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Journal of Bacteriology, September 2004, p . 5775-5781, Vol .
186, No . 17
Assembly Dynamics of FtsZ Rings in Bacillus subtilis and Escherichia
coli and Effects of FtsZ-Regulating Proteins
David E . Anderson,1 Frederico J . Gueiros-Filho,2,
and Harold P . Erickson1*
Department of Cell Biology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North
Carolina,1 Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Harvard
University, Cambridge, Massachusetts2
Received 3 March 2004/ Accepted 26 May 2004
FtsZ is the major cytoskeletal component of the bacterial cell
division machinery . It forms a ring-shaped structure (the Z ring)
that constricts as the bacterium divides . Previous in vivo
experiments with green fluorescent protein-labeled FtsZ and
fluorescence recovery after photobleaching have shown that the
Escherichia coli Z ring is extremely dynamic, continually
remodeling itself with a half time of 30 s, similar to microtubules
in the mitotic spindle . In the present work, under different
experimental conditions, we have found that the half time for
fluorescence recovery of E . coli Z rings is even shorter ( 9
s) . As before, the turnover appears to be coupled to GTP hydrolysis,
since the mutant FtsZ84 protein, with reduced GTPase in vitro,
showed an
3-fold
longer half time . We have also extended the studies to Bacillus
subtilis and found that this species exhibits equally rapid
dynamics of the Z ring (half time,
8
s) . Interestingly, null mutations of the FtsZ-regulating proteins
ZapA, EzrA, and MinCD had only modest effects on the assembly
dynamics . This suggests that these proteins do not directly regulate
FtsZ subunit exchange in and out of polymers . In B . subtilis,
only 30 to 35% of the FtsZ protein was in the Z ring, from which we
conclude that a Z ring only 2 or 3 protofilaments thick can function
for cell division .
FtsZ is a structural homolog of tubulin found in virtually all
prokaryotes, where it is the major cytoskeletal protein in cell
division . It forms a ring structure (the Z ring) at the midpoint of
the cell and, for both Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis,
is required for the recruitment of all of the subsequent proteins
involved in the synthesis of the new septum (7) . FtsZ
has many features in common with eukaryotic tubulin, including a very
similar tertiary structure, GTPase activity, and the ability to
assemble into protofilaments in vitro (6, 14,
19, 20, 30) .
It is generally assumed that the Z ring in vivo consists of some
arrangement of polymerized FtsZ protofilaments . Proper localization
of the Z ring to mid-cell is accomplished by at least two mechanisms,
(i) nucleoid occlusion and (ii) inhibition of polar FtsZ assembly by
the Min system (MinCD and DivIVA in B . subtilis and MinCDE in
E . coli) (7, 11, 18) .
In addition to the Min proteins, other potential regulators of FtsZ
polymerization have been identified . In B . subtilis, lack of
the negative regulator EzrA lowers the FtsZ concentration required
for Z-ring formation in vivo and gives rise to extraneous,
mislocalized FtsZ structures (13) . In addition, a
positive regulator, ZapA, was found to promote FtsZ polymerization
and bundling in vitro, and deletion of its gene led to death of cells
with abnormally low FtsZ levels (10) .
Recent results have shown that the Z ring is a surprisingly
dynamic structure (28), with subunits turning over at a rate
similar to that of microtubules in mitotic spindles of eukaryotic
cells (2, 25) . However, it was
unclear whether this dynamic behavior is unique to E . coli or
occurs in other species . Another question is whether the rapid
dynamics are intrinsic to FtsZ assembly or are regulated by other
proteins, in particular, the proteins described above . We have
therefore extended our fluorescence recovery after photobleaching
(FRAP) studies to examine Z-ring dynamics in another species, B .
subtilis, and have investigated the effect of known
FtsZ-regulating proteins .
Bacterial strains and plasmids. The E . coli and B .
subtilis strains used in this study are listed in Table
1 . The B . subtilis strains were all derivatives of
the wild-type PY79 strain and contained an integrated chromosomal
copy of ftsZ-gfp (in addition to the genomic ftsZ
gene) under the control of the isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside
(IPTG)-inducible Pspac promoter . Mutants were
constructed by transforming Pspac-ftsZ-gfp
strain JDB401 with genomic DNA from strains PL990 ( minCD::spc)
(12a), PL867 ( ezrA::spc)
(13), FG345 ( zapA-yshB::tet)
(10), and FG196 ( minD::kan) .
The E . coli strains contained either plasmid pJSB150 (ftsZ-gfp)
or pJSB151 (ftsZ84-gfp) . Plasmids pJSB150 and pJSB151
are derivatives of pJSB2, an expression plasmid based on pBAD18 but
containing an altered multicloning site and a less efficient
Shine-Dalgarno sequence and with the ampicillin resistance replaced
by chloramphenicol resistance (27) .
| TABLE 1 . Bacterial strains used in this study
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Media and growth conditions. For the B . subtilis
strains, overnight cultures were diluted 100- or 200-fold in
Luria-Bertani (LB) medium or LB plus 5 µg of chloramphenicol per ml .
They were allowed to recover for
1
h at 37°C with shaking and then induced with 50 µM IPTG until mid-log
phase (2 to 3 h) prior to viewing in the microscope . E . coli
BW27783(pJSB150) was grown similarly, but in LB plus 34 µg of
chloramphenicol per ml, and was induced with 0.00005 to 0.0002%
arabinose . Strain WM1032(pJSB150) was diluted and grown in LB plus 30
µg of kanamycin per ml plus 34 µg of chloramphenicol per ml at room
temperature ( 24°C)
until early log phase (optical density, 0.05 to 0.1) and then induced
with 0.001% arabinose for 2 to 3 h before microscopy . To avoid salt
rescue of the ftsZ84 phenotype, strain JFL101(pJSB151) was
grown in MOPS+ medium (28) containing 0.5% glycerol and
34 µg of chloramphenicol per ml at 30°C until early log phase
(optical density, 0.05 to 0.1) and then induced with 0.001% arabinose
for 2 to 3 h before microscopy . For all strains, the final 30 min or
more of shaking prior to microscopy was done at room temperature .
Also, during FRAP experiments requiring multiple slides, cultures
were rediluted with continued shaking at room temperature in order to
maintain a log-phase culture . To check that the green fluorescent
protein (GFP) remained attached to the FtsZ protein, we performed
Western blot assays with a polyclonal anti-GFP antibody (Clontech) .
The B . subtilis fusion protein showed no visible degradation,
and in E . coli <5% of the GFP was cleaved off . This is an
important control for our measurement of the relative amounts of FtsZ
in the ring and cytoplasm .
Microscopy and FRAP. Slides were prepared by (i) melting a
solution of 1% agarose in MOPS+ medium-0.5% glycerol, (ii) pipetting
50 µl onto a siliconized glass slide with two pieces of laboratory
tape as spacers, and (iii) dropping a plain glass slide on top to
create a thin agarose pad . After separating the two slides, 5
µl of culture was pipetted onto the agarose pad on the plain glass
slide and then covered with a number 1 coverslip that was fixed to
the slide with 2 drops of melted Valap (1:1:1
petrolatum-lanolin-paraffin) . Cells were imaged and FRAP experiments
were performed on a Nikon TE300 inverted fluorescence microscope
equipped with a laser source with Metamorph software as previously
described (17, 28) . Unless otherwise
noted, all images and FRAP measurements were made at room temperature
(24 to 26°C) . Exposures were 350 to 400 ms, and laser bleach pulses
were 35 to 45 ms . Time series were typically taken over 1 to 5 min
with exposures every 2 to 10 s, depending on the speed of recovery .
Measurements of integrated fluorescence intensity in the bleached
and other regions at each time point were made in Metamorph and
exported to Excel 2000 . For each measured region, background
intensity was subtracted and a correction factor was applied for
overall photobleaching of the sample during observation (determined
from intensity over time of a control cell in the same field) .
Recovery half times were determined by performing a least-squares fit
of the intensity of the bleached region over time to the
single-exponential equation F
– F(t) = [F
– F0] e–kt, where F
is the fluorescence of the bleached region after maximal recovery,
F(t) is the fluorescence at time t, and F0
is the initial fluorescence just after bleaching (t = 0) .
Fitting was performed with the Solver function of Excel and allowing
F ,
F0, and the half-time, (t1/2 t1/2
= ln 2/k), to vary .
Assembly dynamics of B . subtilis and E . coli Z rings are
equally rapid. In order to test whether the rapid subunit exchange
observed in E . coli Z rings also occurs in other bacterial
species, we performed FRAP experiments with B . subtilis strain
JDB401, which expresses an FtsZ-GFP fusion at relatively low levels,
along with the normal level of endogenous FtsZ (13) .
Figure 1A shows selected time points of a typical
FRAP image series in which we bleached one-half of the Z ring, and
Fig . 1B shows the corresponding time course of
fluorescence recovery in the bleached region . Fitting the corrected
fluorescence intensity to the equation given in Materials and Methods
gave a half time of recovery of 7.0 s for the series shown . This
shows that Z rings of other bacterial species do in fact exhibit
extremely rapid dynamics . The average half time of recovery for
JDB401 cells was 8 ± 3 s (n = 19) . Because the 8-s half time
observed for B . subtilis was much shorter than the 30-s half
time previously reported for E . coli, we also performed FRAP
with E . coli BW27783(pJSB150) cells under the same conditions
(agarose pad immobilization, LB medium,
25°C).
E . coli BW27783 cells were chosen because of their more
uniform level of expression from pBAD within a population of E .
coli cells (12) . A typical FRAP time series
for these cells is shown in Fig . 2 . Surprisingly, the E .
coli Z rings exhibited the same rapid turnover as those of B .
subtilis, with an average half time of 9 ± 3 s (n = 10) .
This exchange is about threefold faster than that observed previously
for E . coli (28) . The different exchange
rates in the two studies could not be wholly attributed to any one
factor, but the method of immobilization (agarose pad in the present
study, polylysine-coated coverslips in the previous one) had the
greatest effect (data not shown) . The exact method of data analysis
may also be a factor .
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FIG . 1 . FRAP of an FtsZ ring in wild-type B . subtilis cells . (A)
Time-lapse series of fluorescence images showing the time course of
recovery . The arrow shows the half-ring to be bleached . (B) Intensity of
the photobleached region over time . The data points have been corrected
for background and photobleaching during the observation period . The
points represent the fluorescence data, and the solid line is the
predicted recovery curve given the first-order rate constant, k,
determined by least-squares fitting of the data to the equation given in
Materials and Methods . The recovery half time for this series was 7.0 s.
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FIG . 2 . FRAP of an FtsZ ring in wild-type E . coli
BW27783(pJSB150) cells . (A) Time-lapse series of fluorescence images .
(B) Intensity of the photobleached region over time . The half time of
recovery for the series shown was 8.9 s.
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A contrast-enhanced movie showing disassembly and reassembly of Z
rings in dividing E . coli BW27783(pJSB150) cells at 37°C can
be accessed at
http://www.cellbio.duke.edu/Faculty/Erickson/ . The overall time
scale is 10 min, with frames taken at 10-s intervals . An interesting
feature of this movie is that individual FtsZ-GFP foci can be seen
translocating across the cells, into and out of the constricting and
reforming Z rings .
We also found, on the basis of integrated fluorescence intensities
in unbleached cells, that the proportion of FtsZ protein in the Z
ring is the same, approximately 30 to 35%, in both E . coli and
B . subtilis cells, and we did not observe any obvious
correlation between the degree of constriction of rings and their
rate of recovery (data not shown) . Because of the size of the focused
laser beam and the small volume of bacterial cells, we unavoidably
bleached a significant portion of the FtsZ-GFP pool with the laser
photobleaching pulse . Thus, on the basis of this study, we are not
able to draw any conclusions about percent recovery and mobile or
immobile fractions . The graphs of fluorescence recovery over time in
Fig . 1 to 4 are not normalized .
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FIG . 4 . FRAP of FtsZ rings in B . subtilis cells lacking minCD .
(A) Time-lapse series of fluorescence images . (B) Intensity of the
photobleached region over time . Recovery half time, 10.7 s.
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Effect of FtsZ-regulating proteins on Z-ring turnover. To
determine whether the rapid dynamics observed are due to the action
of known FtsZ-interacting and -regulating proteins, we performed FRAP
with strains containing null mutations of several genes . We will
subsequently refer to E . coli BW27783 and B . subtilis
JDB401 as the wild-type strains since they served as our control
strains for comparison with the mutants .
The first mutant that we tested was a B . subtilis strain, FG487,
that lacks the protein ZapA, a positive FtsZ assembly factor (10) .
As previously reported, the FtsZ structures in this mutant appeared
normal . We had expected that the absence of the stabilizing factor
might increase assembly dynamics, but the average recovery half time
was similar to that of the wild type, at 10 ± 4 s (n = 12) .
The next strain we examined was FG489, shown in Fig . 3,
which lacks the negative regulator of ring assembly, EzrA (13) .
As previously reported, cells often showed extraneous, mislocalized
rings and also residual Z-ring material at previous division sites .
In this case, the absence of the destabilizing factor did give a
longer recovery half time of 14 ± 5 s (n = 13), which was
statistically significant (Table 2) . However, the
absolute difference is not very large, less than a factor of 2 . The
final two B . subtilis mutant strains examined were FG522,
which lacks MinD, and FG524, which lacks both MinC and MinD . As
expected, these cells showed extra, mislocalized Z rings and some
double rings in FG524 (Fig . 4) . Similar to the
results obtained with the
zapA
and
ezrA
mutant strains, neither FG522 nor FG524 showed a large difference in
Z-ring stability, with average recovery half times of 12 ± 6 (n
= 8) and 10 ± 2 (n = 5) s . In general for all of these
strains, we chose single, medial rings for the FRAP measurements . In
the case of the
ezrA
and
minCD
strains, we also examined several mislocalized rings, and these
showed dynamic behavior similar to that of the medial rings (data not
shown) .
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FIG . 3 . FRAP of FtsZ rings in B . subtilis cells lacking ezrA .
(A) Time-lapse series of fluorescence images . (B) Intensity of the
photobleached region over time . Recovery half time, 13.0 s.
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| TABLE 2 . Summary of B . subtilis and E . coli FRAP
measurements
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We also investigated Z-ring stability in two mutant E . coli
strains . The first, JFL101(pJSB151), carries the ftsZ84 mutation
(G105S), which was shown previously to reduce the turnover of
the Z ring by a factor of about 10, consistent with its reduced
GTPase activity in vitro (28) . Under our present experimental
conditions this strain gave an approximately three- to fourfold
decrease in the turnover of Z rings (t1/2 = 30 ± 10 s;
n = 9) . The second E . coli strain, WM1032(pJSB150), lacks
the MinC, MinD, and MinE proteins . Similar to B . subtilis,
most of these cells had extraneous, polar Z-ring structures . In this
case, however, the absence of the MinCDE system had a more pronounced
effect on Z-ring turnover, with a recovery half time of 19 ± 3
s (n = 3), approximately twice that of the wild type . Table
2 summarizes the average recovery times for all of the strains
and their statistical significances .
Finally, we attempted to measure FRAP of the cytoplasmic pool of
FtsZ to gain information about its polymerization state . The recovery
was too fast for accurate measurement . When a spot was bleached in
the cytoplasm on one side of the bacterium, that side showed a
uniform decrease in fluorescence in
0.5
s, and the fluorescence was equilibrated on the two sides in
1
s (data not shown) .
The rapid assembly dynamics of the Z ring were virtually identical
for E . coli and B . subtilis, suggesting that rapid exchange
of subunits is a conserved property of Z rings in most or all
bacterial species . This continuous turnover of subunits may therefore
play a role in the mechanism of Z-ring function . It is, however,
important to remember that the mutant FtsZ84 protein appears to
divide normally at 30°C, despite a threefold reduction in dynamics .
This suggests that the dynamics of FtsZ have evolved to exceed what
may be essential for division and that some other factor is rate
limiting for division and cell cycle timing .
An important observation is that the fraction of FtsZ incorporated
into the ring,
30%,
is the same for both species . On the basis of an estimation of 15,000
FtsZ molecules per E . coli cell (15), if
one-third of that protein is in the ring, the E . coli Z ring
would be an average of 6 protofilaments wide (28) . In a cell
ready for division (about 1.4 times as long as an average cell)
it could be just over 8 protofilaments thick . However, in B .
subtilis, it has been estimated that there are only 5,000 FtsZ
molecules per cell (8) . Thus, in B . subtilis we
estimate the Z ring to be only 2 protofilaments wide on average, or
about 3 protofilaments at the time of constriction . E . coli
strain MC1061 was likewise reported to have only 5,000 molecules of
FtsZ when growing in minimal medium (24) . Assuming that
it also has only
30%
of its FtsZ in the Z ring, this E . coli B/r K strain can
achieve cell division with a ring only 2 to 3 protofilaments thick .
It has been hypothesized that Z-ring dynamics are the result of a
balance of stabilizing and destabilizing factors (10,
22), and in this study we tested several potential
modulators of this behavior . It is not very surprising that assembly
dynamics are not altered by a lack of ZapA, given that the null
strain has almost no phenotype in terms of septation . It also has
only a small effect on the distribution of FtsZ between the ring
and the cytoplasm (wild type, 30% ± 4%;
zapA
mutant, 25% ± 4%; F . Gueiros-Filho, unpublished observations) .
However, we have not tested the effect of zapA deletion in the
absence of EzrA or with lowered levels of FtsZ . EzrA, which has
a more noticeable phenotype when deleted, did affect the dynamics
more significantly and in the direction expected . However, recovery
half times from this strain were also more variable and the small
absolute difference from the wild type is of questionable
significance . Removing the Min proteins from B . subtilis also
produced only a small increase in the turnover half time, suggesting
that direct inhibition of FtsZ assembly in the Z ring is not a
primary function of B . subtilis MinC . In E . coli, however,
Z rings of the
minCDE
strain were stabilized approximately twofold, almost as much as those
formed of FtsZ84 with its decreased GTPase activity . This suggests
that in E . coli, MinC(DE) might directly interact with already
formed Z rings to inhibit or actively disassemble FtsZ polymers .
The recovery times showed a large variation for each strain
examined (Fig . 5), with half times ranging from 4 s to more
than 20 s even in the wild-type strains . The few cells with
long recovery times (>20 s) were considered possibly unhealthy and
were excluded from the wild-type average recovery times . Given this
large variability in the populations of wild-type cells, we suggest
that the slightly altered dynamics in the mutant B . subtilis
strains may not represent an important functional difference . The
simplest interpretation is that the dynamic behavior of the Z ring is
an intrinsic property of FtsZ polymers and is only slightly altered
by known regulatory proteins . It is notable, however, that E . coli
strains with min deleted showed a more pronounced increase in
recovery half times . This may represent a direct effect on Z-ring
stability, but the stabilization was still only a factor of 2 .
|
FIG . 5 . Histograms of Z-ring fluorescence recovery times for wild-type
(wt) versus mutant cells of B . subtilis (Bs) (A) and E . coli
(Ec) (B).
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We tried to address the question of whether cytoplasmic FtsZ is
monomeric or assembled into protofilaments . In vitro studies with
E . coli FtsZ indicate a critical concentration of
1
µM under physiological solution conditions (9), so
we expect most of the cytoplasmic FtsZ ( 8
µM for E . coli, assuming that 70% of the total is in the
cytoplasm) to be assembled into protofilaments . When we did FRAP with
cytoplasmic FtsZ in strain BW27783, we found that it was completely
re-equilibrated across the bleached half of the cell in
0.5
s and across both sides of the cell in
1
s . This seems somewhat slower than the
0.5-s
time for equilibration of monomeric GFP (4), but
our instrument did not have a time resolution that could accurately
measure a diffusion coefficient . If the equilibration time is slower
than for GFP it would suggest that cytoplasmic FtsZ is assembled into
protofilaments, but with the present data we cannot make a clear
distinction between monomers and short polymers of FtsZ . We attempted
to use fluorescence correlation spectroscopy to determine a diffusion
coefficient for the cytoplasmic form(s) of FtsZ, but we found that
the cellular FtsZ-GFP pool was photobleached too rapidly to obtain
useful measurements .
The 8- to 9-s half time we observed for turnover of the FtsZ ring
in B . subtilis and E . coli is similar to the fastest turnover
in the eukaryotic cytoskeleton, specifically, the mitotic apparatus
of cultured mammalian cells (26) . Turnover of tubulin
is generated by dynamic instability, which involves extended cycles
of assembly and disassembly at the microtubule ends (3,
5) . The assembly dynamics of FtsZ are much less
well understood . Recent work in our laboratory suggests that FtsZ
protofilaments assemble cooperatively by addition of subunits to the
ends, with an assembly time similar to the in vivo turnover rate (Y .
Chen et al., submitted for publication) . Novel experiments are needed
to confirm this and establish a detailed assembly mechanism .
Finally, the rapid dynamics has implications for the structure of
the Z ring . We have estimated that the Z ring is approximately 6 to 8
or 2 to 3 protofilaments wide for E . coli and B . subtilis,
but we have not resolved whether there are a few very long protofilaments
or many short ones . We will postulate that assembly occurs by
addition of subunits to the ends at a rate of 5 µM–1 s–1 .
This is the diffusion-limited rate for protein-protein association (21)
and is in agreement with our recent in vitro kinetic studies (Chen et
al., submitted) . If the concentration of free subunits is 1 µM, which
is the critical concentration determined in vitro (9),
then protofilaments would grow at a rate of five subunits per s . This
would mean that protofilaments could grow only 45 subunits long
during the 9-s turnover half time, or 90 subunits long during the
entire recovery time . A protofilament 45 subunits long would be about
200 nm long, much shorter than the 3,000-nm circumference of the
bacterium . This estimate of protofilament length is similar to the
average protofilament length of 23 subunits for E . coli FtsZ
measured in vitro (23) . Thus, both in vitro
studies and the rapid assembly dynamics observed in vivo suggest that
the Z ring is an assembly of many short protofilaments .
This work was supported by NIH grants GM 066014 to H . P . Erickson and
GM 18568 to R . Losick . F . J . Gueiros-Filho was a Helen Hay Whitney
Foundation postdoctoral fellow during part of this work .
We especially thank the laboratory of E . D . Salmon, University of
North Carolina, for the use of the FRAP microscope and R . Losick,
Harvard University, for support of F.J.G.-F . and comments on the
manuscript . We also thank J . Lutkenhaus, J . D . Keasling, P . A . Levin,
and W . Margolin for providing bacterial strains and J . Stricker for
construction of pJSB150 and pJSB151 .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Box 3709, Duke
University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27710 . Phone: (919) 684-6385 . Fax: (919)
684-8090 . E-mail:
h.erickson@cellbio.duke.edu .
Present address: Departamento de Bioquimica, Instituto de Quimica,
Universidade de Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, SP 05508-900, Brazil .
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