AI Article Synopsis

  • Gram-negative bacteria regulate the growth of their outer membrane, cell wall, and cytoplasmic components through not yet fully understood mechanisms.
  • A mutation called mlaA* in Escherichia coli affects a protein that normally helps maintain lipid balance in the outer membrane, leading to increased cell permeability, heightened drug sensitivity, and cell death in stationary phase.
  • Single-cell imaging shows that cells die after repeated loss of membrane material and changes in inner membrane structure, with the death process linked to depletion of fatty acids rather than energy usage, indicating that proper lipid balance is crucial for maintaining the integrity of Gram-negative bacteria.

Article Abstract

Gram-negative bacteria balance synthesis of the outer membrane (OM), cell wall, and cytoplasmic contents during growth via unknown mechanisms. Here, we show that a dominant mutation (designated mlaA*, maintenance of lipid asymmetry) that alters MlaA, a lipoprotein that removes phospholipids from the outer leaflet of the OM of Escherichia coli, increases OM permeability, lipopolysaccharide levels, drug sensitivity, and cell death in stationary phase. Surprisingly, single-cell imaging revealed that death occurs after protracted loss of OM material through vesiculation and blebbing at cell-division sites and compensatory shrinkage of the inner membrane, eventually resulting in rupture and slow leakage of cytoplasmic contents. The death of mlaA* cells was linked to fatty acid depletion and was not affected by membrane depolarization, suggesting that lipids flow from the inner membrane to the OM in an energy-independent manner. Suppressor analysis suggested that the dominant mlaA* mutation activates phospholipase A, resulting in increased levels of lipopolysaccharide and OM vesiculation that ultimately undermine the integrity of the cell envelope by depleting the inner membrane of phospholipids. This novel cell-death pathway suggests that balanced synthesis across both membranes is key to the mechanical integrity of the Gram-negative cell envelope.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4801249PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1601375113DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cell envelope
12
inner membrane
12
gram-negative cell
8
cell death
8
cytoplasmic contents
8
cell
6
membrane
5
disruption lipid
4
lipid homeostasis
4
homeostasis gram-negative
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!