Biosynthesis and self-assembly of protein S, a development-specific protein of Myxococcus xanthus
- 1 January 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 76 (1) , 209-213
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.76.1.209
Abstract
Myxococcus xanthus is a Gram-negative bacterium that has a complex life cycle including a temporal sequence of cellular aggregation, mound formation, and myxosporulation. During development, protein S (molecuar weight 23,000) is induced and accumulates in very large amounts. Protein S was found in the soluble fraction of early developmental extracts and in the insoluble fraction in later extracts. This insoluble form of protein S can be solubilized by the addition of 1 M NaCl at 0°C to extracts from aggregated cells (mound stage) or by the addition of 1 M NaCl at 30°C to mature spores. Salt extraction (1 M NaCl) of protein S from mature spores was partially inhibited by the addition of Mg2+ and almost completely inhibited by the addition of Ca2+. The viability of spores was not changed by a salt extraction that removed their protein S. Examination of thin sections of mature spores and extracted spores by electron microscopy suggested that the protein S-deficient spores lacked a spore surface coat about 300 A thick. Purified protein S will spontaneously self-assemble onto protein S-deficient spores after removal of the NaCl by dialysis or by addition of 10 mM Ca2+ to undialyzed samples. Glycerol-induced spores did not contain protein S and did not serve as primers for assembly of protein S. Quantitation of the self-assembly process showed almost stoichiometric binding of protein S to the protein S-deficient spores until saturation at 3.3 × 106 molecules per spore, a value 1.35 times higher than the normal level of proteins S found in mature spores. Protein S in the “reconstituted” spores was as protease resistant and sonication resistant as the protein S of native spores. Electron microscopy of the reconstituted spores revealed the assembly of new material on the spore surface. Adjacent spores were sometimes observed to be fused to each other through a common protein S layer. These results suggest that protein S serves a function in spore—spore interaction in the fruiting body.Keywords
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