Abstract
Polar growth in Agrobacterium pirates and repurposes well-known bacterial cell cycle proteins, such as FtsZ, FtsA, PopZ, and PodJ. Here we identify a heretofore unknown protein that we name GROWTH POLE RING (GPR) due to its striking localization as a hexameric ring at the growth pole during polar growth. GPR also localizes at the midcell late in the cell cycle just before division, where it is then poised to be precisely localized at new growth poles in sibling cells. GPR is 2,115 aa long, with two N-terminal transmembrane domains placing the bulk of the protein in the cytoplasm, N- and C-terminal proline-rich disordered regions, and a large 1,700-aa central region of continuous α-helical domains. This latter region contains 12 predicted adjacent or overlapping apolipoprotein domains that may function to sequester lipids during polar growth. Stable genetic deletion or riboswitch-controlled depletion results in spherical cells that grow poorly; thus, GPR is essential for wild-type growth and morphology. As GPR has no predicted enzymatic domains and it forms a distinct 200-nm-diameter ring, we propose that GPR is a structural component of an organizing center for peptidoglycan and membrane syntheses critical for cell envelope formation during polar growth. GPR homologs are found in numerous Rhizobiales; thus, our results and proposed model are fundamental to understanding polar growth strategy in a variety of bacterial species.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 10962-10967 |
Number of pages | 6 |
Journal | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America |
Volume | 166 |
Issue number | 22 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 28 May 2019 |
Funding
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. We thank our colleagues John-Marc Chandonia and Steven Brenner for discussions on ApoLP. We also thank Steven Ruzin and Denise Schichnes (College of Natural Resources Biological Imaging Facility at University of California, Berkeley) for assistance with fluorescent imaging and SIM. The Biological Imaging Facility is supported in part by National Institutes of Health Program S10 (Award 1S1OD018136-01). Research in the P.Z. laboratory is supported by National Science Foundation Grant MCB-0923840. J.S.R.-E. received fellowship support from the Secretaria Nacional de Educacion Superior, Ciencia y Tecnologia, Ecuador. N.G. received support from the College of Natural Resources Sponsored Projects for Undergraduate Research program.
Funders | Funder number |
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College of Natural Resources | |
Secretaria Nacional de Educacion Superior, Ciencia y Tecnologia | |
National Science Foundation | MCB-0923840 |
National Institutes of Health | |
NIH Office of the Director | S10OD018136 |
Keywords
- Agrobacterium
- Apolipoprotein
- Bacterial polar growth
- GROWTH POLE RING protein
- Morphology
- Rod-shape