Litcius/Paper detail

Lipid Anchoring of Archaeosortase Substrates and Midcell Growth in Haloarchaea

Mohd Farid Abdul Halim, Stefan Schulze, Anthony DiLucido, Friedhelm Pfeiffer, Alexandre W. Bisson‐Filho, Mechthild Pohlschröder

2020mBio58 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The subcellular organization of biochemical processes in space and time is still one of the most mysterious topics in archaeal cell biology. Despite the fact that haloarchaea largely rely on covalent lipid anchoring to coat the cell envelope, little is known about how cells coordinate de novo synthesis and about the insertion of this proteinaceous layer throughout the cell cycle. Here, we report the identification of two novel contributors to ArtA-dependent lipid-mediated protein anchoring to the cell surface, HvPssA and HvPssD. ArtA, HvPssA, and HvPssD, as well as SLG, showed midcell localization during growth and cytokinesis, indicating that haloarchaeal cells confine phospholipid processing in order to promote midcell elongation. Our findings have important implications for the biogenesis of the cell surface.

Topics & Concepts

Cell biologyCytokinesisBiogenesisCellBiologyChemistryCell divisionBiochemistryGenePhotosynthetic Processes and MechanismsEnzyme Structure and FunctionBacterial Genetics and Biotechnology