FtsZ-dependent elongation of a coccoid bacterium
2016
Pereira, Ana R. | Hsin, Jen | Król, Ewa | Tavares, Andreia C. | Flores, Pierre | Hoiczyk, Egbert | Ng, Natalie | Dajkovic, Aleksander | Brun, Yves V. | van Nieuwenhze, Michael S. | Roemer, Terry | Carballido Lopez, Rut | Scheffers, Dirk-Jan | Huang, Kerwyn Casey | Pinho, Mariana G. | Universidade Nova de Lisboa = NOVA University Lisbon (NOVA) | Department of Bioengineering ; Beihang University (BUAA) | University of Groningen [Groningen] | MICrobiologie de l'ALImentation au Service de la Santé (MICALIS) ; Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-AgroParisTech | Université Paris Saclay (COmUE) | Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health [Baltimore] ; Johns Hopkins University (JHU) | University of Sheffield [Sheffield] | Department of Biology ; Indiana University [Bloomington] ; Indiana University System-Indiana University System | Indiana University ; Indiana University System | Merck ; Sharp and Dohme Corp | Stanford University | ANR
International audience
Show more [+] Less [-]English. A mechanistic understanding of the determination and maintenance of the simplest bacterial cell shape, a sphere, remains elusive compared with that of more complex shapes. Cocci seem to lack a dedicated elongation machinery, and a spherical shape has been considered an evolutionary dead-end morphology, as a transition from a spherical to a rod-like shape has never been observed in bacteria. Here we show that a Staphylococcus aureus mutant (M5) expressing the ftsZ(G193D) allele exhibits elongated cells. Molecular dynamics simulations and in vitro studies indicate that FtsZ(G193D) filaments are more twisted and shorter than wild-type filaments. In vivo, M5 cell wall deposition is initiated asymmetrically, only on one side of the cell, and progresses into a helical pattern rather than into a constricting ring as in wild-type cells. This helical pattern of wall insertion leads to elongation, as in rod-shaped cells. Thus, structural flexibility of FtsZ filaments can result in an FtsZ-dependent mechanism for generating elongated cells from cocci. IMPORTANCE: The mechanisms by which bacteria generate and maintain even the simplest cell shape remain an elusive but fundamental question in microbiology. In the absence of examples of coccus-to-rod transitions, the spherical shape has been suggested to be an evolutionary dead end in morphogenesis. We describe the first observation of the generation of elongated cells from truly spherical cocci, occurring in a Staphylococcus aureus mutant containing a single point mutation in its genome, in the gene encoding the bacterial tubulin homologue FtsZ. We demonstrate that FtsZ-dependent cell elongation is possible, even in the absence of dedicated elongation machinery.
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