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Journal of Bacteriology, November 2001, p. 6435-6443, Vol. 183, No. 21
Biochemie, Fachbereich Chemie,
Philipps-Universität Marburg, 35032 Marburg, Germany
Received 18 June 2001/Accepted 21 June 2001
Using immunofluorescence microscopy and a fusion of a cold shock
protein (CSP), CspB, to green fluorescent protein (GFP), we showed that
in growing cells Bacillus subtilis CSPs specifically localize to cytosolic regions surrounding the nucleoid. The
subcellular localization of CSPs is influenced by the structure of
the nucleoid. Decondensed chromosomes in smc mutant
cells reduced the sizes of the regions in which CSPs localized, while
cold shock-induced chromosome compaction was accompanied by an
expansion of the space in which CSPs were present. As a control,
histone-like protein HBsu localized to the nucleoids, while
Cold shock proteins (CSPs)
constitute a widespread and highly conserved protein family in
bacteria, and multiple copies of CSPs are often present (10,
25). Haemophilus influenzae contains a single
csp gene, while Bacillus subtilis contains three
csp genes and Escherichia coli contains nine. The
sequence identity for CSPs and the cold shock domain that has been
identified in a variety of eukaryotic RNA-binding proteins is
remarkably high, suggesting that there is a conserved function for CSPs
and the cold shock domain (11).
Synthesis of all CSPs (CspB, CspC, CspD) in B. subtilis is
strongly induced following cold shock and entry into the stationary phase (for CspB and CspC), while CSPs are also present at 37°C (6, 9). Cold shock induction occurs mainly at the
posttranscriptional level, while transcriptional activation of
csp genes is only modest (6, 19, 31). Deletion
of one or two csp genes leads to an increase in synthesis of
the other CSP(s) and influences the synthesis of many other cytosolic
proteins (6). cspB cspD and cspB
cspC double mutants show growth impairment at 15°C as well as at
37°C. These findings suggest that CSPs can complement each other and
cross-regulate their synthesis. The presence of at least one CSP is
necessary for viability of B. subtilis at low and optimal growth temperatures, and depletion of CSPs leads to compromised and
deregulated protein synthesis (6). CSPs consist of a
five-stranded According to recent reports (1, 23), transcription in
bacteria seems to occur mostly on the centrally located nucleoid that
contains the bulk of the DNA, while translation appears to take place
mainly at cytosolic sites surrounding the nucleoid. It has been
proposed that the coupling of transcription and translation to
insertion of proteins into membranes and transport across the cytosolic
membrane pulls DNA towards the membrane, thereby decondensing chromosomes, which otherwise form a more compacted structure (e.g., in
the stationary phase) (32). We have proposed a model in
which CSPs cooperatively bind to nascent transcripts and prevent
formation of secondary structures in RNA that would impair initiation
of translation (6). As the affinity of CSPs for ssDNA and
RNA is moderate, ribosomes could displace CSPs from RNA and initiate translation on a linear template. Thus, CSPs would strongly affect the
coupling of transcription to translation in bacteria. This model was
recently supported by biochemical data obtained by Hanna and Liu
(13), who reported a strong association of
E. coli CspE with several short transcripts after in
vivo cross-linking.
In this study, we investigated the subcellular localization of B. subtilis CSPs. We found that all three CSPs are present in
cytosolic spaces surrounding the central nucleoid. So far, a similar
localization has been reported only for a ribosomal protein in B. subtilis (23), suggesting that CSPs function in the
same cellular location as ribosomes rather than on the nucleoid. However, inhibition of transcription eliminated specific localization of CspB, indicating that CspB binds to RNA during transcription. We
also found that CSPs influence the structure of the nucleoid, which
supports the hypothesis that these molecules function in coupling
transcription and translation.
Media and growth conditions.
E. coli XL1-Blue
{recA endA1 gyrA96 thi-1
hsdR17 supE44 relA1 lac
[F' proAB
lacIqZ Plasmid construction.
By using primers 5'cspB-OrfUp
(5'-AGAGAGCTCAGAAAATTTGAAGAAACCAC-3') and 3'cspB-gfp
(5'-AAACCCGGGACGCTTCTTTAGTAACGT-3') and primers
3'cspB-gfp-Trm3'Orf
(5'-GAAAAGCTTAAGCATAAATTGATATGAAAAACT-3') and 3'cspB-OrfDown
(5'-GGACTCGAGAAATCAGAGATCATTTAAA-3'), a
cspB-containing upstream fragment that did
not include the cspB stop codon (5' fragment, 1,958 bp) and
a fragment downstream of the cspB gene (3' fragment) were
amplified from B. subtilis JH642 chromosomal DNA
by PCR. The 5' fragment was cloned into pCW8 (30) by using SacI and SmaI, resulting in plasmid
pMW_BGFP-1. Next, the 3' fragment was cloned into pMW_BGFP-1 by
using HindIII and XhoI. The resulting plasmid, pMW_BGFP-2, was linearized by HindIII
digestion and ligated with a 1,660-bp HindIII fragment
obtained from pDG647 (Bacillus Genetic Stock Center,
Columbus, Ohio) containing an erythromycin resistance cassette,
which yielded pMW_BGFP. The integrity of this plasmid was verified
by sequencing the entire cspB gene, including its 5'
untranslated leader region and promoter region, as well as the
junction between cspB and gfp, using an ABI Prism 310 genetic analyzer. The linker sequence between CspB and GFP is
SRAAGIRLEK, and the entire fusion protein comprises 317 amino acids
(molecular weight, 35,600; pI 5.50). By introducing SpeI and
BamHI restriction sites, a DNA fragment carrying the
entire gfp gene was amplified from pCW8 (30)
with primers 5'gfp-Express-pX (5'-ATAAACTAGTAGGAGGTAGAAAAAATGAGTAAAGGAGAAG-3')
and 3'gfp-Express-pX (5'-CCTAGGATCCATGCTATTTGTATAGTTCATCCAT-3'), and it was
subsequently cloned into the SpeI and BamHI sites
of the B. subtilis amyE integration vector pX
(20). Plasmid pMW_gfp was tested for the presence of
gfp by digestion analysis and by PCR.
Bacterial strains.
For construction of B. subtilis MW1
(amyE::xylR-Pxyl-gfp-cat),
plasmid pMW_gfp was linearized with ScaI and transformed into B. subtilis JH642 (pheA1 trpC2),
with selection for resistance to 10 µg of chloramphenicol per
ml. Double-crossover integration was verified by performing a starch
assay with Lugol's solution (Merck, Darmstadt, Germany) on LB medium
plates containing 1% starch. Transformation of B. subtilis
JH642 and 64C (6) with ScaI- and
XhoI-linearized plasmid pMW_BGFP and selection for
resistance to 1 µg of erythromycin per ml and 25 µg of lincomycin
per ml resulted in B. subtilis MW2
(cspB-gfp) and MW3 (cspB-gfp
cspC::kan), respectively. To construct MW4
(cspB::cat
cspC::kan cspD::cat pDGcspB), B. subtilis 64BCDbt (6) was
transformed with ScaI-linearized pX (20).
Transformants were selected on LB medium plates containing 30 µg of
chloramphenicol per ml. In contrast to parental strain 64BCDbt, strain
MW4 did not contain the spectinomycin resistance cassette in the
cat-disrupted cspB gene locus, as determined by PCR analysis of the cspB gene locus (Table
1), but instead contained two
cat genes. For construction of MW5
(cspC::kan
cspD::cat cspB-gfp pDGcspB), chromosomal DNA prepared from MW3 was used for transformation of MW4 to obtain MW5 after selection on LB medium plates containing 1 µg of erythromycin per ml and 25 µg of lincomycin per ml.
In contrast to 64BCDbt, growth of MW5 was not affected by
depletion of IPTG. As determined by PCR, continued growth of MW5
without selection for phleomycin resistance resulted in loss of pDGcspB after approximately 2 weeks, in contrast to growth of 64BCDbt, which did not lose this plasmid.
0021-9193/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.183.21.6435-6443.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Localization of Cold Shock Proteins to Cytosolic Spaces
Surrounding Nucleoids in Bacillus subtilis Depends on
Active Transcription
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ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
-galactosidase and GFP were detectable throughout the cell.
After inhibition of translation, CspB-GFP was still present
around the nucleoids in a manner similar to that in cold-shocked cells.
However, in stationary-phase cells and after inhibition of
transcription, CspB was distributed throughout the cell, indicating
that specific localization of CspB depends on active transcription and
is not due to simple exclusion from the nucleoid. Furthermore, we
observed that nucleoids are more condensed and frequently abnormal in
cspB cspC and cspB cspD
double-mutant cells. This suggests that the function of CSPs affects
chromosome structure, probably through coupling of transcription to
translation, which is thought to decondense nucleoids. In addition, we
found that cspB cspD and cspB cspC double
mutants are defective in sporulation, with a block at or before stage
0. Interestingly, CspB and CspC are depleted from the forespore
compartment but not from the mother cell. In toto, our findings
suggest that CSPs localize to zones of newly synthesized RNA,
coupling transcription with initiation of translation.
![]()
INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
-barrel with highly conserved RNA-binding epitopes
(RNP motifs) on adjacent
-strands. Mutational analysis has shown
that RNP motifs are essential for binding to single-stranded DNA
(ssDNA) and to RNA (28). CSPs bind cooperatively to
single-stranded nucleic acids, and their affinity for ssDNA is somewhat
greater than their affinity for RNA (6, 17). Longer RNA
molecules are bound only after heat denaturation, suggesting that CSPs
bind to linear single-stranded nucleic acids instead of highly
structured nucleic acids. Interestingly, B. subtilis CSPs
are highly susceptible to proteolysis in vitro, while they are rather
stable in vivo. Based on the finding that binding to substrate nucleic
acids strongly protects CSPs in vitro, CSPs appear to be heavily
associated with ssDNA and/or RNA in vivo (27). It has been
suggested that CSPs may act as transcription activators of other
cold-induced genes or as RNA chaperones during initiation of translation.
![]()
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
M15
Tn10(Tetr)]; Stratagene} was grown
in Luria-Bertani (LB) rich medium supplemented with 50 µg of
ampicillin per ml when it was appropriate. Bacillus strains
were grown in 2xYT rich medium or DSM sporulation medium. For
expression of green fluorescent protein (GFP) in B. subtilis MW1 (see below), Spizizen's minimal medium (14)
supplemented with 0.2% (wt/vol) fructose instead of glucose, 50 µg
of tryptophan per ml, and 50 µg of phenylalanine per ml was used.
Xylose was added to a final concentration of 0.5% to activate the
Pxyl promoter controlling transcription of
gfp.
Isopropyl-
-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG)
(final concentration, 1 mM) was added to the growth medium of
B. subtilis MW4 (see below) and 64BCDbt (6).
For inhibition studies, rifampin, chloramphenicol, kanamycin, or
spectinomycin was added to a final concentration of 200 µg/ml. Cells
were incubated for 30 min before image acquisition. S750 minimal medium
(16) was used for growth for microscopy.
TABLE 1.
B. subtilis strains
Immunofluorescence microscopy. Immunofluorescence microscopy was performed as described by Pogliano et al. (26). Anti-CspB, anti-CspC, and anti-CspD sera were used at concentrations of 1:2,500 to 1:10,000. 4',6'-Diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) was used at concentrations of 200 to 500 ng/ml; FM4-64 was used at a concentration of 1 nM.
Image acquisition. Fluorescence microscopy was performed with an Olympus AX70 microscope by using Xenon epifluorescence. Cells were grown in S750 medium (16) and were mounted on agarose pads containing growth medium on object slides. Images of live cells or images of fixed cells were taken with the same exposure time. For stationary-phase cells, culture supernatant was used for the agarose pads. Images were acquired with a digital charge-coupled device camera, and three-dimensional image reconstitution was generated with the Metamorph program.
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RESULTS |
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Intracellular localization of CSPs in growing cells.
To study
the subcellular localization of the major CSP, CspB, in B. subtilis, we constructed a fusion of CspB to GFP. The fusion was
integrated by double crossover into the cspB locus of strain
JH642 so that the cspB-gfp fusion was under the same control
as wild-type cspB. Western blot analysis verified that the
fusion was produced, replacing wild-type CspB. To investigate whether the fusion was active, it was necessary to combine the cspB-gfp fusion with cspD and cspC
deletion mutants, since csp single mutants had no detectable
phenotype (6). A strain carrying cspB-gfp and
having deletions of cspC and cspD is viable,
whereas cells having deletions of all csp genes can
survive only when they carry a plasmid encoding cspB in
trans (6). Therefore, the CspB-GFP fusion was
able to complement CspB function, at least in part (see below).
Fluorescence microscopy of the resulting strain, strain MW2
(cspB-gfp), showed that CspB-GFP localized to the cytosol,
as expected. However, the pattern of localization was different from
that of GFP, which was present throughout the cell (Fig.
1A). CspB-GFP was
observed only in cytosolic regions surrounding the nucleoids; most
occurred at the cell poles, while nucleoids were devoid of CspB or had
a drastically lower concentration of CspB (Fig. 1B). An overlay of GFP
fluorescence with DNA stain (Fig. 1B, green-blue panel) revealed little
overlay (yellow) of CspB and the DNA stain. To obtain better resolution
of the location of the GFP fusion, three-dimensional images were
reconstructed from Z sections taken through MW2 cells (data not shown).
These analyses showed that central spaces in the cells were mostly
devoid of CspB-GFP and that CspB was present not only at the cell poles but also between nucleoids and the membranes along the long axis of the
cells. To determine if this pattern of localization is also valid for
wild-type CSPs, we performed immunofluorescence microscopy with
antisera raised against all B. subtilis CSPs (CspB, CspC,
and CspD) (6). As shown in Fig. 1C, CspB localized around nucleoids indistinguishable from the CspB-GFP fusion protein; this was
also observed for CspC and CspD (data not shown), while background
staining was observed in a cspB deletion strain (Fig. 1F)
(the same results were obtained with cspC or cspD
mutant cells when the corresponding sera were used [data not shown]).
In contrast,
-galactosidase was observed throughout the cells (Fig.
1E), without pronounced exclusion from spaces occupied by nucleoids. As
a further control, we used HBsu-GFP, which localized entirely to
nucleoids (Fig. 1H) (note that the overlay of GFP and blue DNA staining resulted in a yellowish color), as previously reported
(21). Thus, HBsu and CSPs localize to two distinct
subcellular regions in B. subtilis.
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Nucleoid structure influences the localization of CSPs. After a shift from 37 to 15°C during the mid-exponential phase in rich medium, B. subtilis cells continue to grow, albeit at a very reduced rate, while the level of CSPs increases about twofold (10). Following cold shock, nucleoids in B. subtilis cells condensed significantly, as shown in Fig. 1D (Fig. 1C and D, compare the red stains), although the cell size and cell shape remained similar to the cell size and cell shape of cells growing at 37°C. Thus, as in cells in the stationary phase and after a block in translation (see below), cold shock leads to chromosome compaction, probably due to a decrease in the transcriptional and translational capacity of the cell. Immunofluorescence microscopy revealed that CSPs still localized around nucleoids and that the zones of localization increased concomitant with nucleoid compaction (Fig. 1D). Conversely, in smc mutant cells growing exponentially at a permissive temperature (23°C) in rich medium, which have a DNA-to-protein ratio similar to that of wild-type cells but strongly decondensed chromosomes (4, 8, 24), the cellular spaces occupied by CSPs decreased, and CSPs were detectable only in small spaces close to the cell membrane (Fig. 1G). Thus, in growing cells, CSP localization depends on the state of compaction of the DNA.
Entry into the stationary phase and inhibition of transcription but
not inhibition of translation affect localization of CSPs.
CSPs
may localize to zones surrounding the nucleoids simply because of
exclusion from the nucleoids, or alternatively, they may localize to
zones of active transcription and/or translation. CSPs have been shown
to bind to ssDNA, as well as to RNA, via a positively charged
RNA-binding epitope (28), so there is no repulsion from
DNA per se due to their overall negative charge. We therefore
analyzed the localization of CSPs in stationary-phase cells, in
which chromosomes were more compact (Fig.
2C) than they were in growing cells (Fig.
2A). Nucleoid compaction during the stationary phase was also observed
in cells expressing HBsu-GFP (Fig. 2E) and thus is likely to represent
the true situation in vivo instead of a fixation artifact. Soon after
entry into the stationary phase, CspB-GFP was observed throughout cells
(Fig. 2C), in contrast to the pronounced localization around nucleoids in growing cells (Fig. 2A). Similarly, using immunofluorescence, we
found that CspB and CspC localized throughout the cytosol in the
stationary phase (data not shown).
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Absence of CSPs leads to a defect in nucleoid structure and in
chromosome segregation.
Two CSPs have been identified as
high-copy-number suppressors of chromosome decondensation defects in
E. coli cells (15, 34). We therefore analyzed
nucleoid morphology in csp deletion strains during
exponential growth. Figure
3 shows nucleoid
staining in typical fields of wild-type cells (Fig. 3A) and cspB
cspD double-mutant cells (Fig. 3B) grown in rich medium at 37°C.
In the mutant strain, nucleoids were generally more condensed (Fig. 3B)
and frequently had irregular shapes (this was observed in 5 to 15% of
the cells). Similar nucleoid defects were found in cspB cspC
double-mutant cells (data not shown) and in cspC mutant
cells containing cspB-GFP (indicating that the fusion does
not fully complement the wild-type protein). Occasionally, small cells
devoid of DNA were detected (0.1 to 0.5% of the cells) adjacent to
DNA-free zones in larger mutant cells (Fig. 3C), showing that a defect
in CSP function leads to minicell formation. We speculate that in order
to function optimally, CSPs need to be small proteins, a
requirement which is compromised through the GFP fusion. However,
we cannot rule out the possibility that the fusion has an influence on
proper folding of CspB. In contrast, depletion of HBsu from cells that constitutively expressed HBsu-GFP and contained wild-type
hbsu under an inducible promoter led to chromosome
decondensation (Fig. 3D), as previously reported (21), as
well as to generation of 5 to 10% anucleate cells 2 h after
removal of the inducer (when cells were still growing, as judged from
the increase in optical density). Note that anucleate cells are
generally normal cell size and are generated by guillotining of DNA
entrapped by a prematurely closing septum (Fig. 3D, white lines). These
findings show that CSPs influence the structure of the nucleoid,
although they localize to zones surrounding the chromosomes.
Additionally, CSPs influence the position of cell division, probably in
an indirect way. In contrast, HBsu has a direct impact on chromosome
condensation and segregation, analogous to the impact of the SMC
condensation factor.
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Sporulation defect in csp double mutants. B. subtilis has the unique ability to undergo sporulation in response to adverse environmental conditions. This differentiation process involves sequential activation of sporulation genes and synthesis of the corresponding gene products. CSPs have previously been shown to affect protein synthesis in growing cells, so we investigated a possible role of CSPs during sporulation. All csp single-mutant strains formed heat-resistant spores comparable to those of wild-type cells (sporulation efficiency, 70 to 80%). In contrast, cspB cspD mutant cells were strongly impaired in terms of sporulation, producing only 0.05% spores. Cells with a deletion of cspB and cspC are defective in adaptation to the stationary phase; such mutant cells lyse after cessation of growth (6). Likewise, only 0.002% viable colonies remained 24 h after the beginning of sporulation in cspB cspC mutant cells, compared to wild-type cells. However, the sporulation frequency was 0.03% (compared to viable cells), revealing that the csp double mutants did not sporulate. A cspC deletion strain expressing cspB-gfp formed 0.5 to 1% spores, as well as a number of viable cells comparable to the number formed by the parental strain, showing that a CspB-GFP fusion can substantially but not completely complement the function of CspB during sporulation.
In order to analyze at which stage the block in sporulation occurs, cspB cspC and cspB cspD mutant cells were stained with FM4-64 membrane stain several hours after entry into sporulation. In contrast to the parental strain, in which polar septation started 2 h after initiation of sporulation (Fig. 3E), no polar septa were detectable in the csp double mutants for up to 48 h after entry into sporulation (Fig. 3F). Thus, deletion of cspD or cspC in addition to cspB leads to a defect at stage 0 of sporulation. Recent data suggest that formation of the polar septum during sporulation depends not only on Spo0A activity but also on the migration of replication origins to the extreme cell poles, a process termed axial filament formation (7). To test whether csp mutant cells that have more compacted nucleoids during growth are defective in formation of axial filaments, we investigated nucleoid structure at the onset of sporulation. DAPI staining of live cells at the transition to the stationary phase in sporulation medium showed that nucleoids extended to the cell poles (and more or less filled the whole cell) in wild-type cells (Fig. 3G). In cspB cspC and cspB cspD mutant cells, nucleoids also extended to the poles in a majority of the cells (Fig. 3H). Thus, csp mutant cells are not obviously affected in axial filament formation.Localization of CSPs in sporulating cells. Cells expressing CspB-GFP were used to study the localization of CspB during sporulation. Although CspB-GFP was found to generally localize throughout the cell at the onset of sporulation (data not shown), comparable to what happens in cells entering the stationary phase (Fig. 2C), the amount of fusion protein decreased considerably within the forespore compartment soon after polar septation (Fig. 1I). Likewise, using immunofluorescence as a control, we observed depletion of CspB and CspC from the forespores in wild-type sporangia (Fig. 1J). CspD appeared to be present in the forespore compartment at least until engulfment (data not shown); however, in the absence of an available GFP fusion construct, this finding remains preliminary.
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DISCUSSION |
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The results of this study establish that there is a connection
among specific subcellular localization of B. subtilis CSPs, active transcription, and nucleoid structure. In growing cells, CSPs
localize in cytosolic spaces surrounding the nucleoids, in contrast to
histone-like protein HBsu, which localizes exclusively in the nucleoid,
as shown previously (21). B. subtilis CSPs remained at locations surrounding nucleoids in cells with more condensed nucleoids, such as cells after cold shock, and also in cells
with decondensed chromosomes, such as smc mutant cells. According to recent reports, ribosomal proteins localize in a manner
similar to CSPs, while RNA polymerase subunits and the main sigma
factor localize mainly in nucleoids (1, 23). In control
experiments, we found that GFP and
-galactosidase localize throughout the cell, providing evidence that non-nucleoid-associated proteins are not generally excluded from nucleoids.
CSPs have been shown to affect the synthesis of other cytosolic proteins at 37°C and after cold shock (5, 6, 18, 22, 33). Two main modes of activation or repression by CSPs have been proposed. Due to their binding to ssDNA, it has been proposed that CSPs may facilitate open complex formation by RNA polymerase through stabilization of ssDNA during transcription initiation (3). In an alternative model, it was suggested that CSPs function as RNA chaperones (17) by binding to newly synthesized RNA and by keeping RNA in a linear form (6). This is a prerequisite for translation initiation, which depends on a linear RNA template in bacteria (12). Although our data do not exclude a possible function of CSPs in transcription or in replication initiation, the pattern of localization suggests that the main function of CSPs takes place at sites of translation.
Recently, E. coli CSPs were shown to act as antiterminators in transcription of a cold stress-induced operon (2). This finding indicates that coupling of transcription and translation may take place at the interface between the nucleoid and surrounding spaces containing ribosomes. Consequently, CSPs could act mainly on translation initiation within translation areas and could act as antiterminators at the interface between nucleoid and cytosol. In support of this model, we found that in the absence of transcription and during the stationary phase, CSPs localize throughout the cytoplasm, while inhibition of translation retains the specific localization of CSPs. We interpret these findings as an association of CSPs with mRNA, which is preserved upon a block in translation but is eliminated when there is a decrease in RNA synthesis. Our data show that CSPs change their pattern of localization depending on cellular activity, which has not been reported previously for bacterial proteins with respect to transcription and translation.
Intriguingly, although CSPs do not localize to the nucleoid like condensation and compaction factors such as HBsu and SMC, they affect the structure of the nucleoid. In contrast to depletion of HBsu (21) or deletion of smc (4, 8), each of which leads to chromosome decondensation, a cspB cspD double mutant had more compact nucleoids with frequently abnormal structure than wild-type cells. This finding suggests that through their function, CSPs are involved in decondensing chromosomes in growing cells. Chromosome condensation occurs during the stationary phase, during a block in translation, and after cold shock, as shown in this study. Woldringh et al. (32) proposed a model in which simultaneous insertion into and transport of proteins across membranes and coupled transcription-translation that takes place in bacteria provide expansion forces for chromosome decondensation in growing cells. Our findings are consistent with this model, since a decrease in cellular CSP levels compromises protein synthesis (6) and thereby probably affects chromosome decondensation. The data which we obtained also support the hypothesis that CSPs are important mediators in the coupling of transcription and translation. Moreover, the effect of CSPs on nucleoid morphology discovered in this study is a first clue to why two CSPs in E. coli were found to be high-copy-number suppressors of a mutation in condensation factor MukB (34) and confer resistance to chromosome decondensation through camphor (15).
We also found that CSPs are important for the developmental process of sporulation in B. subtilis. CSP double mutants were strongly impaired in terms of initiation of sporulation, at a stage before polar septation. In light of a defect in protein synthesis in csp mutants during growth (6), it appears likely that absence of CSPs leads to deregulation of protein levels at the onset of sporulation. Interestingly, we found that CspB and CspC were depleted from the forespore compartment but not from the mother cell. The significance of this observation is not clear; however, degradation of CSPs from the forespore may indicate a generally higher rate of proteolysis within the forespore. This may be relevant in compartmentalized proteolysis during sporulation, which, for example, could also lead to degradation of sigma factor E, which is depleted from the forespore (26).
Changes in localization of CSPs during growth, sporulation, and the stationary phase provide evidence not only that membrane and DNA-binding proteins switch their subcellular locations (29) but also that the position of cytosolic, non-DNA-binding proteins is more dynamic in bacteria than anticipated.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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Immunofluorescence microscopy experiments were performed primarily in the laboratory of Richard Losick (Cambridge, Mass.).
This study was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Emmie Noether Program and SFB 395).
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ADDENDUM IN PROOF |
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It was recently shown that CSPs colocalize with ribosomes in B. subtilis and that localization of ribosomes to sites surrounding nucleoids also depends on active transcription (J. Mascarenhas, M. H. Weber, and P. L. Graumann, EMBO Rep. 2:685-689, 2001).
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FOOTNOTES |
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* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Biochemie, Fachbereich Chemie, Hans-Meerwein-Straße, Philipps-Universität Marburg, 35032 Marburg, Germany. Phone: 49 (0) 6421 2825539. Fax: 49 (0) 6421 2822191. E-mail: graumann{at}chemie.uni-marburg.de.
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