Complex polar machinery required for proper chromosome segregation in vegetative and sporulating cells of Bacillus subtilis
Summary Chromosome segregation is an essential process of cell multiplication. In prokaryotes, segregation starts with the newly replicated sister origins of replication, oriCs, which move apart to defined positions in the cell. We have developed a genetic screen to identify mutants defective in pla...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Molecular microbiology 2016-07, Vol.101 (2), p.333-350 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Chromosome segregation is an essential process of cell multiplication. In prokaryotes, segregation starts with the newly replicated sister origins of replication, oriCs, which move apart to defined positions in the cell. We have developed a genetic screen to identify mutants defective in placement of oriC during spore development in the Gram‐positive bacterium Bacillus subtilis. In addition to the previously identified proteins Soj and DivIVA, our screen identified several new factors involved in polar recruitment of oriC: a reported regulator of competence ComN, and the regulators of division site selection MinD and MinJ. Previous work implicated Soj as an important regulator of oriC positioning in the cell. Our results suggest a model in which the DivIVA‐interacting proteins ComN and MinJ recruit MinD to the cell pole, and that these proteins work upstream of Soj to enable oriC placement. We show that these proteins form a polar complex, which acts in parallel with but distinct from the sporulation‐specific RacA pathway of oriC placement, and also functions during vegetative growth. Our study further shows that MinD has two distinct cell cycle roles, in cell division and chromosome segregation, and highlights that cell probably use multiple parallel mechanisms to ensure accurate chromosome segregation.
During spore development in Bacillus subtilis, the MinD and ComN proteins take on new roles that are unrelated to their functions in vegetative growth, forming a polar complex which recruits the origin of replication (oriC) region of the chromosome to the cell pole in a pathway that is separate from the sporulation‐specific RacA pathway of oriC placement. |
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ISSN: | 0950-382X 1365-2958 |
DOI: | 10.1111/mmi.13393 |