Affiliation:
1. Infectious Disease Division, Massachusetts General Hospital, Cambridge, Massachusetts
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In rod-shaped bacteria, certain proteins are specifically localized to the cell poles. The nature of the positional information that leads to the proper localization of these proteins is unclear. In a screen for factors required for the localization of the
Shigella
sp. actin assembly protein IcsA to the bacterial pole, a mutant carrying a transposon insertion in
mreB
displayed altered targeting of IcsA. The phenotype of cells containing a transposon insertion in
mreB
was indistinguishable from that of cells containing a nonpolar mutation in
mreB
or that of wild-type cells treated with the MreB inhibitor A22. In cells lacking MreB, a green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusion to a cytoplasmic derivative of IcsA localized to multiple sites. Secreted full-length native IcsA was present in multiple faint patches on the surfaces of these cells in a pattern similar to that seen for the cytoplasmic IcsA-GFP fusion. EpsM, the polar
Vibrio cholerae
inner membrane protein, also localized to multiple sites in
mreB
cells and colocalized with IcsA, indicating that localization to multiple sites is not unique to IcsA. Our results are consistent with the requirement, either direct or indirect, for MreB in the restriction of certain polar material to defined sites within the cell and, in the absence of MreB, with the formation of ectopic sites containing polar material.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
46 articles.
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