Eukaryotic morphogenesis is seeded with the establishment and subsequent amplification of polarity cues at key times during the cell cycle, often using (cyclic) nucleotide signals. We discovered that flagellum de- and repolarization in the model prokaryote Caulobacter crescentus is precisely orchestrated through at least three spatiotemporal mechanisms integrated at TipF. We show that TipF is a cell cycle-regulated receptor for the second messenger-bis-(3′-5′)-cyclic dimeric guanosine monophosphate (c-di-GMP)-that perceives and transduces this signal through the degenerate c-di-GMP phosphodiesterase (EAL) domain to nucleate polar flagellum biogenesis. Once c-di-GMP levels rise at the G1 → S transition, TipF is activated, stabilized, and polarized, enabling the recruitment of downstream effectors, including flagellar switch proteins and the PflI positioning factor, at a preselected pole harboring the TipN landmark. These c-di-GMP-dependent events are coordinated with the onset of tipF transcription in early S phase and together enable the correct establishment and robust amplification of TipF-dependent polarization early in the cell cycle. Importantly, these mechanisms also govern the timely removal of TipF at cell division coincident with the drop in c-di-GMP levels, thereby resetting the flagellar polarization state in the next cell cycle after a preprogrammed period during which motility must be suspended. © 2013, Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.
CITATION STYLE
Davis, N. J., Cohen, Y., Sanselicio, S., Fumeaux, C., Ozaki, S., Luciano, J., … Viollier, P. H. (2013). De- and repolarization mechanism of flagellar morphogenesis during a bacterial cell cycle. Genes and Development, 27(18), 2049–2062. https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.222679.113
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