Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular Biology and Microbiology, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts 02111
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Deletion of the
citC
gene, coding for isocitrate dehydrogenase, arrests sporulation of
Bacillus subtilis
at stage I after bipolar localization of the cell division protein FtsZ but before formation of the asymmetric septum. A spontaneous extragenic suppressor mutation that overcame the stage I block was found to map within the
spoVG
gene. The suppressing mutation and other
spoVG
loss-of-function mutations enabled
citC
mutant cells to form asymmetric septa and to activate the forespore-specific sigma factor ς
F
. However, little induction of mother cell-specific, ς
E
-dependent sporulation genes was observed in a
citC spoVG
double mutant, indicating that there is an additional defect(s) in compartmentalized gene expression in the
citC
mutant. These other defects could be partially overcome by reducing the synthesis of citrate, by buffering the medium, or by adding excess MnCl
2
. Overexpression of the
spoVG
gene in wild-type cells significantly delayed ς
F
activation. Increased expression and stability of SpoVG in
citC
mutant cells may contribute to the
citC
mutant phenotype. Inactivation of the
spoVG
gene caused a population of otherwise wild-type cells to produce a small number of minicells during growth and caused sporulating cells to complete asymmetric septation more rapidly than normal. Unlike the case for inactivation of the cell division inhibitor gene
minD
, many of these minicells contained DNA and appeared only when the primary sporulation signal transduction pathway, the Spo0A phosphorelay, was active. These results suggest that SpoVG interferes with or is a negative regulator of the pathway leading to asymmetric septation.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
57 articles.
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