| Literature DB >> 24782835 |
Catriona Donovan1, Marc Bramkamp1.
Abstract
Bacterial cells must coordinate a number of events during the cell cycle. Spatio-temporal regulation of bacterial cytokinesis is indispensable for the production of viable, genetically identical offspring. In many rod-shaped bacteria, precise midcell assembly of the division machinery relies on inhibitory systems such as Min and Noc. In rod-shaped Actinobacteria, for example Corynebacterium glutamicum and Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the divisome assembles in the proximity of the midcell region, however more spatial flexibility is observed compared to Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis. Actinobacteria represent a group of bacteria that spatially regulate cytokinesis in the absence of recognizable Min and Noc homologs. The key cell division steps in E. coli and B. subtilis have been subject to intensive study and are well-understood. In comparison, only a minimal set of positive and negative regulators of cytokinesis are known in Actinobacteria. Nonetheless, the timing of cytokinesis and the placement of the division septum is coordinated with growth as well as initiation of chromosome replication and segregation. We summarize here the current knowledge on cytokinesis and division site selection in the Actinobacteria suborder Corynebacterineae.Entities:
Keywords: Corynebacterium glutamicum; DivIVA; FtsZ; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Par system; cell cycle; cell division; serine/threonine kinases
Year: 2014 PMID: 24782835 PMCID: PMC3989709 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2014.00132
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Putative cell division gene of .
| cg0915 | rv3101c | b0095 | BSU15290 | Tubulin homolog, GTPase, polymerizes into Z-ring, recruitment of downstream cell division proteins | Bi and Lutkenhaus, | |
| ? | ? | b0094 | BSU15280 | Actin fold, membrane-associated protein, positive regulator of FtsZ assembly, and membrane association of Z-ring | Beall and Lutkenhaus, | |
| cg2496/cg3203 | rv2345/rv3835 | b2412 | – | Membrane-associated protein, positive regulator of Z-ring assembly | Hale and De Boer, | |
| – | – | b2910 | BSU28610 | Positive regulator of FtsZ assembly, promotes Z-ring polymerization and protofilament bundling | Gueiros-Filho and Losick, | |
| – | b3928 | – | Interacts with ZapA and FtsZ, stabilize Z-ring via ZapA | Ebersbach et al., | ||
| – | – | b0946 | – | Suppresses FtsZ GTPase activity and promotes lateral association of FtsZ polymers | Durand-Heredia et al., | |
| – | b0102 | – | Positive regulator of FtsZ assembly, promotes Z-ring polymerization and protofilament bundling | Durand-Heredia et al., | ||
| cg2158 | rv2748c (MSMEG2690) | b0890 | BSU29800 BSU16800 ( | Membrane protein, ATPase, DNA translocator at the division septum, role in chromosome segregation and septum formation, SpoIIIE is a DNA translocator during sporulation in | Wu and Errington, | |
| – | – | – | BSU29610 | Integral membrane protein, negative regulator of Z-ring assembly, plays a role in midcell localization of Z-rings | Levin et al., | |
| cg2363 | rv2147c | – | BSU15390 | Putative positive regulator of cell division, promoting Z-ring formation | Hamoen et al., | |
| cg0914 | rv3102c | b3463 | BSU35260 | Putative role in promoting Z-ring assembly, Regulator of peptidoglycan hydrolases. FtsX recruits EnvC to divisome in | Schmidt et al., | |
| cg0915 | rv3101c | b3462 | BSU35250 | |||
| cg1112 | rv1024 | b2748 | BSU00620 | Bitopic membrane protein, forms complex with FtsL and FtsQ in | Levin and Losick, | |
| cg2367 | rv2151 | b0093 | BSU15240 | Transmembrane protein, forms complex with FtsL and FtsB in | Yi et al., | |
| cg2376 | Rv2164c | b0083 | BSU15150 | Transmembrane protein, forms complex with FtsB and FtsQ in | Guzman et al., | |
| cg2370 | rv2154c | b0089 | BSU14850 | SEDS member, mediates precursor translocation across the membrane for cognate transpeptidase, bridges cell division and septal peptidoglycan synthesis | Datta et al., | |
| BSU15210 ( | ||||||
| cg2375 | rv2163c | b0084 | BSU15170 | Essential HMW-PBP transpeptidase, localized at the septum, interacts with the FtsZ/FtsW complex in | Weiss et al., | |
| – | b3933 | – | Bitopic membrane protein, interacts with both early (e.g., FtsA, ZapA) and late cell division proteins (e.g., FtsQLB, FtsW) essential cell division protein, speculated role in coordinating cell division and peptidoglycan synthesis | Ursinus et al., | ||
| cg0055 | rv0011c | – | – | Localizes to division septum in an FtsZ-dependent manner, interacts with FtsI, FtsQ, PbpA in | Plocinski et al., | |
| – | rv0008c | – | – | Putative Wag31 topology factor, lack of | Plocinski et al., | |
| – | b1176 | BSU28000 | Inhibitor of FtsZ, interacts with MinD | De Boer et al., | ||
| – | – | b1175 | BSU27990 | Membrane-associated ATPase, brings MinC to the membrane | De Boer et al., | |
| – | – | b1174 | Topological factor that stimulates pole-to-pole oscillation of MinCD in | De Boer et al., | ||
| – | – | – | BSU35220 | Adaptor protein linking DivIVA and the MinCD complex in | Bramkamp et al., | |
| cg2361 | rv2145c ( | – | BSU15420 | Component of the Min system in | Cha and Stewart, | |
| ? | ? | b3641 ( | BSU40990 ( | Nucleoid occlusion effector proteins, inhibit Z-ring assembly over the nucleoid | Wu and Errington, | |
| cg1610 | rv1708 | – | – | Putative spatial regulator of cell division, member of the ParA/MinD protein family | Donovan et al., | |
| – | – | BL02920 | Small peptide, inhibits Z-ring assembly during sporulation in | Handler et al., | ||
| cg2620 | rv2457c | b0438 | BSU28220 | Putative negative regulator of cell division, inhibits Z-ring formation under stress conditions | Weart et al., | |
| cgR_1759 | rv2719c ( | b0958 ( | BSU17860 ( | Induced upon DNA damage, inhibits Z-ring formation, ChiZ is a cell wall hydrolase and interacts with FtsI and FtsQ | Huisman et al., | |
| ? | ? | ? | BSU21920 | Metabolic sensor that inhibits Z-ring assembly in response to high UDP-glucose availability (nutrient rich conditions) | Weart et al., | |
| cg3424 ( | rv3915 ( | b2817 | BSU09420 ( | N-acetylmuramoyl-l-alanine amidase, septal peptidoglycan hydrolysis to separate daughter cells, cleaves stem peptides and N-acetylmuramic acid components of glycan stands, septal recruitment dependent on FtsN | Heidrich et al., | |
| BSU09370 ( | ||||||
| cgR_1596 | rv1477 ( | b3613 | BSU34800 ( | LytM domain containing, activator of amidases AmiC (and AmiB) ( | Bernhardt and De Boer, | |
M. tuberculosis H37Rv,
shows weak homology, ? not known,
B. licheniformis,
Not homologs but all have analogous function as septation inhibitors,
Weak homology but similar topology,
C. glutamicum R.
Figure 1Alignment of ParA proteins highlighting basic residues involved in DNA-binding. Surface exposed arginine residues have been shown to be involved in DNA-binding in B. subtilis Soj (Hester and Lutkenhaus, 2007). We have aligned sequence of different ParA/MinD proteins using ClustalW2. The alignment was rendered in ESPript (Gouet et al., 2003). Note that C. glutamicum ParA and PldP have the conserved positive charges (arrows) identified for DNA-binding in B. subtilis, while MinD lacks positive charges at these sites. Bsu, B. subtilis; Ccr, C. crescentus; Cgl, C. glutamicum; Mtu, M. tuberculosis; Mxa, M. xanthus; Tth, T. thermophilus.
Figure 2Putative PknA phosphorylation sites on FtsZ. Shown is a homology model of C. glutamicum FtsZ. The residues phosphorylated by Ser/Thr protein kinases are shown in red and indicated. Residue T108 is involved in nucleotide binding/hydrolysis, T63 is at the interface of the FtsZ oligomerization domain. Residues S353 and T388 are located toward the C-terminal end. The C-terminal end is not depicted in this model.
Figure 3Comparison of cell division in Directly after cell division, one cell pole contains a ParB-bound origin that is tethered at the old cell pole through interaction with the polar growth determinant DivIVA. At this stage of the cell cycle, we speculate that polar growth is asymmetric with the pole lacking a tethered origin (young pole) growing slower than origin bound pole (arrows). In B. subtilis, the post-divisional cell contains a centrally located nucleoid with the oriC and terC also found positioned at the midcell. (B) Initiation of chromosome replication gives rise to duplication of the oriC. In C. glutamicum, the newly duplicated oriC is bound by ParB, then ParA is recruited and the oriC is segregated to the opposite cell pole. FtsZ assembles into a Z-ring prior to complete segregation of the chromosome. The Z-ring does not always assemble precisely at midcell. The orphan ParA-like protein, PldP localizes to the division site, where it might function to spatially regulate cell division. In B. subtilis a centrally positioned replisome duplicates the chromosome. While the Min system protects the poles and Noc protects the chromosome from aberrant Z-ring assembly, some aspect of replication initiation positively influences midcell localization of the Z-ring (note that DivIVA is not part of the Min system here). Contrary to the asymmetric polar growth in C. glutamicum, B. subtilis grow at a uniform rate along the lateral axis (arrows). (C) In C. glutamicum, the sister origin is tethered at the cell pole by an interaction with DivIVA. This interaction then leads to an increase in growth from this pole (arrow). Polar growth, in addition with bulk chromosome segregation mechanisms, would aid in segregating the chromosomes. As the septum invaginates, DivIVA begins to localize at the site of division. In B. subtilis, the Min system moves from the cell poles to the invaginating septum. The midcell localized Min system prevents the divisome from reassembling near to an old division site.