Affiliation:
1. Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology, Hyderabad 500007, India
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In
Escherichia coli
, at least 12 proteins, FtsZ, ZipA, FtsA, FtsE/X, FtsK, FtsQ, FtsL, FtsB, FtsW, FtsI, FtsN, and AmiC, are known to localize to the septal ring in an interdependent and sequential pathway to coordinate the septum formation at the midcell. The FtsEX complex is the latest recruit of this pathway, and unlike other division proteins, it is shown to be essential only on low-salt media. In this study, it is shown that
ftsEX
null mutations are not only salt remedial but also osmoremedial, which suggests that FtsEX may not be involved in salt transport as previously thought. Increased coexpression of cell division proteins FtsQ-FtsA-FtsZ or FtsN alone restored the growth defects of
ftsEX
mutants.
ftsEX
deletion exacerbated the defects of most of the mutants affected in Z ring localization and septal assembly; however, the
ftsZ84
allele was a weak suppressor of
ftsEX
. The viability of
ftsEX
mutants in high-osmolarity conditions was shown to be dependent on the presence of a periplasmic protein, SufI, a substrate of twin-arginine translocase. In addition, SufI in multiple copies could substitute for the functions of FtsEX. Taken together, these results suggest that FtsE and FtsX are absolutely required for the process of cell division in conditions of low osmotic strength for the stability of the septal ring assembly and that, during high-osmolarity conditions, the FtsEX and SufI functions are redundant for this essential process.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology