Cell division machinery drives cell-specific gene activation during differentiation in Bacillus subtilis

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Abstract

When faced with starvation, the bacterium Bacillus subtilis transforms itself into a dormant cell type called a "spore". Sporulation initiates with an asymmetric division event, which requires the relocation of the core divisome components FtsA and FtsZ, after which the sigma factor σF is exclusively activated in the smaller daughter cell. Compartment-specific activation of σF requires the SpoIIE phosphatase, which displays a biased localization on one side of the asymmetric division septum and associates with the structural protein DivIVA, but the mechanism by which this preferential localization is achieved is unclear. Here, we isolated a variant of DivIVA that indiscriminately activates σF in both daughter cells due to promiscuous localization of SpoIIE, which was corrected by overproduction of FtsA and FtsZ. We propose that the core components of the redeployed cell division machinery drive the asymmetric localization of DivIVA and SpoIIE to trigger the initiation of the sporulation program.

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Chareyre, S., Li, X., Anjuwon-Foster, B. R., Updegrove, T. B., Clifford, S., Brogan, A. P., … Ramamurthi, K. S. (2024). Cell division machinery drives cell-specific gene activation during differentiation in Bacillus subtilis. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 121(13). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2400584121

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