A chromosome-encoded ParMR system that forms membrane-bound filaments regulating cell shape in Cyanobacteria
Microbiology Seminar Series
- Date: Dec 2, 2024
- Time: 01:15 PM (Local Time Germany)
- Speaker: Prof. Martin Loose
- Institute of Science and Technology Austria
- Location: MPI for Terrestrial Microbiology
- Room: Lecture Hall / Hybrid
- Host: Dr. Georg Hochberg
- Contact: georg.hochberg@mpi-marburg.mpg.de
Actin-like protein filaments are essential for
bacterial intracellular organization. For example, ParMRC systems are well
known to segregate newly replicated plasmids using actin-like filaments of
ParM, the DNA-binding protein ParR, and the parC DNA element. Multicellular
cyanobacteria like Anabaena, have a chromosomal ParMR system with potential
implications in chromosome segregation. However, its precise function remained
unclear.
Surprisingly, we discovered that the ParMR system is not involved in DNA segregation,
but instead comprises a novel cytoskeletal system of membrane-bound filaments
that regulates cell shape. Evolutionary analysis revealed that these new
functions co-evolved with a modification of the cyanobacterial Min system that
we found to control ParM polymerization, thereby establishing a link between
cell shape regulation and cell division. Our research not only reveals a new
cytoskeletal system in Cyanobacteria, but also shed light on how protein
functions can change and be modified during evolution.