Membrane fission during bacterial spore development requires DNA-pumping driven cellular inflation

Autor: Ane Landajuela, Martha Braun, Alejandro Martinez-Calvo, Christopher D. A. Rodrigues, Carolina Gomis Perez, Thierry Doan, David Z. Rudner, Ned S Wingreen, Erdem Karatekin
Rok vydání: 2021
Předmět:
DOI: 10.1101/2021.10.08.463650
Popis: Bacteria require membrane fission for cell division and endospore formation. FisB catalyzes membrane fission during sporulation, but the molecular basis is unclear as it cannot remodel membranes by itself. Sporulation initiates with an asymmetric division that generates a large mother cell and a smaller forespore that contains only 1/4 of its complete genome. As the mother cell membranes engulf the forespore, a DNA translocase pumps the rest of the chromosome into the small forespore compartment, inflating it due to increased turgor. When the engulfing membranes undergo fission, the forespore is released into the mother cell cytoplasm. Here we show that forespore inflation and FisB accumulation are both required for efficient membrane fission. We suggest that high membrane tension in the engulfment membrane caused by forespore inflation drives FisB-catalyzed membrane fission. Collectively our data indicate that DNA-translocation has a previously unappreciated second function in energizing FisB-mediated membrane fission under energy-limited conditions. HIGHLIGHTS- Membrane fission during endospore formation requires rapid forespore inflation by ATP-driven DNA translocation. - Forespore inflation increases the tension of the engulfment and forespore membranes to near lysis tensions. - FisB catalyzes membrane fission, but only if the membrane tension is high. - Membrane fission utilizes chemical energy transduced to mechanical energy during DNA-packing into the forespore.
Databáze: OpenAIRE