filamentous structures that are not
static, but undergo slow remodeling dynamics. Similar to eukaryotic IFs, crescentin
filaments form structures that are both viscous and elastic, i.e. structures that
are stiff at short time scales and flow at long time scales. However, unlike most
eukaryotic IFs, crescentin filaments display no strain-induced hardening and poor
mechanical resilience. Together these results indicate that crescentin forms stiff,
yet dynamic, structures and that its dissociation rate, not the assembly rate,
controls the rate of remodeling of crescentin structures in C.
crescentus.
Materials and Methods
Purification of Crescentin
E. coliBL21 (DE3) cells, described in [1], transformed with
the pET 28a(+) vector derived construct containing the C. crescentus
crescentin encoding gene [1], were inoculated at 37°C in
2× YT media supplemented with 100 µg/ml ampicillin until the
culture reached an OD600 of 0.6. Production of polyhistidine-tagged
crescentin was induced with 1 mM isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG)
for 3 h. The cells were spun down at 6,000×g for 15 min, quickly
frozen by liquid nitrogen, and stored at -20°C for further use. Cell
pellets were thawed and resuspended in lysis/wash buffer (50 mM Tris buffer, pH
8.0, 300 mM NaCl, 1 mM PMSF, 6 M urea) containing lysozyme. The mixture was
sonicated and DNase I was added. The mixture was centrifuged
(150,000×g) for 1 h and the supernatant was subjected to affinity
chromatography using the Talon metal affinity resin (BD Biosciences Clontech,
CA) under denaturing conditions (6 M Urea). To remove the polyhistidine tag,
biotinylated thrombin was added to fractions containing crescentin after
dialysis in a stepwise manner into thrombin-cleavage buffer (20 mM Tris buffer,
pH 8.4, 1 M urea, 100 mM NaCl, 2.5 mM CaCl2). The cleaved
poly-histidine tag bound to biotinylated thrombin was removed with a
streptavidin resin (Novagen). Crescentin was then further purified by gel
filtration using the sephacryl S-300 resin (Sigma) equilibrated in a buffer
containing 5 mM Tris buffer, pH 8.4, 1 mM EDTA, and 1 M urea. Before use, the
purified protein was dialyzed in storage buffer (5 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.4) at
4°C and centrifuged (150,000×g) for 1 h.
Confocal Microscopy, FLIP and FRAP
C. crescentus cells described in [1] were immobilized on
1% agarose pads and visualized in PYE media at room temperature using
a Zeiss LSM 510 confocal microscope fitted with a DIC 100× objective.
Images of crescentin-GFP were obtained by excitation at 488 nm and emission at
545 nm. Photobleaching was performed according to Yoon et al.
[14]
by exposing a 100% intensity of 488 nm laser to a region of interest.
Fluorescent images were acquired before and after photobleaching using a custom
time-lapse program. We note that because of the small size of bacterial cells, a
large fraction of the cell volume is always photobleached. Therefore, full
recovery of FRAP cannot occur and an estimation of immobile fractions is
impossible. Nevertheless, the rate of recovery can be relatively reliably
estimated. In FLIP experiments, a region of the cell was repeatedly bleached and
imaged with the same image acquisition software as FRAP. The FLIP and FRAP
intensities were corrected for the total decrease in fluorescence due to
photobleaching. Mean FRAP and FLIP profiles were analyzed by simple kinetic
modeling, as described in Daniels et al, [26].
In Vitro Filament Assembly
Crescentin was assembled at room temperature by adding 1 volume of polymerizing
buffer (500 mM MES buffer, pH 6.5) to 9 volumes of crescentin in storage buffer.
The polymerizing buffer was supplemented with 1.6 M NaCl, 1.6 M KCl, 50 mM
CaCl2, or 50 mM MgCl2, as needed. Protein
concentration was measured using the calibrated BCA (bicinchoninic acid)
assay.
Electron Microscopy
The ultrastructure of crescentin filaments was examined by electron microscopy.
Crescentin was incubated in assembly buffer (50 mM MES buffer, pH 6.5) obtained
by mixing 1 volume of polymerizing buffer to 9 volumes of storage buffer. Ten
µl of solution was placed on each collodion-coated electron
microscopic grid. Grids were washed with assembly buffer and stained with
2% uranyl acetate solution [27]. Electron microscopy
was performed at the Imaging Center in Yale University with a Philips 410
transmission electron microscope at magnifications between 50,000× and
105,000×, as indicated.
Quantitative Rheology
Quantitative rheology was used to measure the mechanical properties of crescentin
during filament assembly and at steady state. After addition of the
polymerization buffer (loading deadtime, 30 s), crescentin suspensions were
placed between the 50-mm diameter cone (cone
angle = 4°) and plate of a
strain-controlled rheometer (ARES-100 TA Instrument, Piscataway, NJ) [28]. The
plate is coupled to a computer-controlled motor, which applies either steady or
oscillatory shear deformations of controlled frequency and amplitude. The cone
is connected to a torque transducer, which measures the stress induced in the
crescentin solutions by the applied shear deformations. First, oscillatory shear
deformations of a small amplitude of 1% and a frequency of 1 rad/s
were applied every 30 s and the resulting oscillatory stress was recorded until
it reached a steady state value. Here we report the in-phase and out-of-phase
components of the stress divided by the amplitude of the deformation
(1%), i.e. the elastic modulus, G′, and viscous modulus,
G″, respectively, as well as the phase angle,
δ = tan−1(G″/G′).
Next, oscillatory deformations of small amplitude (1%) and frequency
between 0.01 and 100 rad/s were applied to measure the frequency-dependent
elastic modulus, G′(ω), and viscous modulus,
G″(ω), of the crescentin filament networks. Finally,
deformations of fixed frequency (1 rad/s) and deformation amplitude between
0.1% and 1000% were applied to measure the elastic and
viscous moduli as a function of deformation amplitude γ,
G′(γ) and G″(γ), respectively.
Results
In Vivo Dynamics of Crescentin-GFP
We used FRAP to investigate the dynamics of crescentin-GFP in
vivo. A defined region of individual C. crescentus
cells was bleached with a laser pulse of 500 ms. The kinetics of recovery,
reflecting the mobility of crescentin-GFP, was monitored using time-lapsed
fluorescence confocal microscopy. After photobleaching, the fluorescence
intensity recovered slowly (Fig.
1, A and B). The mean half time of recovery was 26±2 min (mean
± standard error;
n = 12 cells). This time
represents a significant fraction of the life cycle time of a C.
crescentus cell grown on agarose pads (∼150 min). The mean
FRAP intensity profile was well fitted by an exponential curve obtained from a
simple kinetics model of exchange of crescentin-GFP subunits between bleached
and unbleached regions of the cell [29] (Fig. 1A). Partial photobleaching did not appear to affect cell
growth over 2 h (e.g. Fig.
1, A and B). On the other hand, cells that were completely bleached
appeared to stop growing and did not show any significant fluorescent recovery
(Fig. 1C). We found no
polarity in crescentin structures, which would be indicated by a net migration
of the bleached region. This result indicates that if crescentin filaments are
indeed polar, then they are arranged in an anti-polar fashion in
vivo.
Figure 1
In vivo dynamics and FRAP/FLIP analysis of
crescentin-GFP in C. crescentus.
, crescentin-GFP FRAP kinetics. The half-life time for recovery
is t1/2 = 26±1.9
min (n = 12). The curve is a fit based
on a FRAP kinetics model. , Time-lapsed fluorescence microscopy images of crescentin-GFP
following photobleaching in the indicated region of the cell. Columns
show selected images before and after photobleaching. Arrow heads show
fluorescence recovery in bleached region (white circle) of cells.
Columns correspond to DIC, GFP fluorescence and overlay, respectively. , Overlaid DIC and crescentin-GFP fluorescence micrographs in a
cell that has been completely photobleached. The cell does not recover
its fluorescence.
, Crescentin-GFP FLIP kinetics. A region in the cell
was repeatedly photobleached for 120 min and the loss in fluorescence in
the rest of the cell was measured. The rate of FLIP is
0.50±0.18 h−1
(n = 12 cells) (mean
± standard error). The curve is a fit based on a FLIP
kinetics model.
In vivo dynamics and FRAP/FLIP analysis of
crescentin-GFP in C. crescentus.
, crescentin-GFP FRAP kinetics. The half-life time for recovery
is t1/2 = 26±1.9
min (n = 12). The curve is a fit based
on a FRAP kinetics model. , Time-lapsed fluorescence microscopy images of crescentin-GFP
following photobleaching in the indicated region of the cell. Columns
show selected images before and after photobleaching. Arrow heads show
fluorescence recovery in bleached region (white circle) of cells.
Columns correspond to DIC, GFP fluorescence and overlay, respectively. , Overlaid DIC and crescentin-GFP fluorescence micrographs in a
cell that has been completely photobleached. The cell does not recover
its fluorescence.
, Crescentin-GFP FLIP kinetics. A region in the cell
was repeatedly photobleached for 120 min and the loss in fluorescence in
the rest of the cell was measured. The rate of FLIP is
0.50±0.18 h−1
(n = 12 cells) (mean
± standard error). The curve is a fit based on a FLIP
kinetics model.FRAP measurements were complemented by FLIP studies. FLIP is a method that is
particularly well suited to probe the dissociation dynamics of GFP-labeled
proteins from established structures. A defined crescentin-GFP-containing region
of the cell was repeatedly bleached using a 500-ms laser pulse and the cell was
imaged by time-lapsed confocal microscopy. The fluorescence intensity in the
unbleached region of the cell declined exponentially, with a rate of
0.50±0.18 h−1
(n = 12 cells) (Fig. 1D). This slow rate of
FLIP is consistent with the slow rate of recovery in the FRAP experiments.
Together the results of these FRAP and FLIP studies suggest that the slow
dynamics of crescentin-GFP is controlled by the slow dissociation of crescentin
subunits from established crescentin structures. We used time-lapsed confocal
fluorescence and DIC microscopy to investigate the organization of
crescentin-GFP in growing C. crescentus cells. Crescentin
structures formed structures that spanned the length of C.
crescentus cells over most of their life cycle. Significant
rearrangement of the crescentin-GFP structures occurred only at the onset of
cell division, just before daughter cell separation, at the site of division.
But FRAP analysis of crescentin-GFP indicated that crescentin dynamics were also
slow in a dividing cell, with a half time of recovery of
t1/2 = 27±3 min (not
shown). Together, results from FRAP, FLIP, and time-lapsed microscopy
experiments indicate that crescentin structures in vivo undergo
slow remodeling and the exchange of subunits between these structures and a pool
of unassembled subunits is very slow during the life cycle of the cell.
Crescentin Forms Elastic Structures
IFs (including vimentin, keratins, lamins, etc.) present distinct mechanical
features that are significantly different from the two other major cytoskeleton
filamentous proteins, F-actin and microtubule. Specifically, eukaryotic IFs form
structures that are elastic, recover their elasticity after shear, and increase
their stiffness under mechanical stress, even in the absence of auxiliary
proteins [30], [31]. We used
quantitative rheology to determine whether the IF-like bacterial protein
crescentin shared these mechanical properties and, therefore, test whether
crescentin could be mechanically classified as an IF. The mechanical properties
of crescentin were probed using a cone-and-plate rheometer, which monitored both
the elastic modulus, G′ (which measures the propensity of the network
to rebound after shear), and the viscous modulus, G″ (which measures
how much the specimen can flow).As expected, crescentin in storage buffer displayed no elasticity and had a
viscosity comparable to that of buffer. Upon addition of polymerizing buffer,
crescentin progressively displayed elasticity which was much higher than that of
crescentin in storage buffer or polymerizing buffer without proteins (Fig. 2A). The elasticity of
crescentin reached a plateau value, which was significantly higher than that of
other eukaryotic IFs (Table
1). The rate of gelation of crescentin filament networks, calculated as
the inverse of the time it takes to reach 90% of the steady state
plateau value, increased steadily with crescentin concentration (Fig. 2B). The phase angle of
crescentin filament network,
δ = tan−1(G″/G′)∼10°,
which compares the relative magnitudes of viscous and elastic moduli, was lower
than that of both F-actin and microtubule network. However, the phase angle was
comparable to that of networks of eukaryotic IF's (Table 1 and Fig. 2C), which indicates that
crescentin filaments flowed under mechanical stress similarly to eukaryotic IFs.
The elasticity of crescentin filament suspensions depended highly on
concentration, with a scaling consistent with a power law,
G′(c)∼c3.5 (Fig. 2A). By comparison, the elasticity of
eukaryotic filament networks increased less steeply with protein concentration:
G′∼c1.2 for F-actin;
G′∼c1.5 for keratin K5-K14; and
G′∼c1.4 for lamin B1 (Table 1). Complementary electron microscopy
(EM) revealed that crescentin formed extensive filament networks under assembly
conditions (Fig. 2D).
Figure 2
Gelation kinetics and steady-state mechanical properties of
crescentin.
, Time-dependent elastic modulus, G′, after the onset
of crescentin assembly (dead time for specimen loading in the rheometer
was 30 s). Crescentin concentrations: 0.25 mg/ml (filled squares), 0.5
mg/ml (open squares), 0.75 mg/ml (filled circles), and 1 mg/ml (open
circles). , Rate of gelation as a function of protein concentration
measured as the inverse of the time required for the network elasticity
to reach 90% of its plateau value. , phase angle, δ, of crescentin structures as a function
of concentration. A phase angle of 90° describes the rheological
behavior of a liquid (e.g. glycerol); a phase angle of 0°
describes the rheological behavior of an elastic solid (e.g. a stiff
rubber). Phase angle was evaluated at a frequency of 1 rad/s and a
strain amplitude of 1%. , Crescentin filaments (0.2 mg/ml) visualized by negative
staining and EM. Bar, 2 µm
Table 1
Mechanical properties of crescentin and its eukaryotic counterparts
in vitro.
Cytoskeleton protein
Elasticity (dyn/cm2)
Phase angle (°)
Resilience (%)
Exponent G′(c)∼cn
pH
Source
Crescentin
82±10
10±3
2±1
3.5
6.5
This work
Lamin B1
1±1
9±2
200±30
1.4
8.8
Panorchan et al. 2004
Vimentin
4±2
9±2
10±3
NA
7.4
Esue et al. 2006
Keratin K5-K14
7±2
4±2
200±30
1.5
7.4
Yamada et al. 2002
Keratin K8-K18
5±2
5±2
100±20
0.6
7.4
Yamada et al. 2003
F-actin
10±3
30±5
5±2
1.2
7.0
Xu et al. 2000
Microtubule
6±2
40±6
2±1
NA
6.8
Unpublished results
Elasticity, G′, and phase angle, δ, were measured
using a cone-and-plate strain-controlled rheometer, which applied
oscillatory shear deformations of small 1%-amplitude and
a frequency of 1 rad/s. Rheological parameters G′ and
δ were measured at steady state, i.e. after these parameters
had reached a steady state after onset of assembly. The phase angle
measures the delay in the response of the stress induced in the
filament networks by the rheometer. An elastic solid shows no delay
(phase angle of 0°); a viscous liquid without elasticity
like glycerol shows a maximum delay (phase angle of 90°).
The mechanical resilience of cytoskeleton proteins is defined as the
shear amplitude at which the elastic modulus started to fall (e.g.
Fig. 3).
Protein concentration for measurements of G′, δ,
and resilience was 1 mg/ml. For the range of concentrations for the
concentration-dependent elasticity, G′(c), see text and
references.
Gelation kinetics and steady-state mechanical properties of
crescentin.
, Time-dependent elastic modulus, G′, after the onset
of crescentin assembly (dead time for specimen loading in the rheometer
was 30 s). Crescentin concentrations: 0.25 mg/ml (filled squares), 0.5
mg/ml (open squares), 0.75 mg/ml (filled circles), and 1 mg/ml (open
circles). , Rate of gelation as a function of protein concentration
measured as the inverse of the time required for the network elasticity
to reach 90% of its plateau value. , phase angle, δ, of crescentin structures as a function
of concentration. A phase angle of 90° describes the rheological
behavior of a liquid (e.g. glycerol); a phase angle of 0°
describes the rheological behavior of an elastic solid (e.g. a stiff
rubber). Phase angle was evaluated at a frequency of 1 rad/s and a
strain amplitude of 1%. , Crescentin filaments (0.2 mg/ml) visualized by negative
staining and EM. Bar, 2 µmElasticity, G′, and phase angle, δ, were measured
using a cone-and-plate strain-controlled rheometer, which applied
oscillatory shear deformations of small 1%-amplitude and
a frequency of 1 rad/s. Rheological parameters G′ and
δ were measured at steady state, i.e. after these parameters
had reached a steady state after onset of assembly. The phase angle
measures the delay in the response of the stress induced in the
filament networks by the rheometer. An elastic solid shows no delay
(phase angle of 0°); a viscous liquid without elasticity
like glycerol shows a maximum delay (phase angle of 90°).
The mechanical resilience of cytoskeleton proteins is defined as the
shear amplitude at which the elastic modulus started to fall (e.g.
Fig. 3).
Protein concentration for measurements of G′, δ,
and resilience was 1 mg/ml. For the range of concentrations for the
concentration-dependent elasticity, G′(c), see text and
references.
Figure 3
Response of crescentin to mechanical deformation.
, Frequency-dependent elastic modulus, G′(ω),
of crescentin as different concentrations. , Elasticity, G′, of crescentin as a function of strain
amplitude, γ (see Methods
section). Crescentin does not undergo strain-hardening, whereby
G′ would increase with γ. Crescentin concentrations in
panels A and B are 0.25 mg/ml (filled squares), 0.5 mg/ml (open
squares), 0.75 mg/ml (filled circles), and 1 mg/ml (open circles). , Recovery of the elasticity of crescentin following the
application of a large short-lived shear deformation as a function of
crescentin concentration. Percent recovery is defined as the ratio of
the recovered elasticity after application of a couple of oscillatory
shear deformations of 1000% and the initial elasticity.
Elasticity was evaluated at a frequency of 1 rad/s and a strain
amplitude of 1%.
Mechanical Response of Crescentin Filaments to Shear Stresses
Crescentin filament suspensions were subjected to shear deformations of
increasing shear rate and fixed small amplitude. This mechanical test determines
the magnitude of spontaneous movements of crescentin filaments within their
network, which would relax the stress. Filament movements may be impeded by
entanglements and/or inter-filament crosslinking interactions, which give rise
to network elasticity. Along with its high network elasticity, crescentin
filaments formed networks that behaved as visco-elastic solids, which flowed
little when subjected to shear and could elastically resist mechanical shear
stresses (Fig. 3). The
elasticity of crescentin filaments, G′(ω), showed a weak
dependence on the rate of shear (the shear frequency ω) (Fig. 3A); this frequency
dependence was similar to those of vimentin and keratin K5-K14 [32]–[34]. This result
indicates that crescentin filaments were able to move less readily past one
another - and therefore relaxed more slowly the stress during cycles of shear.
Crescentin filaments relaxed mechanical stresses at the same rate as their
eukaryotic counterparts [32].
Response of crescentin to mechanical deformation.
, Frequency-dependent elastic modulus, G′(ω),
of crescentin as different concentrations. , Elasticity, G′, of crescentin as a function of strain
amplitude, γ (see Methods
section). Crescentin does not undergo strain-hardening, whereby
G′ would increase with γ. Crescentin concentrations in
panels A and B are 0.25 mg/ml (filled squares), 0.5 mg/ml (open
squares), 0.75 mg/ml (filled circles), and 1 mg/ml (open circles). , Recovery of the elasticity of crescentin following the
application of a large short-lived shear deformation as a function of
crescentin concentration. Percent recovery is defined as the ratio of
the recovered elasticity after application of a couple of oscillatory
shear deformations of 1000% and the initial elasticity.
Elasticity was evaluated at a frequency of 1 rad/s and a strain
amplitude of 1%.We tested the propensity of crescentin filaments to resist shear deformations of
increasing amplitude. In contrast to eukaryotic IFs (Table 1), crescentin filaments offered little
resistance to shear: they softened at a shear amplitude as low as
∼1%, as indicated by a sharp drop of G′(γ)
at γ∼1% (Fig. 3B). This level of mechanical resilience is similar to that
offered by F-actin without crosslinking proteins and much lower than the
resilience of eukaryotic IFs (Table 1). IFs lamin B1 and keratin, as well as crosslinked F-actin,
displayed a resilience that was 10–50 fold higher than crescentin
(Table 1). Moreover,
these cytoskeletal filaments undergo strain-induced hardening (also called
strain-stiffening), whereby elasticity increased steadily with increased
mechanical shear, before yielding at high shear amplitudes (Table 1). In contrast,
crescentin displayed no strain-hardening (Fig. 3B).Unlike other networks of filamentous proteins, MreB and F-actin, which recover
slowly to only a small fraction (<10%) of their initial
elasticity after a large shear deformation [35], [36], crescentin filament
networks recovered rapidly to between 30 and 60% of their initial
elasticity (Fig. 3C). In the
recovery assay, crescentin was allowed to gel until steady state elasticity was
reached. Each tested crescentin suspension was then subjected to a couple of
oscillatory deformations of 1000% amplitude and frequency of 1 rad/s.
As a result of this large deformation, the elasticity dropped to undetectable
values. But the elasticity increased rapidly and recovered
∼59% of its initial value for a 0.5 mg/ml gel and
∼30% for a 1 mg/ml gel (Fig. 3C). This rapid recovery is similar to
that observed with other IFs [37].
Divalent, but Not Monovalent, Cations Affect Crescentin Network Assembly and
Structure
The presence of cations affects the kinetics and extent of assembly of most
cytoskeletal proteins, including eukaryotic IFs [38]–[40], F-actin, MreB [36], and FtsZ [41]–[43]. Therefore, we
studied the effect of monovalent cations (K+,
Na+) and divalent cations (Ca2+,
Mg2+) on crescentin assembly, although these cations are
not necessary for crescentin filament assembly (Fig. 2). EM and negative staining showed that
the ultrastructure of crescentin filaments was unaffected by low concentrations
(≤50 mM) of Na+ and K+ ions,
while the filaments assembled in the presence of Ca2+ and
Mg2+ appeared more bundled and rigid (Fig. 4 and 5). In the presence of 50 mM
NaCl, crescentin formed networks composed of highly entangled filaments (Fig. 4A), while in 100 mM
NaCl, the extent of filamentous formation was significantly reduced with
fragile-looking filaments (Fig.
4B). This trend was similar with K+ ions and as shown
by EM, crescentin formed a mixture of amorphous aggregates and ordered filaments
in the presence of 150 mM KCl (Fig.
4C). Rheology studies complemented these findings to show that 50 mM
of either NaCl or KCl did not affect crescentin's assembly, steady
state mechanical properties or ability to recover after shear deformation (not
shown).
Figure 4
EM of crescentin filaments assembled with monovalent cations.
Crescentin filaments (0.2 mg/ml) in the presence of , 50 mM NaCl (scale bar, 2 µm) , 100 mM NaCl (scale bar, 1 µm), and , 150 mM KCl (scale bar, 1 µm) respectively, visualized
by negative staining and EM.
Figure 5
Effect of divalent cations on mechanical properties of Crescentin.
, Steady state elastic modulus, G′, of crescentin
structures as a function of MgCl2 (grey) and CaCl2
(black) concentration. Elasticity was evaluated at a frequency of 1
rad/s and a strain amplitude of 1% after 2 h of gelation. , Rate of gelation as a function of MgCl2 (grey) and
CaCl2 (black) concentration measured as the inverse of
the time required for the network elasticity to reach 90% of
its plateau value. Crescentin filaments (0.2 mg/ml) in the presence of , 5 mM MgCl2 (scale bar, 2 µm) and , 10 mM MgCl2 (scale bar, 2 µm),
respectively, visualized by negative staining and EM. Symbols correspond
to control (closed squares), control with 10 mM CaCl2 (open
squares), and control with 10 mM MgCl2 (closed circles).
EM of crescentin filaments assembled with monovalent cations.
Crescentin filaments (0.2 mg/ml) in the presence of , 50 mM NaCl (scale bar, 2 µm) , 100 mM NaCl (scale bar, 1 µm), and , 150 mM KCl (scale bar, 1 µm) respectively, visualized
by negative staining and EM.
Effect of divalent cations on mechanical properties of Crescentin.
, Steady state elastic modulus, G′, of crescentin
structures as a function of MgCl2 (grey) and CaCl2
(black) concentration. Elasticity was evaluated at a frequency of 1
rad/s and a strain amplitude of 1% after 2 h of gelation. , Rate of gelation as a function of MgCl2 (grey) and
CaCl2 (black) concentration measured as the inverse of
the time required for the network elasticity to reach 90% of
its plateau value. Crescentin filaments (0.2 mg/ml) in the presence of , 5 mM MgCl2 (scale bar, 2 µm) and , 10 mM MgCl2 (scale bar, 2 µm),
respectively, visualized by negative staining and EM. Symbols correspond
to control (closed squares), control with 10 mM CaCl2 (open
squares), and control with 10 mM MgCl2 (closed circles).Addition of divalent ions, Ca2+ or Mg2+,
on the other hand made crescentin networks stiffer and more solid-like than
networks without cations as indicated by an increase in elastic modulus with
increase in divalent ion concentration (Fig. 5A). Crescentin network elasticity
increased from ∼15 dyn/cm2
( = 1.5 Pascal), without divalent ions to
∼18 dyn/cm2 in the presence of either 5 mM
Ca2+ or Mg2+ and to 22
dyn/cm2 and 32 dyn/cm2 in 10 mM Ca2+
and 10 mM Mg2+, respectively (Fig. 5A). The rate of gelation decreased
slightly in the presence of Ca2+ but increased in the
presence of Mg2+ (Fig. 5B). This increase in elasticity was
also evident from electron micrographs, which revealed that crescentin formed
more dense networks consisting of filament bundles in the presence of divalent
ions (Fig. 5, C and D).
Surprisingly, this increase in filament bundling and network density as assessed
by EM did not significantly increase the steady state mechanical properties of
crescentin networks.Similar to other IFs, crescentin networks showed a weak dependence on the
frequency of the network elasticity, G′(ω), that was not
affected by adding divalent ions during assembly. Together these results
indicate that crescentin displays mechanical properties that are unique among
cytoskeleton filamentous proteins.
Discussion
Until recently it was assumed that bacterial cell shape was primarily established and
maintained by the glycopeptide polymer peptidoglycan of the cell wall. The
degradation of peptidoglycan by lysozyme causes rod-shaped E. coli
cells to become spherical and mutations of proteins involved in peptidoglycan
metabolism affect the shape of various bacteria. However, the recent finding that
the cytoplasmic proteins MreB [3], [44], [45] and crescentin [1], [12], which
both assemble into filamentous structures in vitro, play a critical
shape-determining role has changed this simple view of cell morphogenesis in
prokaryotes [2], [46], [47].This paper studies the in vivo dynamics and in
vitro assembly and mechanical properties of the recently discovered
crescentin IF-like protein. Crescentin in C. crescentus forms
structures that are not static, but undergo slow remodeling and allow for little
exchange between these structures and a pool of unassembled subunits in
vivo. Since protein synthesis was not blocked, newly formed crescentin
proteins may also contribute to the unassembled subunits in vivo as
shown by Charbon et al [2]. Moreover, the organization and dynamics of
crescentin do not significantly change during the C. crescentus
cell life cycle. In vitro, crescentin shares many structural
features and assembly properties with eukaryotic IFs. In particular,
crescentin's fast filament assembly leads to the rapid formation of
viscoelastic filament networks in a manner similar to its eukaryotic IF
counterparts, although crescentin filament assemblies are significantly less
mechanically resilient than those formed by eukaryotic IFs.
Crescentin Dynamics
Crescentin spans the length of C. crescentus cells and is mostly
stable during the duration of the cell cycle, during which the cell maintains a
distinct crescent shape. The time required for recovery of GFP-crescentin in
FRAP experiments
(t1/2 = 26–50 min) [2]
represents a substantial fraction of the C. crescentus cycle
lifetime and is significantly slower than that of other major prokaryotic
cytoskeletal proteins, E. coli FtsZ
(t1/2 = 9 s) [48] and B.
subtilis Mbl
(t1/2 = 7–10 min) [49]. It is also slower than vimentin dynamics in
interphase cells
(t1/2 = 5–14 min), but
faster than the dynamics of cytoplasmic keratins (∼100 min), albeit
those times represent small fractions of the cell-cycle lifetimes. Crescentin
recovery may be faster than its other prokaryotic cytoskeletal proteins because
crescentin appears to form a stable structure throughout the cell's
life cycle while MreB and FtsZ have been shown to condense into a ring structure
at the time of cell division, a property that requires both MreB and FtsZ to be
more dynamic than Crescentin. Recovery of photobleached crescentin structures in
this work (t1/2 = 26 min) was faster
than previously reported at
t1/2 = 50 min, where protein
synthesis was blocked [2]. This faster recovery rate is possibly due to
the synthesis of new crescentin proteins which increase the cytoplasmic pool of
unassembled proteins available. Nevertheless, the recovery obtained in both
cases are much faster when compared to cytoplamic keratins (∼100 min).
Kinetic analysis of the time-dependent FRAP/FLIP intensity profiles in the
bleached regions of the cell and in vitro assembly results
together indicate that the recovery is not limited by the diffusion of unbound
crescentin-GFP subunits within the cytoplasmic pool and/or the incorporation of
subunits into the already established crescentin structures, but is instead
controlled by the slow dissociation of crescentin from those structures.The possibility of an equilibrium between polymeric structures and subunits has
been postulated in IFs [16], [50]–[52].
Following an analogous hypothesis, assembly sites may become available when
bleached crescentin-GFP dissociates from polymeric structures and relocates to
the cytoplasmic pool. Like other IFs, this subunit exchange may occur throughout
the length of the filaments, and not only at filament ends [2], [16],
[53], [54]. This model of subunit exchange is more
difficult to test for crescentin because of the small size of C.
crescentus cells compared to cultured mammalian cells.
Assembly, Ultrastructural, and Mechanical Properties of Crescentin
The ultrastructure of crescentin filaments in vitro resembles
that of other eukaryotic IFs in standard assembly conditions used for other IF
preparations: similar length, diameter, and filament rigidity [34], [37], [55]–[58].
Crescentin's mode of assembly is similar to that of vimentin by
increase in solution ionic strength, but different from most other IFs by
assembling into filamentous structures upon removal of denaturing buffer (urea)
in the absence of nucleotides [55], [59]–[61].A main function of IFs in higher eukaryotes is to provide cells with mechanical
support. Type I and II IF keratins play a key role in the protection of complex
epithelia (skin) and simple epithelia (kidney) against mechanical trauma. Type
III IF neurofilaments play a key role in shaping the axon of neural cells, while
vimentin provides a large fraction of the mechanical rigidity of mesenchymal
cells. In vivo studies of C. crescentus
support a similar mechanical function for crescentin. Our rheological studies
provide some insight into the mechanical strength of crescentin structures and
whether they possess the characteristics to maintain a curved cell shape.
Despite the extraordinary diversity of polymer structures formed by IFs [55],
[62], they display remarkably similar mechanical
properties [30], [34]. Thus far, all
tested IFs are stiff, mechanically resilient, more elastic than viscous (i.e.
low phase angle), and recover rapidly after shear. These rheological properties
stem partially from the high propensity of IFs to form cross-links. Similarly to
eukaryotic IFs, crescentin filaments in the presence of divalent cations form
extensive cross-links that could promote direct inter-filament interactions.A rheological signature of IFs in the presence of chemical crosslinks is the
relatively low phase angle displayed by crescentin, i.e. crescentin filaments
are as solid-like as other eukaryotic IFs. Vimentin, epithelial keratins
k5–k14 and k9–k19, crescentin, and nuclear lamin B1 all
consistently display a significantly low phase angle of
δ∼4–9° (Table 1). The absence of strain hardening is
a rheological similarity between bacterial IF crescentin and vimentin, although
different from most other eukaryotic IFs. Under shear, some IFs are prevented
from bending because of their finite rigidity, and from sliding past one another
due to cross-links [34], [35], [57]. These two properties prevent eukaryotic IFs
from relaxing stress and, in turn, elasticity builds up in IF networks under
shear. This weak inter-filament interaction between crescentin filaments results
in a low mechanical resilience of crescentin similar to vimentin. Crescentin
softens almost immediately under mechanical stress: the mechanical resilience of
crescentin is remarkably low, between 5 and 100 fold lower than that of most
other eukaryotic IFs (Table
1). Together these results suggest that the stiffness of crescentin
filament suspensions, like that of F-actin suspensions, stems primarily from
overlapping or steric interactions between filaments, not from crosslinking
interactions between filaments. Divalent ions such as calcium ions appear to
increase the width of class III IF vimentin [38]; we do not observe
thickening of crescentin filament. The correlation between divalent ions and
crescentin function in vivo remains to be fully studied,
however calcium and magnesium ions are required for the proper growth of
C. crescentus
[63].Our rheological studies suggest that the observed long-lived mechanical stability
of crescentin structures stems not from intrinsically strong inter-filament
interactions, but from the crosslinking of crescentin structures to the cell
wall by not-yet-identified auxiliary proteins although recent findings [2]
show that MreB may mediate the interaction between crescentin and the cell wall.
This intereaction may be similar to that observed between their eukaryotic
homologs, actin and vimentin [33], [64].
Crescentin Network Structure Depends on Cationic Valence and Concentration
Polycation-induced lateral filament aggregation is a common feature of
cytoskeletal proteins and DNA [65]–[67]. However, rheology
and EM suggest that the onset of crescentin filament bundling by
Ca2+ occurs at concentrations much lower than those
required to bundle F-actin. Indeed, actin filament bundling occurs at threshold
concentrations of 20 mM Ca2+ and 27 mM Mg2+
[68],
while crescentin filament bundling is observed at concentrations as low as 5 mM
Ca2+ or Mg2+. Linear polyelectrolyte
models [67], [69] suggest that this
lower filament bundling threshold for crescentin is due to facilitated
counterion condensation. Bundling of crescentin is induced by the rapid
neutralization of fewer exposed charges on crescentin. The average polymer
contour length between charges on DNA and actin is 1.7 Å and 2.5
Å, respectively [68]. If we assume that the cross-section of a
crescentin filament has an architecture similar to that of vimentin and that
only external monomers would be involved in inter-filament interactions, then we
estimate that the average counter length between charges on a crescentin
filament is ∼10 Å. This would imply that charges on crescentin
indeed require fewer counterions to be neutralized. More precise calculations
are clearly needed to fully understand why crescentin has a propensity to bundle
in the presence of polycations.
Potential Physiological Implications
Crescentin's fast filament assembly in vitro leads to the rapid
formation of viscoelastic filament networks that may be relevant for its
structural role in vivo. Similar to eukaryotic IFs that provide mechanical
support in cells either by protecting them against stresses (e.g. keratins in
epithelia cells) or by shaping cells (e.g. axon of neural cells), crescentin
helps to shape C. Crescentus cells. While crescentin-null C.
crescentus cells display a rod-shaped phenotype, indicating their
participation in shaping the cell, the intrinsic mechanical properties of
crescentin suggest that it cannot generate the forces needed to curve the cell
wall. Crescentin may directly or indirectly interact with the cell wall through
yet to be discovered crescentin-binding proteins that could bundle and crosslink
individual filaments, thus increasing their mechanical properties. These binding
proteins may be activated by cations, such as calcium, which would neutralize
charges on crescentin filaments in a similar manner to the calcium-activated
actin-bundling protein fimbrin. In vitro, crescentin rapidly forms stable
filament networks that feature mechanical properties similar to IFs while
in vivo, these structures appear stable and undergo slow
remodeling, allowing for little exchange with the pool of unassembled
cytoplasmic subunits. Altogether, these properties may be physiologically
relevant to enable C. crescentus to maintain its crescent shape
throughout its life cycle.
Authors: Samantha J Stehbens; Andrew D Paterson; Matthew S Crampton; Annette M Shewan; Charles Ferguson; Anna Akhmanova; Robert G Parton; Alpha S Yap Journal: J Cell Sci Date: 2006-04-11 Impact factor: 5.285