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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 282, Issue 38, 27736-27743, September 21, 2007
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1
From the
Department of Cell Biology, Duke University, Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710 and
Biomedical Research, University of Texas Health Center, Tyler, Texas 75708-3154
Received for publication, May 8, 2007 , and in revised form, June 24, 2007.
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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Recently we developed two assays to study the kinetics of E. coli FtsZ in vitro. One is based on the tryptophan mutant, FtsZ-L68W, which showed a 2.5-fold increase in fluorescence upon assembly (4). The other is a FRET (fluorescence resonance energy transfer)-based assay (1). Both assays showed that assembly of EcFtsZ is a cooperative process with a weak dimer nucleus. Initial assembly was very fast and reached a plateau within 5 to 10 s. The FRET assay was used to monitor the rate of subunit exchange at steady state by mixing preassembled donor and acceptor EcFtsZ. The half-time for exchange was about 7 s, very close to the 8–9 s in vivo turnover measured by FRAP (fluorescence recovery after photobleaching) (3). Thus every protofilament in the Z ring, or in a steady state mixture in vitro, is disassembling and reassembling with a 7–9 s half-time.
Tuberculosis is the single greatest cause of death in humans by a bacterium. The World Health Organization estimates that nearly 3 million people each year die from tuberculosis. Several reports have already studied FtsZ as a promising target for new antibacterial drug discovery, some of them with a particular interest in the FtsZ of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MtbFtsZ) (5–7). MtbFtsZ has been studied previously and was reported to differ from EcFtsZ in several respects (8, 9). In contrast to the short, one-stranded protofilaments of EcFtsZ, MtbFtsZ assembled into long, two-stranded filaments. The kinetics of initial assembly, assayed by light scattering, were reported to be much slower than those of EcFtsZ. Dynamics at steady state were not examined. Because our FRET assay has several important advantages over light scattering, we used it to study the kinetics and assembly dynamics of MtbFtsZ.
| EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES |
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Protein Labeling—MtbFtsZ has a single cysteine, Cys-155, at the position of E. coli Val-157. This location is not near any known protofilament interface, and so we used this site to attach a fluorescent label. Donor FtsZ was prepared by reacting with fluorescein-5-maleimide (Molecular Probes) and acceptor with tetramethylrhodamine-5-maleimide (TMR; Molecular Probes). Reactions contained a 5-fold excess of probe and were incubated for 2 h at room temperature in a pH 7.9 Tris buffer. Samples were dialyzed three times against 50 mM HEPES, pH 7.7, 100 mM KAc, 2.5 mM MgAc, and 1 mM EGTA to remove free probe. A cycle of calcium assembly and disassembly was done to remove any inactive protein and remaining free probe, as described by Chen and Erickson (1). Protein was resuspended in the desired buffer and stored at –80 °C. The labeling efficiency was 30–40% for each fluorophore.
Most of the buffers used for assembly contained 100 mM KAc, 5 mM MgAc, and 1 mM EGTA. The pH 6.5 and 6.7 buffers contained 50 mM MES; pH 6.9 and 7.2 buffers had 50 mM MOPS; and pH 7.4 and 7.7 buffers had 50 mM HEPES.
Electron Microscopy—Negative stain electron microscopy was used to visualize MtbFtsZ filaments. About 10 µl of MtbFtsZ in the appropriate buffer was incubated with GTP for 5–10 min and applied to a carbon-coated copper grid. Grids were negatively stained with 2% uranyl acetate, and specimens were imaged with a Philips 301 electron microscope at x50,000 magnification.
GTPase Activity Measurement—GTPase activity was determined by an improved sensitivity malachite green assay (11) as described in detail by Redick et al. (12).
Fluorescence and Light-scattering Measurements—Kinetics data were measured using a Shimadzu RF-5301 PC spectrofluorometer. For fluorescence measurements, the samples were excited at 450 nm and detected at 515 nm. For light scattering, the samples were both excited and measured at 350 nm. Because the assembly was slow we did not use a stopped flow device. For kinetic measurements assembly was initiated by adding GTP to 200 µM and pipetting to mix rapidly. The measurement started immediately after GTP was added. To assay for FtsZ filament exchange, donor- and acceptor-labeled FtsZ were assembled separately for 2 min in 0.5 mM GTP. Equal volumes of the two polymer samples were mixed, and measurement was begun. To measure GDP-induced disassembly, a mixture of acceptor and donor protein was first assembled in 0.1 mM GTP, and the fluorescence measurement was begun after adding 2 mM GDP.
Kinetic Modeling—The MtbFtsZ assembly kinetics data were fit using the minimal kinetic model described previously for EcFtsZ (1, 4). This model has three steps: monomer activation, formation of a dimer nucleus, and elongation. The data were fit using the programs KINSIM40 and FITSIM40 (13–16). The kinetic mechanism we used is as follows.
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Growth of Mycobacterium smegmatis Cultures—Merodiploid M. smegmatis strain mC2-79 carries the plasmid pJFR79 (Pami:ftsZsmeg-GFP), which expresses MsmFtsZ-GFP (17). Strain mC2-11 carries plasmid pJFR11 (Pami:ftsZtb-GFP), which expresses MtbFtsZ-GFP (18). Strains were maintained as freezer stocks at –80 °C and streaked onto plates of 7H10 Middlebrook agar supplemented with albumin-dextrose complex and 50 µg/ml kanamycin 4 days prior to use in a FRAP experiment. After 3 days, one colony of M. smegmatis cells was transferred into liquid medium (7H9 Middlebrook broth supplemented with albumin-dextrose complex and 0.05% Tween 80 plus 50 µg/ml kanamycin) and grown overnight at 37 °C with shaking. The following day, cultures were diluted to OD
0.1 and grown for 4–6 h before undergoing FRAP microscopy.
Microscopy and in Vivo FRAP Measurements—Culture samples of 4–5 µl were applied to the surface of 1% agarose pads and then covered with a coverslip, as in our most recent FRAP studies (3). Cells were imaged, and FRAP experiments were performed on a Nikon TE300 inverted fluorescence microscope equipped with a laser source and driven by Metamorph software as described previously (2, 3, 19). All images and FRAP measurements were taken at room temperature. Exposures were typically 500 ms, and laser bleach pulses were 100 ms. Measurements of integrated fluorescence intensity in the bleached and other regions at each time point were made in Metamorph and exported to Microsoft Excel. For each measured region, background intensity was subtracted, and a correction factor was applied for overall photobleaching of the sample during observation (determined from intensity over time of a control cell in the same field). Recovery half-times were determined by performing a least-squares fit to a single-exponential equation as described previously (3).
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| RESULTS |
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Kinetics of Initial Assembly of MtbFtsZ—We labeled MtbFtsZ with fluorescein as donor and with TMR as acceptor. We first tested whether the fluorophore labeling had any effect on assembly using the light-scattering assay at pH 6.5. Fig. 2 shows that there was only a small decrease in the assembly plateau measured by light scattering after labeling with fluorescein or TMR, and there was no significant change in kinetics. We then mixed equal parts donor and acceptor and assayed assembly by FRET using the decrease in donor fluorescence as the measure of FRET. Donor fluorescence showed a rapid 3–4% decrease after mixing and before adding GTP. This may reflect a weak dimer formation. This decrease occurred within 1 s (data not shown). Following the addition of GTP, donor fluorescence slowly dropped by 20%, which we attributed to the assembly of filaments (Fig. 2, curve e). The kinetics measured by FRET are very similar to those measured by light scattering. We also checked the labeled protein by electron microscopy and found similar structures assembled by labeled and unlabeled protein (data not shown).
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Because the excitation and emission spectra of fluorescein overlap, fluorescein-labeled MtbFtsZ in the absence of acceptor can produce a homo-FRET or quenching signal. This is shown in Fig. 3b. The homo-FRET signal is barely detectable at pH 7.7 but is substantial (9% decrease) at pH 6.5. The Förster distance is 4.0 nm for fluorescein homo-FRET versus 5.5 nm for fluorescein-rhodamine FRET. Because the subunit spacing is 4.3 nm along the filament, homo-FRET may be small for one-stranded filaments and stronger across the two-stranded filament. This signal would be especially strong if the labeled Cys-155 residues were facing each other across the center of the two-stranded filament.
We concluded that some fraction of the total FRET signal in Fig. 3a was due to homo-FRET of the fluorescein donor, but this did not affect our interpretation. We used the drop in donor fluorescence as a measure of relative assembly, and it is not important whether the decrease was generated by hetero- or homo-FRET.
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Steady State GTPase Activity of MtbFtsZ—The GTPase activity of MtbFtsZ was much lower than that of EcFtsZ at all pH values. Because the GTPase is zero below the critical concentration, we calculated the hydrolysis rate (GDP FtsZ–1 min–1, Table 1) relative to the FtsZ concentration above the critical concentration (12). Note that these rates were determined at room temperature. Because our previous GTPase assays were mostly at 37 °C, we compared the rates at the two temperatures for a single preparation of EcFtsZ. The GTPase of EcFtsZ was 2- or 3-fold lower at 22 °C than at 37 °C. This is similar to the previous results of de Boer et al. (21), who reported that the GTPase of EcFtsZ is 2-fold higher at 37 °C than at 30 °C.
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Kinetics Analysis: MtbFtsZ Assembly Is Cooperative with a Weak Dimer Nucleus—We measured assembly kinetics over a range of protein concentration at both pH 6.5 and 7.7 (Fig. 4). Assembly at both pH 6.5 and 7.7 could be fit with the same kinetic model that fit EcFtsZ. This comprised three steps: monomer activation, formation of a weak dimer nucleus, and elongation (see Scheme 1 under "Experimental Procedures"). The model and fitting procedure are described in detail in our previous papers (1, 4). The main difference between EcFtsZ and MtbFtsZ (at pH 7.7) is that MtbFtsZ has a much slower rate constant for elongation. Table 2 lists the kinetic parameters derived from the fitting and compares them to the parameters determined previously for EcFtsZ.
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F·e–t/
(where F(t) is the fluorescence at time t, Feq is the final equilibrium fluorescence,
F is the change in fluorescence from time zero to equilibrium, and
is the characteristic decay time; the half-time of the reaction is t
=
·ln2). The decay half-time was 28 s at pH 7.7 and increased to 131 s at pH 6.5 (Fig. 5a). In a similar experiment EcFtsZ showed a halftime of 4 s (Fig. 5A, bottom panel). The second experiment directly measured the subunit turnover at steady state by mixing separate pools of preassembled donor and acceptor protofilaments. Initially there was no FRET (except for some homo-FRET by fluorescein) because the donors and acceptors were on separate protofilaments. FRET developed as the protofilaments disassembled and reassembled into mixed polymers. Fig. 5b shows the change in the FRET signal over time in three different pH buffers: pH 6.5, 6.9, and 7.7. These curves were all fit well by single-exponentials. The half-time of MtbFtsZ turnover was about 42 s at pH 7.7 and 163 s at pH 6.5. The turnover of EcFtsZ was much faster with a half-time of 5 s at pH 7.7 (Fig. 5b, bottom panel). Also, we found that at pH 6.5 only about half of the MtbFtsZ subunits exchanged. Thus, in addition to the slow turnover, half of the subunits remained stably in their original two-stranded filaments and did not exchange.
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20% of the FRAP series obtained showed very little recovery (less than 10%), and these were not included in the averages given above. Thus the average half-times we report here are likely underestimates. | DISCUSSION |
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Using a light scattering assay, White et al. (8) report a strong assembly of MtbFtsZ at pH 6.5, but found that the signal dropped to about one-tenth at pH 7.0 and disappeared completely at pH 7.5. We believe this illustrates the problem inherent in the light scattering assay, namely that the scattering signal is strongly dependent on the size of the polymers. Thus the long, two-stranded filaments at pH 6.5 scatter very strongly, whereas the same mass of short, one-stranded filaments at pH 7.7 scatters very weakly. The FRET assay avoids this problem and gives a signal proportional to the mass of polymer and independent of filament length. We confirmed, both by the FRET assay and by electron microscopy, that MtbFtsZ assembles quite well at pH 7.2 and 7.7.
Bacteria maintain a fairly constant internal pH when growing in a range of external pH. In optimal growth conditions, E. coli maintains a cytoplasmic pH near 7.7 (23, 24). Mycobacterium species maintain their internal pH in a range of 6.5 to 7 (25, 26). At the pH 6.6 of our growth medium, M. smegmatis maintains an internal pH of 6.9–7.0 (25, 26). In this physiological range MtbFtsZ formed two-stranded filaments, as well as some one-stranded filaments. We found that higher potassium, which is present at 300+ mM in bacterial cytoplasm (27), also favored small bundles of filaments. This suggests that a mixture of one- and two-stranded filaments and small bundles may be the physiologically relevant FtsZ polymer in Mycobacterium.
The average t
of 25 s that we measured for turnover in vivo is significantly faster than the 80 s measured in vitro at pH 6.9. This discrepancy is in contrast to the case for E. coli, where the turnover rates were very close in vivo and in vitro (1). We noted that the FRAP data for M. smegmatis were much more scattered than for E. coli, and we excluded 20% of the measurements that showed minimal recovery; thus the actual turnover in vivo is likely slower than the 25 s average half-time.
Turnover in vivo measured by FRAP might be faster or slower than turnover in vitro measured by FRAP. If turnover in vivo involved dissociation and reassociation of entire protofilaments, it could be faster than the turnover of single subunits measured by FRET. On the other hand, if subunits disassembled from the Z-ring and quickly reassembled into the Z-ring without exchanging with the cytoplasmic pool, turnover in vivo would appear slower than in vitro. We have previously discussed in detail how the in vivo FRAP correlates with in vitro assembly and turnover for EcFtsZ (1, 3). For MtbFtsZ the analysis is complicated by the unknown mixture of one- and two-stranded filaments, so we prefer not to speculate further on the modest discrepancy of turnover in vivo and in vitro.
Kinetics Analysis: Both One- and Two-stranded Filaments Show Cooperative Assembly with a Dimer Nucleus—We had expected that the assembly mechanism for the two-stranded polymers at pH 6.5 might be very different from that of the one-stranded protofilaments at pH 7.7. In particular, a two-stranded filament could provide a rationale for cooperative assembly and a dimer nucleus, which remain an enigma for a one-stranded filament (4). However the kinetics of initial assembly were fit by the same kinetic model at both pH 6.5 and 7.7: monomer activation, a dimer nucleus, and elongation. The numerical values of the kinetic parameters were different. Elongation was five times slower at pH 7.7 compared with pH 6.5, but nucleation was eight times more favorable, leading to a similar time course for initial assembly. Because nucleation was actually less favorable for the two-stranded polymer, the two-stranded structure apparently does not play a role in nucleation. We suggest that the basic assembly mechanism at both pH 7.7 and 6.5 is the formation of one-stranded protofilaments. The formation of two-stranded filaments at pH 6.5 may be a secondary association event with little effect on kinetics.
We caution that the dimer nucleus is a hypothetical intermediate inferred from the kinetic modeling. Because the protofilaments are one-stranded it is difficult to understand the structure of this nucleus. Another potential problem is that, although the dissociation constant (k–2/k2, Table 2) of the dimer is approximately the same for EcFtsZ and MtbFtsZ at pH 7.7 (277 and 567 µM), it is 10 times higher for MtbFtsZ at pH 6.5 (4,700 µM). This much slower nucleation is balanced by a five times faster elongation to give a total assembly time approximately the same for the two pH values. This coincidence suggests caution in the interpretation of the kinetics model. At present the dimer nucleus is a hypothesis that provides a good fit to the kinetics, but we do not even know that it exists as a structure.
Correlations among Steady State Turnover, GTP Hydrolysis, and GDP-induced Disassembly—The steady state assembly dynamics appear to be related to GTP hydrolysis. The half-time for subunit turnover is about half the time for GTP turnover (1/GTPase, Table 1) for EcFtsZ at pH 6.5 and 7.7 and for MtbFtsZ at pH 7.7. (The two-stranded filaments of MtbFtsZ at pH 6.5 and 6.9 are complicated by having only a partial turnover, which we will ignore for the present.) This correlation suggests the following mechanism. Following GTP hydrolysis the GDP is trapped in the protofilament interface, and the subunit has to dissociate in order to exchange the GDP for GTP. Once a subunit dissociates and the exchange has occurred, the subunit is activated for a new round of assembly and hydrolysis. This mechanism is well established for tubulin, and our data suggest that it may apply also to FtsZ.
Steady state subunit turnover also correlates well with the GDP-induced disassembly. For all five cases in Table 1, the halftime for GDP-induced disassembly was about 65–75% that for subunit turnover measured by FRET. This is consistent with the model above and with our assumption that the excess of GDP binds to free subunits and blocks their ability to reassemble. The protofilaments then disassemble at their natural rate. Although fit by a single exponential, this disassembly reaction is likely complex and involves two mechanisms. One is the natural disassembly from the protofilament end, given by the kinetic constant k–e. The second mechanism involves GTP hydrolysis, where we assume that each hydrolysis event is followed by dissociation of the subunit and exchange of GDP for GTP.
The steady state subunit turnover measured by FRET is only slightly slower than this disassembly rate. This suggests that during normal turnover protofilaments are disassembling almost as quickly as when reassembly is completely blocked by GDP.
Exchange of Nucleotide into Protofilaments—Some previous studies have proposed that GTP can exchange directly into assembled protofilaments (28–32). In the most recent study (28) the earliest time point examined was 10 s, the time at which exchange was found to be complete (at pH 7.5, 500 mM KCl). However, our work shows that the half-time for subunit turnover for EcFtsZ was 5.5 s under comparable conditions (Table 1), so that most or all of this exchange could take place on free subunits as they are turning over.
Tadros et al. (28) repeated the exchange experiment in 500 mM RbCl and found a slower exchange with a half-time of
10 s. The GTPase was greatly reduced in rubidium (0.6 min–1) and was eight times slower than the rate measured for GTP exchange. The authors concluded that nucleotide exchange in rubidium was occurring directly into assembled protofilaments. However, we have repeated these GTPase measurements and compared them directly to subunit exchange. We found that the GTPase at pH 7.7 and room temperature was 2 min–1 in rubidium (about four times faster than reported by Tadros et al. (28)) and was 6–7 min–1 in potassium. The halftime of subunit exchange was 11 s in rubidium and 4 s in potassium. Thus the half-time for subunit exchange was about one-third of the time for GTP hydrolysis in both rubidium and potassium, similar to the ratio of one-half that we found for EcFtsZ at pH 6.5 and 7.7 and for MtbFtsZ at pH 7.7 (Table 1).
In an earlier study our laboratory investigated nucleotide exchange into EcFtsZ polymers stabilized by DEAE-dextran (33). In DEAE-dextran FtsZ-GDP assembled into tubes, with the protofilaments in the helical, curved conformation. FtsZ-GTP formed sheets of straight protofilaments. When polymers were assembled in one nucleotide and an excess of the other was added, they transformed in shape. However, the transformation took 2–4 min, suggesting disassembly of the original, an exchange of nucleotide on the free subunits, and reassembly of the new form. Rapid exchange directly into assembled protofilaments was found under only one condition. When GTP plus EDTA was added to GDP tubes, the tubes transformed into sheets of straight protofilaments in less than 15 s. We concluded that chelation of magnesium permitted the exchange of GTP directly into the curved conformation of GDP protofilaments.
The close correlation of GDP-induced disassembly and subunit turnover in the continued presence of GTP is inconsistent with nucleotide exchange into protofilaments. If GDP could enter the protofilaments, we would expect the GDP-induced disassembly to be much faster. However, in all cases it was only 25–35% faster. If GTP could enter the protofilaments, we would expect it to replace the GDP rapidly following hydrolysis and eliminate the observed correlation of hydrolysis with turnover.
Modeling Details of Protofilament Turnover—In the future, we would like to develop a detailed model for events involved in turnover of protofilaments at steady state. However, at present there are too many unknowns. The site of GTP hydrolysis is one of the major unknowns. Most of the subunits in polymer carry unhydrolyzed GTP (34), so there must be a considerable lag between the time a subunit enters the protofilament and when it hydrolyzes its GTP. What triggers hydrolysis is unknown. One possibility is that these subunits hydrolyze GTP at random and that the protofilament then fragments at the site of the newly formed GDP. A very different model would propose that spontaneous hydrolysis of GTP occurs rarely, but when it does happen additional hydrolysis is accelerated vectorially on the adjacent subunits. This type of coupled or vectorial hydrolysis has been proposed to explain how the GTP cap generates microtubule dynamic instability (35).
| FOOTNOTES |
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1 To whom correspondence should be addressed: Dept. of Cell Biology, Duke University Medical Center, Box 3709, Durham, NC 27710. Tel.: 919-684-6385; Fax: 919-684-8090; E-mail: h.erickson{at}cellbio.duke.edu.
2 The abbreviations used are: EcFtsZ, FtsZ from Escherichia coli; MtbFtsZ, FtsZ from Mycobacterium tuberculosis; FRET, fluorescence resonance energy transfer; TMR, tetramethylrhodamine; FRAP, fluorescence recovery after photobleaching; GFP, green fluorescent protein; MES, 4-morpholineethanesulfonic acid; MOPS, 4-morpholinepropanesulfonic acid. ![]()
3 M. Rajagopalan, unpublished data. ![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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