Publication | Open Access
DivIVA Is Required for Polar Growth in the MreB-Lacking Rod-Shaped Actinomycete<i>Corynebacterium glutamicum</i>
151
Citations
41
References
2008
Year
BiologyProkaryotic SystemPolar GrowthChromosome SegregationRod ShapeNatural SciencesBacteriologyMolecular BiologyMicrobial PhysiologyMicrobial EcologyMicrobiologyMolecular MicrobiologyMedicineCell Wall
The actinomycete Corynebacterium glutamicum grows as rod-shaped cells by zonal peptidoglycan synthesis at the cell poles. In this bacterium, experimental depletion of the polar DivIVA protein (DivIVA(Cg)) resulted in the inhibition of polar growth; consequently, these cells exhibited a coccoid morphology. This result demonstrated that DivIVA is required for cell elongation and the acquisition of a rod shape. DivIVA from Streptomyces or Mycobacterium localized to the cell poles of DivIVA(Cg)-depleted C. glutamicum and restored polar peptidoglycan synthesis, in contrast to DivIVA proteins from Bacillus subtilis or Streptococcus pneumoniae, which localized at the septum of C. glutamicum. This confirmed that DivIVAs from actinomycetes are involved in polarized cell growth. DivIVA(Cg) localized at the septum after cell wall synthesis had started and the nucleoids had already segregated, suggesting that in C. glutamicum DivIVA is not involved in cell division or chromosome segregation.
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