Author:
Xu Xiaomei,Risoul Véronique,Byrne Deborah,Champ Stéphanie,Douzi Badredinne,Latifi Amel
Abstract
AbstractLocal activation and long-range inhibition are mechanisms conserved in self-organizing systems leading to biological patterns. A number of them involve the production by the developing cell of an inhibitory morphogen, but how this cell gets immune to self-inhibition is rather unknown. Under combined nitrogen starvation, the multicellular cyanobacterium Nostoc PCC 7120 develops nitrogen-fixing heterocysts with a pattern of a heterocyst every 10-12 vegetative cells. Cell differentiation is regulated by HetR which activates the synthesis of its own inhibitory morphogen (PatS), which diffusion establishes the differentiation pattern. Here we show that HetR interacts with HetL at the same interface as PatS, and that this interaction is required to suppress inhibition and to differentiate heterocysts. hetL expression is induced under nitrogen-starvation and is activated by HetR, suggesting that HetL provides immunity to the heterocyst. This protective mechanism might be conserved in other differentiating cyanobacteria as HetL homologues are spread across the phylum.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory