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Eukaryotic-like gephyrin and cognate membrane receptor coordinate corynebacterial cell division and polar elongation.

Mariano MartinezJulienne PetitAlejandro LeyvaAdrià SoguesDaniela MegrianAzalia RodriguezQuentin GadayMathildeb Ben AssayaMaria Magdalena PortelaAhmed HaouzAdrien DucretChristophe GrangeassePedro M AlzariRosario DuranAnne Marie Wehenkel
Published in: Nature microbiology (2023)
The order Corynebacteriales includes major industrial and pathogenic Actinobacteria such as Corynebacterium glutamicum or Mycobacterium tuberculosis. These bacteria have multi-layered cell walls composed of the mycolyl-arabinogalactan-peptidoglycan complex and a polar growth mode, thus requiring tight coordination between the septal divisome, organized around the tubulin-like protein FtsZ, and the polar elongasome, assembled around the coiled-coil protein Wag31. Here, using C. glutamicum, we report the discovery of two divisome members: a gephyrin-like repurposed molybdotransferase (Glp) and its membrane receptor (GlpR). Our results show how cell cycle progression requires interplay between Glp/GlpR, FtsZ and Wag31, showcasing a crucial crosstalk between the divisome and elongasome machineries that might be targeted for anti-mycobacterial drug discovery. Further, our work reveals that Corynebacteriales have evolved a protein scaffold to control cell division and morphogenesis, similar to the gephyrin/GlyR system that mediates synaptic signalling in higher eukaryotes through network organization of membrane receptors and the microtubule cytoskeleton.
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