Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9440212 | Research in Microbiology | 2005 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
A region in the cell division site determinant MinD required for stimulation by MinE and which determines MinD topological specificity along coil-like structures has been identified. Structural modeling of dimeric MinD and sequence alignment of 24 MinD proteins revealed a conserved polar region in Gram-negative bacterial MinD proteins, corresponding to residues 92-94 of Neisseria gonorrhoeae MinD (MinDNg). Using MinDNg as a paradigm for MinD functionality in Gram-negative organisms, mutation of these conserved residues did not abrogate MinDNg self-association, nor its interaction with MinENg and the cell division inhibitor MinC. Although the MinDNg mutant dimerized in the presence of ATP, its ATPase activity was not stimulated by MinENg, unlike wild-type MinDNg. GFP fusions to either MinDNg or to Escherichia coli MinD bearing simultaneous or individual mutations to residues 92-94 localized within coiled arrays along the E. coli inner cell periphery, similar to wild-type GFP-MinD. However, unlike wild-type GFP-fusions, the mutant proteins were distributed uniformly throughout the array, despite the presence of MinE, which normally imparts topological specificity to MinD by inducing the latter to oscillate from pole-to-pole and away from midcell. Hence, despite localizing along the inner cell periphery as a polymeric structure, the mutant MinD proteins in this study have lost the ability to be efficiently stimulated by MinENg, resulting in a loss of distinct pole-to-pole oscillation.
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Authors
Jason Szeto, Nelson F. Eng, Sudeep Acharya, Marc D. Rigden, Jo-Anne R. Dillon,