Affiliation:
1. Wadsworth Center, David Axelrod Institute for Public Health, New York State Department of Health, Albany, New York 12201-2002
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In
Treponema denticola
, a ribbon-like structure of cytoplasmic filaments spans the cytoplasm at all stages of the cell division process. Insertional inactivation was used as a first step to determine the function of the cytoplasmic filaments. A suicide plasmid was constructed that contained part of
cfpA
and a nonpolar erythromycin resistance cassette (
ermF
and
ermAM
) inserted near the beginning of the gene. The plasmid was electroporated into
T. denticola
, and double-crossover recombinants which had the chromosomal copy of
cfpA
insertionally inactivated were selected. Immunoblotting and electron microscopy confirmed the lack of cytoplasmic filaments. The mutant was further analyzed by dark-field microscopy to determine cell morphology and by the binding of two fluorescent dyes to DNA to assess the distribution of cellular nucleic acids. The cytoplasmic filament protein-deficient mutant exhibited pleiotropic defects, including highly condensed chromosomal DNA, compared to the homogeneous distribution of the DNA throughout the cytoplasm in a wild-type cell. Moreover, chains of cells are formed by the cytoplasmic filament-deficient mutant, and those cells show reduced spreading in agarose, which may be due to the abnormal cell length. The chains of cells and the highly condensed chromosomal DNA suggest that the cytoplasmic filaments may be involved in chromosome structure, segregation, or the cell division process in
Treponema
.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
31 articles.
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