Publication: Supramolecular structure in the membrane of Staphylococcus aureus
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Type:
Article
Date
2015-12-22
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Abstract
All life demands the temporal and spatial control of essential
biological functions. In bacteria, the recent discovery of coordinating elements provides a framework to begin to explain cell
growth and division. Here we present the discovery of a supramolecular structure in the membrane of the coccal bacterium
Staphylococcus aureus, which leads to the formation of a largescale pattern across the entire cell body; this has been unveiled by
studying the distribution of essential proteins involved in lipid
metabolism (PlsY and CdsA). The organization is found to require
MreD, which determines morphology in rod-shaped cells. The distribution of protein complexes can be explained as a spontaneous
pattern formation arising from the competition between the energy cost of bending that they impose on the membrane, their
entropy of mixing, and the geometric constraints in the system.
Our results provide evidence for the existence of a self-organized
and nonpercolating molecular scaffold involving MreD as an organizer for optimal cell function and growth based on the intrinsic
self-assembling properties of biological molecules.
Description
Keywords
Supramolecular structure, membrane, Staphylococcus aureus
