Publication:
NlpD links cell wall remodeling and outer membrane invagination during cytokinesis in Escherichia coli

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2017

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Public Library of Science
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Tsang, Mary-Jane, Anastasiya A. Yakhnina, and Thomas G. Bernhardt. 2017. “NlpD links cell wall remodeling and outer membrane invagination during cytokinesis in Escherichia coli.” PLoS Genetics 13 (7): e1006888. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1006888. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1006888.

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Abstract

Cytokinesis in gram-negative bacteria requires the constriction of all three cell envelope layers: the inner membrane (IM), the peptidoglycan (PG) cell wall and the outer membrane (OM). In order to avoid potentially lethal breaches in cell integrity, this dramatic reshaping of the cell surface requires tight coordination of the different envelope remodeling activities of the cytokinetic ring. However, the mechanisms responsible for this coordination remain poorly defined. One of the few characterized regulatory points in the envelope remodeling process is the activation of cell wall hydrolytic enzymes called amidases. These enzymes split cell wall material shared by developing daughter cells to facilitate their eventual separation. In Escherichia coli, amidase activity requires stimulation by one of two partially redundant activators: EnvC, which is associated with the IM, and NlpD, a lipoprotein anchored in the OM. Here, we investigate the regulation of amidase activation by NlpD. Structure-function analysis revealed that the OM localization of NlpD is critical for regulating its amidase activation activity. To identify additional factors involved in the NlpD cell separation pathway, we also developed a genetic screen using a flow cytometry-based enrichment procedure. This strategy allowed us to isolate mutants that form long chains of unseparated cells specifically when the redundant EnvC pathway is inactivated. The screen implicated the Tol-Pal system and YraP in NlpD activation. The Tol-Pal system is thought to promote OM invagination at the division site. YraP is a conserved protein of unknown function that we have identified as a new OM-localized component of the cytokinetic ring. Overall, our results support a model in which OM and PG remodeling events at the division site are coordinated in part through the coupling of NlpD activation with OM invagination.

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Biology and Life Sciences, Cell Biology, Cell Processes, Cell Cycle and Cell Division, Spectrum Analysis Techniques, Spectrophotometry, Cytophotometry, Flow Cytometry, Cell Physiology, Cell Fusion, Cellular Structures and Organelles, Cell Walls, Microscopy, Electron Microscopy, Phase Contrast Microscopy, Biochemistry, Proteins, Lipoproteins, Light Microscopy, Fluorescence Microscopy, Microbiology, Periplasm

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