Article
- The EMBO Journal (2006) 25, 5919 - 5931
- doi:10.1038/sj.emboj.7601443
Published online: 30 November 2006
Subject Category:
DNA segregation by the bacterial actin AlfA during Bacillus subtilis growth and development
Eric Beckera, Nick C Herreraa, Felizza Q Gunderson, Alan I Derman, Amber L Dance, Jennifer Sims, Rachel A Larsen and Joe Pogliano
- Division of Biological Sciences, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA
Correspondence to:
Joe Pogliano, Division of Biological Sciences, University of California San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, CA 92093-0377, USA. Tel.: +1 858 822 4074; Fax: +1 858 822 1431; E-mail: jpogliano@ucsd.edu
aThese authors contributed equally to this work.
Received 22 June 2006; Accepted 23 October 2006
Abstract
We here identify a protein (AlfA; actin like filament) that defines a new family of actins that are only distantly related to MreB and ParM. AlfA is required for segregation of Bacillus subtilis plasmid pBET131 (a mini pLS32-derivative) during growth and sporulation. A 3-kb DNA fragment encoding alfA and a downstream gene (alfB) is necessary and sufficient for plasmid stability. AlfA-GFP assembles dynamic cytoskeletal filaments that rapidly turn over (t1/2<
45 s) in fluorescence recovery after photobleaching experiments. A point mutation (alfA D168A) that completely inhibits AlfA subunit exchange in vivo is strongly defective for plasmid segregation, demonstrating that dynamic polymerization of AlfA is necessary for function. During sporulation, plasmid segregation occurs before septation and independently of the DNA translocase SpoIIIE and the chromosomal Par proteins Soj and Spo0J. The absence of the RacA chromosome anchoring protein reduces the efficiency of plasmid segregation (by about two-fold), suggesting that it might contribute to anchoring the plasmid at the pole during sporulation. Our results suggest that the dynamic polymerization of AlfA mediates plasmid separation during both growth and sporulation.
Keywords:
- actin,
- bacterial cytoskeleton,
- DNA segregation,
- sporulation



