Coiled coil Cytoskeleton in Bacterial Cell Architecture : Studies of Growth and Development in Streptomyces

Bacterial cytoskeleton is an exciting and relatively new field of research. Recent findings have proven that microbes are well-organized and neatly structured organisms. In this study we have shown that intermediate filament-like proteins with a characteristic rod domain architecture of coiled coil...

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Main Author: Bagchi, Sonchita
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Uppsala universitet, Mikrobiologi 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-158271
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-554-8145-2
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-uu-1582712013-01-08T13:07:58ZCoiled coil Cytoskeleton in Bacterial Cell Architecture : Studies of Growth and Development in StreptomycesengBagchi, SonchitaUppsala universitet, MikrobiologiUppsala : Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis2011Coiled coil proteinsBacterial cytoskeletonDifferentiationCell and molecular biologyCell- och molekylärbiologiBacterial cytoskeleton is an exciting and relatively new field of research. Recent findings have proven that microbes are well-organized and neatly structured organisms. In this study we have shown that intermediate filament-like proteins with a characteristic rod domain architecture of coiled coil segments separated by non-coiled coil linkers, are widely spread among bacteria. We identified and characterized an intermediate filament-like protein (named FilP after filamentous protein) in Streptomyces coelicolor. It shares the characteristic biochemical property of eukaryotic intermediate filaments of formation of spontaneous filaments in vitro without requiring any energy or co-factor. We have provided here a preliminary model of its assembly in vitro. FilP also forms in vivo filaments in S. coelicolor hyphae, which are strongest at the sub-apical location of growing vegetative hyphae. We have proposed that FilP cytoskeletal network provides rigidity to the hyphae, especially at the growing tips, by interacting with an essential coiled coil protein DivIVA and possibly other partner elements, yet to be found. S. coelicolor is a well-studied model organism with a complicated life cycle. It germinates from a spore and spreads by forming branched vegetative hyphae. Lack of nutrients in the environment initiates formation of aerial hyphae in the air, perpendicular to the vegetative ones. The aerial hyphae differentiate into spore chains and eventually grey-pigmented dispersed individual spores are released. The signals involved in sporulation including cell division and chromosome segregation are not clear yet. We characterized here a novel locus consisting of two genes: a small putative membrane protein with no defined function, named SmeA and a member of the SpoIIIE/FtsK family, called SffA. The expression of this locus appears to be dependent on whiA and whiG-whiH-whiI pathways. This finding is intriguing as it can provide insight to the relationship between two apparently unrelated pathways, both leading to the same function of septation and maturation during sporulation. Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summaryinfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-158271urn:isbn:978-91-554-8145-2Digital Comprehensive Summaries of Uppsala Dissertations from the Faculty of Science and Technology, 1651-6214 ; 849application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Coiled coil proteins
Bacterial cytoskeleton
Differentiation
Cell and molecular biology
Cell- och molekylärbiologi
spellingShingle Coiled coil proteins
Bacterial cytoskeleton
Differentiation
Cell and molecular biology
Cell- och molekylärbiologi
Bagchi, Sonchita
Coiled coil Cytoskeleton in Bacterial Cell Architecture : Studies of Growth and Development in Streptomyces
description Bacterial cytoskeleton is an exciting and relatively new field of research. Recent findings have proven that microbes are well-organized and neatly structured organisms. In this study we have shown that intermediate filament-like proteins with a characteristic rod domain architecture of coiled coil segments separated by non-coiled coil linkers, are widely spread among bacteria. We identified and characterized an intermediate filament-like protein (named FilP after filamentous protein) in Streptomyces coelicolor. It shares the characteristic biochemical property of eukaryotic intermediate filaments of formation of spontaneous filaments in vitro without requiring any energy or co-factor. We have provided here a preliminary model of its assembly in vitro. FilP also forms in vivo filaments in S. coelicolor hyphae, which are strongest at the sub-apical location of growing vegetative hyphae. We have proposed that FilP cytoskeletal network provides rigidity to the hyphae, especially at the growing tips, by interacting with an essential coiled coil protein DivIVA and possibly other partner elements, yet to be found. S. coelicolor is a well-studied model organism with a complicated life cycle. It germinates from a spore and spreads by forming branched vegetative hyphae. Lack of nutrients in the environment initiates formation of aerial hyphae in the air, perpendicular to the vegetative ones. The aerial hyphae differentiate into spore chains and eventually grey-pigmented dispersed individual spores are released. The signals involved in sporulation including cell division and chromosome segregation are not clear yet. We characterized here a novel locus consisting of two genes: a small putative membrane protein with no defined function, named SmeA and a member of the SpoIIIE/FtsK family, called SffA. The expression of this locus appears to be dependent on whiA and whiG-whiH-whiI pathways. This finding is intriguing as it can provide insight to the relationship between two apparently unrelated pathways, both leading to the same function of septation and maturation during sporulation.
author Bagchi, Sonchita
author_facet Bagchi, Sonchita
author_sort Bagchi, Sonchita
title Coiled coil Cytoskeleton in Bacterial Cell Architecture : Studies of Growth and Development in Streptomyces
title_short Coiled coil Cytoskeleton in Bacterial Cell Architecture : Studies of Growth and Development in Streptomyces
title_full Coiled coil Cytoskeleton in Bacterial Cell Architecture : Studies of Growth and Development in Streptomyces
title_fullStr Coiled coil Cytoskeleton in Bacterial Cell Architecture : Studies of Growth and Development in Streptomyces
title_full_unstemmed Coiled coil Cytoskeleton in Bacterial Cell Architecture : Studies of Growth and Development in Streptomyces
title_sort coiled coil cytoskeleton in bacterial cell architecture : studies of growth and development in streptomyces
publisher Uppsala universitet, Mikrobiologi
publishDate 2011
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-158271
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-554-8145-2
work_keys_str_mv AT bagchisonchita coiledcoilcytoskeletoninbacterialcellarchitecturestudiesofgrowthanddevelopmentinstreptomyces
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