Cell wall precursors are required to organize the chlamydial division septum

N. Jacquier,Antonio Frandi,T. Pillonel,P. Viollier,Gilbert GREUB

Published 2014 in Nature Communications

ABSTRACT

Members of the Chlamydiales order are major bacterial pathogens that divide at mid-cell, without a sequence homologue of the FtsZ cytokinetic tubulin and without a classical peptidoglycan cell wall. Moreover, the spatiotemporal mechanisms directing constriction in Chlamydia are not known. Here we show that the MreB actin homologue and its conserved regulator RodZ localize to the division furrow in Waddlia chondrophila, a member of the Chlamydiales order implicated in human miscarriage. RodZ is recruited to the septal site earlier than MreB and in a manner that depends on biosynthesis of the peptidoglycan precursor lipid II by the MurA enzyme. By contrast, crosslinking of lipid II peptides by the Pbp3 transpeptidase disperses RodZ from the septum. Altogether, these findings provide a cytological framework for understanding chlamydial cytokinesis driven by septal cell wall synthesis. Cell division in Chlamydiales remains mysterious as it occurs in the absence of a cytokinetic tubulin and a classical peptidoglycan cell wall. Jacquier et al. show that the actin homologue MreB is recruited to the division site in Waddliaand that this depends on synthesis of the peptidoglycan precursor lipid II.

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