Bend into shape

نویسنده

  • Piet A J de Boer
چکیده

Bacteria come in a variety of shapes, as most species elaborate on the ‘default’ sphere to resemble ovoids, rods, bend rods, spirals, branched filaments or other more complicated forms. How cells that are under considerable turgor pressure maintain a nonspherical shape is unclear, though it is known to depend on structural elements on either side of the cytoplasmic membrane: the murein (peptidoglycan) sacculus on the outside, and forerunners of the eukaryotic cytoskeleton on the inside. In this issue, the results by Cabeen et al argue for one attractive mechanism whereby these elements cooperate to drive cellular morphogenesis. The murein sacculus is one large mesh-like molecule of linear glycan strands that are covalently linked by short peptides. It surrounds the entire cytoplasmic membrane where turgor pressure stretches it considerably, primarily at the peptide cross-links. It is critical in maintaining cell shape and integrity, and its destruction (e.g. by lysozyme) causes cells to quickly convert to fragile spheres that will burst under common (hypotonic) conditions. Purified sacculi typically retain the particular shape of the bacterium it was isolated from, implying that it is somehow welded into the murein meshwork. This is likely accomplished, at least partly, by controlling where and when new murein strands are incorporated as cells elongate and divide. New strands are incorporated by the combined actions of murein hydrolases and synthases, many of which are direct targets of b-lactam antibiotics. The hydrolases break bonds in the sacculus, whereas the synthases assemble and incorporate fresh glycan strands into the ‘gap’ left by the hydrolases. Several, perhaps all, murein hydrolases and synthases are part of larger transmembrane murein holoenzymes. This likely ensures tight coordination between their activities, which is needed to prevent cell rupture (Cabeen and Jacobs-Wagner, 2007; den Blaauwen et al, 2008; Vollmer and Bertsche, 2008). Much evidence indicates that cytoskeletal filaments on the cytoplasmic face of the membrane exert spatio-temporal control on growth and shape of the sacculus by serving as tracks for the murein (holo) enzymes. The best conserved track is laid by FtsZ, which orchestrates cytokinesis (cell fission, septation, constriction) in almost all bacteria. This forerunner of tubulin forms a ring at the prospective constriction site and then attracts and guides the murein enzymes that produce and process septal murein during the constriction process. Most nonspherical bacteria also produce one or more forms of bacterial actin (MreB), which is required to maintain nonspherical shape and usually assembles in spiral-like configurations along the long axis of the cell. Similar to the FtsZ-ring during cell constriction, MreB spirals are thought to act as tracks for murein enzymes that incorporate new murein in a spiral-like fashion during cell elongation (Cabeen and Jacobs-Wagner, 2007; den Blaauwen et al, 2008; Vollmer and Bertsche, 2008). Cabeen et al now make the case for an entirely different mechanism whereby a third cytoskeletal element helps to control cell shape in Caulobacter crescentus whose name reflects its curved-rod morphology (Cabeen et al, 2009). Earlier, the group of Jacobs-Wagner identified a straight-rod mutant of C. crescentus that was defective in crescentin (CreS) (Ausmees et al, 2003). This 50-kD protein resembles metazoan intermediate filaments (IFs), and readily polymerizes in vitro. In vivo, CreS forms a lateral filamentous structure that invariably lines the concave side (inner curvature) of the cell, suggesting that it helps to induce cell curvature quite directly (Ausmees et al, 2003). Additional IF-like proteins have since been identified in other bacteria (Bagchi et al, 2008), suggesting that, like tubulin and actin, IFs were a prokaryotic invention as well. Four laboratories joined forces to elucidate how CreS causes rod-shaped cells to curve (Cabeen et al, 2009). Remarkably, treatment of C. crescentus cells with the b-lactam mecillinam induced a gradual detachment of CreS from the cell periphery to yield a single filamentous structure that, once free in the cytoplasm, coiled-up with a pronounced lefthanded twist. This result indicates that (1) the cellular CreS filament likely consists of some stable super arrangement (e.g. bundles) of the B10-nm wide ‘proto-filaments’ that are seen in vitro (Ausmees et al, 2003), (2) association of the filament with the membrane is somehow dependent on the integrity of the murein sacculus and (3) the attached filament is normally in a stretched conformation. The latter raised the possibility that a tensed CreS filament bends a cell simply by exerting a sufficiently large compressive force to ‘scrunch-up’ the murein mesh-work on its side of the cylinder. However, this is inconsistent with the fact that de-proteinized C. crescentus sacculi retain the curved appearance of cells (Poindexter and Hagenzieker, 1982), and the authors formally show that curved cells require an extended period of growth (i.e. new murein synthesis) to straighten-out in the absence of a functional CreS structure. Rather, insertion of The EMBO Journal (2009) 28, 1193–1194 | & 2009 European Molecular Biology Organization | Some Rights Reserved 0261-4189/09 www.embojournal.org

برای دانلود متن کامل این مقاله و بیش از 32 میلیون مقاله دیگر ابتدا ثبت نام کنید

ثبت نام

اگر عضو سایت هستید لطفا وارد حساب کاربری خود شوید

منابع مشابه

Experimental Investigation of Submerged Vanes’ Shape effect on river-bend stability

In river meandering, when flow passes through a bend, reduction of flow velocity and rising hydrostatic pressure cause super elevation phenomena at outer side and reduction of water surface at inner-side of the bend. A helical motion results, causing erosion of the outer side of the bend. Installation of submerged vanes on the stream bed can reduce erosion of the outer bank significantly. In th...

متن کامل

Numerical Simulation of Semi-Elliptical Axial Crack in Pipe Bend Using XFEM

In this work, XFEM is employed to obtain the stress intensity factors (SIFs) of a semi elliptical part through thickness axial crack. In XFEM, additional functions are employed to enrich the displacement approximation using partition of unity approach. Level set functions are approximated using higher order shape functions in the crack front elements to ensure the accurate modeling of the crack...

متن کامل

Integrated Optical Refractometer based on U-shape bend Waveguide Structure for (bio-) Chemical Sensing Applications

This paper proposes and describes a design of an integrated refractive index sensor for (bio-) chemical sensing applications based on a U-shape bend waveguide structure. The proposed structure is formed by connecting four-bend waveguides and optimized using beam propagation method so that the output power has a function of refractive index of measurand liquid. The results show that the designed...

متن کامل

Effect of polar intermolecular interactions on the elastic constants of bent-core nematics and the origin of the twist-bend phase.

A molecular theory of both elastic constants and the flexoelectric coefficients of bent-core nematic liquid crystals has been developed taking into account dipole-dipole interactions as well as polar interactions determined by the bent molecular shape. It has been shown that if polar interactions are neglected, the elastic constants are increasing monotonically with the decreasing temperature. ...

متن کامل

Shape Blending of 2{D Piecewise Curves

This paper presents an algorithm for blending (that is, smoothly transforming between) two 2{D shapes bounded by piecewise curves. The algorithm searches for the point correspondence between the two shapes which will minimize the energy required to bend and stretch one shape into the other. The new algorithm runs several times faster than does splitting each curve into ve line segments and appl...

متن کامل

Electromechanical reshaping of costal cartilage grafts: a new surgical treatment modality.

OBJECTIVES/HYPOTHESIS Needle electrode-based electromechanical reshaping (EMR) is a novel, ultra-low-cost nascent surgical technology to reshape cartilage with low morbidity. EMR uses direct current to induce mechanical relaxation in cartilage that is first deformed into a required geometry, which in turn leads to permanent shape change. The objective of this study was to determine the effect o...

متن کامل

ذخیره در منابع من


  با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید

برای دانلود متن کامل این مقاله و بیش از 32 میلیون مقاله دیگر ابتدا ثبت نام کنید

ثبت نام

اگر عضو سایت هستید لطفا وارد حساب کاربری خود شوید

عنوان ژورنال:
  • The EMBO Journal

دوره 28  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2009