Investigation of protein interactions in the cell division complex of Bacillus subtilis reveals a possible mechanism for cell size homeostasis
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| Award date | 15-01-2020 |
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| Number of pages | 218 |
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| Abstract |
Cell division is essential for bacterial survival. In this work, the cell division machinery, or divisome, of the gram positive, rod shaped bacterium Bacillus subtilis is investigated. The divisome is a protein complex consisting of many different subunits that sequentially and dynamically localize to the future division site. Four proteins assist the highly conserved tubulin homologue FtsZ to form a ring-like structure (Z-ring). After a delay, a second wave of proteins (late-proteins) are recruited to the division site, responsible for the synthesis of the crosswall between daughter cells. In this work, these dynamic interactions have been investigated using crosslinking mass-spectrometry (chapters 2 and 3) and fluorescence time-lapse microscopy (chapter 4). We developed a novel method allowing for direct crosslinking of cells in their growth medium. A proteome-wide analysis of crosslinked residues identified mainly abundant complexes, such as ribosomes and RNA polymerases. A more directed approach studied the interaction between FtsZ and the membrane anchor SepF in vitro. Based on the crosslinks identified and in silico docking, we propose that SepF dimers form a tetramer, which the FtsZ C-terminal peptide binds, possibly by being trapped between two SepF dimers. Finally, the delay between Z-ring formation and late-protein recruitment was addressed by time-lapse micrscopy, imaging fluorescent fusions of ZapA (Z-ring) and Pbp2B (late-protein). The highly variable delay negatively correlated with cell size and Z-ring concentration, and a size-dependent accumulation of Z-ring proteins was observed. This size-dependent Z-ring accumulation could be the molecular mechanism of cell size homeostasis in B. subtilis.
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| Document type | PhD thesis |
| Language | English |
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