Abstract

Cell division is the ultimate process for the propagation of bacteria, and FtsZ is an essential protein used by nearly all bacteria for this function. Chlamydiae belong to a small group of bacteria that lack the universal cell division protein FtsZ but still divide by binary fission. Chlamydial MreB is a member of the shape-determining MreB/Mbl family of proteins responsible for rod shape morphology in Escherichia coliChlamydia also encodes a homolog of RodZ, an MreB assembly cytoskeletal protein that links MreB to cell wall synthesis proteins. We hypothesized that MreB directs cell division in Chlamydia and that chlamydial MreB could replace FtsZ function for cell division in E. coli Overexpression of chlamydial mreB-rodZ in E. coli induced prominent morphological changes with production of large swollen or oval bacteria, eventually resulting in bacterial lysis. Low-level expression of chlamydial mreB-rodZ restored viability of a lethal ΔmreB mutation in E. coli, although the bacteria lost their typical rod shape and grew as rounded cells. When FtsZ activity was inhibited by overexpression of SulA in the ΔmreB mutant of E. coli complemented with chlamydial mreB-rodZ, spherical E. coli grew and divided. Localization studies using a fluorescent fusion chlamydial MreB protein indicated that chlamydial RodZ directs chlamydial MreB to the E. coli division septum. These results demonstrate that chlamydial MreB, in partnership with chlamydial RodZ, acts as a cell division protein. Our findings suggest that an mreB-rodZ-based mechanism allows Chlamydia to divide without the universal division protein FtsZ.IMPORTANCE The study of Chlamydia growth and cell division is complicated by its obligate intracellular nature and biphasic lifestyle. Chlamydia also lacks the universal division protein FtsZ. We employed the cell division system of Escherichia coli as a surrogate to identify chlamydial cell division proteins. We demonstrate that chlamydial MreB, together with chlamydial RodZ, forms a cell division and growth complex that can replace FtsZ activity and support cell division in E. coli Chlamydial RodZ plays a major role in directing chlamydial MreB localization to the cell division site. It is likely that the evolution of chlamydial MreB and RodZ to form a functional cell division complex allowed Chlamydia to dispense with its FtsZ-based cell division machinery during genome reduction. Thus, MreB-RodZ represents a possible mechanism for cell division in other bacteria lacking FtsZ.

Highlights

  • IMPORTANCE The study of Chlamydia growth and cell division is complicated by its obligate intracellular nature and biphasic lifestyle

  • Since RodZ plays a critical role in MreB function [27] and chlamydial RodZ interacts with chlamydial MreB [43], we constructed a transcriptional fusion of chlamydial MreB with chlamydial RodZ under the control of the arabinose promoter in pBAD33

  • It is likely that the higher levels of MreB competing for cell wall synthesis proteins disrupted the normal cell wall building process and that chlamydial MreB behaves to E. coli MreB under these conditions

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Summary

Introduction

IMPORTANCE The study of Chlamydia growth and cell division is complicated by its obligate intracellular nature and biphasic lifestyle. It is likely that the evolution of chlamydial MreB and RodZ to form a functional cell division complex allowed Chlamydia to dispense with its FtsZ-based cell division machinery during genome reduction. Present-day pathogenic chlamydiae separated from the last common ancestor that they shared with environmental chlamydiae roughly 700 million years ago [12] Their evolution to become successful obligate intracellular pathogens came by elimination of ancestral biosynthetic pathways and metabolic capabilities and subsequent strict reliance on the metabolism of their host cell for growth. Whole-genome sequence analyses indicate that pathogenic chlamydiae disposed of all known FtsZ-driven cell division machinery proteins, including Z ring stabilization proteins FtsA, ZipA, and ZapA/B/C/D; septal localization proteins FtsE and FtsX; and recruiter proteins for cell wall synthesis FtsB and FtsP [13]. And localization of MreB are regulated by RodZ [29], and loss of RodZ leads to disassembly of MreB and consequent loss of rod shape [30]

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