SpoIVA-SipL Complex Formation Is Essential for Spore Assembly.

J Bacteriol

Department of Molecular Biology and Microbiology, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts, USA

Published: April 2019

Spores are the major infectious particle of the Gram-positive nosocomial pathogen (formerly ), but the molecular details of how this organism forms these metabolically dormant cells remain poorly characterized. The composition of the spore coat in differs markedly from that defined in the well-studied organism , with only 25% of the ∼70 spore coat proteins being conserved between the two organisms and with only 2 of 9 coat assembly (morphogenetic) proteins defined in having homologs in We previously identified SipL as a clostridium-specific coat protein essential for functional spore formation. Heterologous expression analyses in revealed that SipL directly interacts with SpoIVA, a coat-morphogenetic protein conserved in all spore-forming organisms, through SipL's C-terminal LysM domain. In this study, we show that SpoIVA-SipL binding is essential for spore formation and identify specific residues within the LysM domain that stabilize this interaction. Fluorescence microscopy analyses indicate that binding of SipL's LysM domain to SpoIVA is required for SipL to localize to the forespore while SpoIVA requires SipL to promote encasement of SpoIVA around the forespore. Since we also show that clostridial LysM domains are functionally interchangeable at least in , the basic mechanism for SipL-dependent assembly of clostridial spore coats may be conserved. The metabolically dormant spore form of the major nosocomial pathogen is its major infectious particle. However, the mechanisms controlling the formation of this resistant cell type are not well understood, particularly with respect to its outermost layer, the spore coat. We previously identified two spore-morphogenetic proteins in : SpoIVA, which is conserved in all spore-forming organisms, and SipL, which is conserved only in the clostridia. Both SpoIVA and SipL are essential for heat-resistant spore formation and directly interact through SipL's C-terminal LysM domain. In this study, we demonstrate that the LysM domain is critical for SipL and SpoIVA function, likely by helping recruit SipL to the forespore during spore morphogenesis. We further identified residues within the LysM domain that are important for binding SpoIVA and, thus, functional spore formation. These findings provide important insight into the molecular mechanisms controlling the assembly of infectious spores.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6436350PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JB.00042-19DOI Listing

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