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Supramolecular assemblies underpin turnover of outer membrane proteins in bacteria

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Supramolecular assemblies underpin turnover of outer membrane proteins in bacteria. / Rassam, Patrice; Copeland, Nikki; Birkholz, Oliver et al.
In: Nature, Vol. 523, 2015, p. 333–336.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Rassam, P, Copeland, N, Birkholz, O, Toth, C, Chavent, M, Cross, S, Housden, N, Kaminska, R, Seger, U, Quinn, D, Garrod, T, Sansom, MS, Piehler, J, Baumann, CG & Kleanthous, C 2015, 'Supramolecular assemblies underpin turnover of outer membrane proteins in bacteria', Nature, vol. 523, pp. 333–336. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature14461

APA

Rassam, P., Copeland, N., Birkholz, O., Toth, C., Chavent, M., Cross, S., Housden, N., Kaminska, R., Seger, U., Quinn, D., Garrod, T., Sansom, M. S., Piehler, J., Baumann, C. G., & Kleanthous, C. (2015). Supramolecular assemblies underpin turnover of outer membrane proteins in bacteria. Nature, 523, 333–336. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature14461

Vancouver

Rassam P, Copeland N, Birkholz O, Toth C, Chavent M, Cross S et al. Supramolecular assemblies underpin turnover of outer membrane proteins in bacteria. Nature. 2015;523:333–336. Epub 2015 Jun 10. doi: 10.1038/nature14461

Author

Rassam, Patrice ; Copeland, Nikki ; Birkholz, Oliver et al. / Supramolecular assemblies underpin turnover of outer membrane proteins in bacteria. In: Nature. 2015 ; Vol. 523. pp. 333–336.

Bibtex

@article{c6be605d9d52497b9a4341bfedff5594,
title = "Supramolecular assemblies underpin turnover of outer membrane proteins in bacteria",
abstract = "Gram-negative bacteria inhabit a broad range of ecological niches. For Escherichia coli, this includes river water as well as humans and animals, where it can be both a commensal and a pathogen. Intricate regulatory mechanisms ensure that bacteria have the right complement of β-barrel outer membrane proteins (OMPs) to enable adaptation to a particular habitat. Yet no mechanism is known for replacing OMPs in the outer membrane, an issue that is further confounded by the lack of an energy source and the high stability and abundance of OMPs. Here we uncover the process underpinning OMP turnover in E. coli and show it to be passive and binary in nature, in which old OMPs are displaced to the poles of growing cells as new OMPs take their place. Using fluorescent colicins as OMP-specific probes, in combination with ensemble and single-molecule fluorescence microscopy in vivo and in vitro, as well as molecular dynamics simulations, we established the mechanism for binary OMP partitioning. OMPs clustered to form ∼0.5-μm diameter islands, where their diffusion is restricted by promiscuous interactions with other OMPs. OMP islands were distributed throughout the cell and contained the Bam complex, which catalyses the insertion of OMPs in the outer membrane. However, OMP biogenesis occurred as a gradient that was highest at mid-cell but largely absent at cell poles. The cumulative effect is to push old OMP islands towards the poles of growing cells, leading to a binary distribution when cells divide. Hence, the outer membrane of a Gram-negative bacterium is a spatially and temporally organized structure, and this organization lies at the heart of how OMPs are turned over in the membrane.",
keywords = "gram negative, OMP assembly, MEMBRANE, Diffusion, BAM",
author = "Patrice Rassam and Nikki Copeland and Oliver Birkholz and Csaba Toth and M Chavent and Stephen Cross and Nicholas Housden and R Kaminska and Urban Seger and Diana Quinn and T Garrod and Sansom, {Mark S} and Jacob Piehler and Baumann, {Christoph G} and Colin Kleanthous",
year = "2015",
doi = "10.1038/nature14461",
language = "English",
volume = "523",
pages = "333–336",
journal = "Nature",
issn = "0028-0836",
publisher = "Nature Publishing Group",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Supramolecular assemblies underpin turnover of outer membrane proteins in bacteria

AU - Rassam, Patrice

AU - Copeland, Nikki

AU - Birkholz, Oliver

AU - Toth, Csaba

AU - Chavent, M

AU - Cross, Stephen

AU - Housden, Nicholas

AU - Kaminska, R

AU - Seger, Urban

AU - Quinn, Diana

AU - Garrod, T

AU - Sansom, Mark S

AU - Piehler, Jacob

AU - Baumann, Christoph G

AU - Kleanthous, Colin

PY - 2015

Y1 - 2015

N2 - Gram-negative bacteria inhabit a broad range of ecological niches. For Escherichia coli, this includes river water as well as humans and animals, where it can be both a commensal and a pathogen. Intricate regulatory mechanisms ensure that bacteria have the right complement of β-barrel outer membrane proteins (OMPs) to enable adaptation to a particular habitat. Yet no mechanism is known for replacing OMPs in the outer membrane, an issue that is further confounded by the lack of an energy source and the high stability and abundance of OMPs. Here we uncover the process underpinning OMP turnover in E. coli and show it to be passive and binary in nature, in which old OMPs are displaced to the poles of growing cells as new OMPs take their place. Using fluorescent colicins as OMP-specific probes, in combination with ensemble and single-molecule fluorescence microscopy in vivo and in vitro, as well as molecular dynamics simulations, we established the mechanism for binary OMP partitioning. OMPs clustered to form ∼0.5-μm diameter islands, where their diffusion is restricted by promiscuous interactions with other OMPs. OMP islands were distributed throughout the cell and contained the Bam complex, which catalyses the insertion of OMPs in the outer membrane. However, OMP biogenesis occurred as a gradient that was highest at mid-cell but largely absent at cell poles. The cumulative effect is to push old OMP islands towards the poles of growing cells, leading to a binary distribution when cells divide. Hence, the outer membrane of a Gram-negative bacterium is a spatially and temporally organized structure, and this organization lies at the heart of how OMPs are turned over in the membrane.

AB - Gram-negative bacteria inhabit a broad range of ecological niches. For Escherichia coli, this includes river water as well as humans and animals, where it can be both a commensal and a pathogen. Intricate regulatory mechanisms ensure that bacteria have the right complement of β-barrel outer membrane proteins (OMPs) to enable adaptation to a particular habitat. Yet no mechanism is known for replacing OMPs in the outer membrane, an issue that is further confounded by the lack of an energy source and the high stability and abundance of OMPs. Here we uncover the process underpinning OMP turnover in E. coli and show it to be passive and binary in nature, in which old OMPs are displaced to the poles of growing cells as new OMPs take their place. Using fluorescent colicins as OMP-specific probes, in combination with ensemble and single-molecule fluorescence microscopy in vivo and in vitro, as well as molecular dynamics simulations, we established the mechanism for binary OMP partitioning. OMPs clustered to form ∼0.5-μm diameter islands, where their diffusion is restricted by promiscuous interactions with other OMPs. OMP islands were distributed throughout the cell and contained the Bam complex, which catalyses the insertion of OMPs in the outer membrane. However, OMP biogenesis occurred as a gradient that was highest at mid-cell but largely absent at cell poles. The cumulative effect is to push old OMP islands towards the poles of growing cells, leading to a binary distribution when cells divide. Hence, the outer membrane of a Gram-negative bacterium is a spatially and temporally organized structure, and this organization lies at the heart of how OMPs are turned over in the membrane.

KW - gram negative

KW - OMP assembly

KW - MEMBRANE

KW - Diffusion

KW - BAM

U2 - 10.1038/nature14461

DO - 10.1038/nature14461

M3 - Journal article

VL - 523

SP - 333

EP - 336

JO - Nature

JF - Nature

SN - 0028-0836

ER -