Article

  • The EMBO Journal (1999) 18, 2364 - 2371
  • doi:10.1093/emboj/18.9.2364

Tubulin-like protofilaments in Ca2+-induced FtsZ sheets

Jan Löwe1 and Linda A. Amos1

  1. MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Hills Road, Cambridge CB2 2QH, UK

Correspondence to:

Jan Löwe, E-mail: jyl@mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk

Received 23 December 1998; Accepted 8 March 1999; Revised 8 March 1999


The 40 kDa protein FtsZ is a major septum-forming component of bacterial cell division. Early during cytokinesis at midcell, FtsZ forms a cytokinetic ring that constricts as septation progresses. FtsZ has a high propensity to polymerize in vitro into various structures, including sheets and filaments, in a GTP-dependent manner. Together with limited sequence homology, the occurrence of the tubulin signature motif in FtsZ and a similar three-dimensional structure, this leads to the conclusion that FtsZ is the bacterial tubulin homologue. We have polymerized FtsZ1 from Methanococcus jannaschii in the presence of millimolar concentrations of Ca2+ ions to produce two-dimensional crystals of plane group P2221. Most of the protein precipitates and forms filaments approx23.0 nm in diameter. A three-dimensional reconstruction of tilted micrographs of FtsZ sheets in negative stain between 0 and 60° shows protofilaments of FtsZ running along the sheet axis. Pairs of parallel FtsZ protofilaments associate in an antiparallel fashion to form a two-dimensional sheet. The antiparallel arrangement is believed to generate flat sheets instead of the curved filaments seen in other FtsZ polymers. Together with the subunit spacing along the protofilament axis, a fitting of the FtsZ crystal structure into the reconstruction suggests a protofilamant structure very similar to that of tubulin protofilaments.

  • Keywords:

    • electron microscopy,
    • FtsZ,
    • Methanococcus jannaschii,
    • three-dimensional image reconstruction,
    • two-dimensional crystals