Affiliation:
1. Interfaculty Institute for Microbiology and Infection Medicine, Organismic Interactions, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany
2. Junior Research Group Synaptic Plasticity, Hertie Institute for Clinical Brain Research, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Filamentous cyanobacteria of the order
Nostocales
display typical properties of multicellular organisms. In response to nitrogen starvation, some vegetative cells differentiate into heterocysts, where fixation of N
2
takes place. Heterocysts provide a micro-oxic compartment to protect nitrogenase from the oxygen produced by the vegetative cells. Differentiation involves fundamental remodeling of the Gram-negative cell wall by deposition of a thick envelope and by formation of a neck-like structure at the contact site to the vegetative cells. Cell wall-hydrolyzing enzymes, like cell wall amidases, are involved in peptidoglycan maturation and turnover in unicellular bacteria. Recently, we showed that mutation of the amidase homologue
amiC2
gene in
Nostoc punctiforme
ATCC 29133 distorts filament morphology and function. Here, we present the functional characterization of two
amiC
paralogues from
Anabaena
sp. strain PCC 7120. The
amiC1
(
alr0092
) mutant was not able to differentiate heterocysts or to grow diazotrophically, whereas the
amiC2
(
alr0093
) mutant did not show an altered phenotype under standard growth conditions. In agreement, fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) studies showed a lack of cell-cell communication only in the AmiC1 mutant. Green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged AmiC1 was able to complement the mutant phenotype to wild-type properties. The protein localized in the septal regions of newly dividing cells and at the neck region of differentiating heterocysts. Upon nitrogen step-down, no mature heterocysts were developed in spite of ongoing heterocyst-specific gene expression. These results show the dependence of heterocyst development on amidase function and highlight a pivotal but so far underestimated cellular process, the remodeling of peptidoglycan, for the biology of filamentous cyanobacteria.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology