A novel system of bacterial cell division arrest implicated in horizontal transmission of an integrative and conjugative element.

Integrative and conjugative elements (ICEs) are widespread mobile DNA elements in the prokaryotic world. ICEs are usually retained within the bacterial chromosome, but can be excised and transferred from a donor to a new recipient cell, even of another species. Horizontal transmission of ICEclc, a p...

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Main Authors: Sotaro Takano, Kohei Fukuda, Akiko Koto, Ryo Miyazaki
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-10-01
Series:PLoS Genetics
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008445
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spelling doaj-5b1bc6cc22eb4aaabf076fb7dd7564b92021-04-21T13:47:13ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Genetics1553-73901553-74042019-10-011510e100844510.1371/journal.pgen.1008445A novel system of bacterial cell division arrest implicated in horizontal transmission of an integrative and conjugative element.Sotaro TakanoKohei FukudaAkiko KotoRyo MiyazakiIntegrative and conjugative elements (ICEs) are widespread mobile DNA elements in the prokaryotic world. ICEs are usually retained within the bacterial chromosome, but can be excised and transferred from a donor to a new recipient cell, even of another species. Horizontal transmission of ICEclc, a prevalent ICE in proteobacteria, only occurs from developed specialized transfer competent (tc) cells in the donor population. tc cells become entirely dedicated to the ICE transmission at the cost of cell proliferation. The cell growth impairment is mediated by two ICEclc located genes, parA and shi, but the mechanistic and dynamic details of this process are unknown. To better understand the function of ParA and Shi, we followed their intracellular behavior from fluorescent protein fusions, and studied host cell division at single-cell level. Superresolution imaging revealed that ParA-mCherry colocalized with the host nucleoid while Shi-GFP was enriched at the membrane during the growth impairment. Despite being enriched at different cellular locations, the two proteins showed in vivo interactions, and mutations in the Walker A motif of ParA dislocalized both ParA and Shi. In addition, ParA mutations in the ATPase motif abolished the growth arrest on the host cell. Time-lapse microscopy revealed that ParA and Shi initially delay cell division, suggesting an extension of the S phase of cells, but eventually completely inhibit cell elongation. The parA-shi locus is highly conserved in other ICEclc-related elements, and expressing ParA-Shi from ICEclc in other proteobacterial species caused similar growth arrest, suggesting that the system functions similarly across hosts. The results of our study provide mechanistic insight into the novel and unique system on ICEs and help to understand such epistatic interaction between ICE genes and host physiology that entails efficient horizontal gene transfer.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008445
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sotaro Takano
Kohei Fukuda
Akiko Koto
Ryo Miyazaki
spellingShingle Sotaro Takano
Kohei Fukuda
Akiko Koto
Ryo Miyazaki
A novel system of bacterial cell division arrest implicated in horizontal transmission of an integrative and conjugative element.
PLoS Genetics
author_facet Sotaro Takano
Kohei Fukuda
Akiko Koto
Ryo Miyazaki
author_sort Sotaro Takano
title A novel system of bacterial cell division arrest implicated in horizontal transmission of an integrative and conjugative element.
title_short A novel system of bacterial cell division arrest implicated in horizontal transmission of an integrative and conjugative element.
title_full A novel system of bacterial cell division arrest implicated in horizontal transmission of an integrative and conjugative element.
title_fullStr A novel system of bacterial cell division arrest implicated in horizontal transmission of an integrative and conjugative element.
title_full_unstemmed A novel system of bacterial cell division arrest implicated in horizontal transmission of an integrative and conjugative element.
title_sort novel system of bacterial cell division arrest implicated in horizontal transmission of an integrative and conjugative element.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Genetics
issn 1553-7390
1553-7404
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Integrative and conjugative elements (ICEs) are widespread mobile DNA elements in the prokaryotic world. ICEs are usually retained within the bacterial chromosome, but can be excised and transferred from a donor to a new recipient cell, even of another species. Horizontal transmission of ICEclc, a prevalent ICE in proteobacteria, only occurs from developed specialized transfer competent (tc) cells in the donor population. tc cells become entirely dedicated to the ICE transmission at the cost of cell proliferation. The cell growth impairment is mediated by two ICEclc located genes, parA and shi, but the mechanistic and dynamic details of this process are unknown. To better understand the function of ParA and Shi, we followed their intracellular behavior from fluorescent protein fusions, and studied host cell division at single-cell level. Superresolution imaging revealed that ParA-mCherry colocalized with the host nucleoid while Shi-GFP was enriched at the membrane during the growth impairment. Despite being enriched at different cellular locations, the two proteins showed in vivo interactions, and mutations in the Walker A motif of ParA dislocalized both ParA and Shi. In addition, ParA mutations in the ATPase motif abolished the growth arrest on the host cell. Time-lapse microscopy revealed that ParA and Shi initially delay cell division, suggesting an extension of the S phase of cells, but eventually completely inhibit cell elongation. The parA-shi locus is highly conserved in other ICEclc-related elements, and expressing ParA-Shi from ICEclc in other proteobacterial species caused similar growth arrest, suggesting that the system functions similarly across hosts. The results of our study provide mechanistic insight into the novel and unique system on ICEs and help to understand such epistatic interaction between ICE genes and host physiology that entails efficient horizontal gene transfer.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008445
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