The Inorganic Nutrient Regime and the <i>mre</i> Genes Regulate Cell and Filament Size and Morphology in the Phototrophic Multicellular Bacterium <i>Anabaena</i>
Cristina Velázquez-Suárez, Ignacio Luque, Antonia Herrero
Abstract
Most studies on the determination of bacterial cell morphology have been conducted in heterotrophic organisms. Here, we present a study of how the availability of inorganic nitrogen and carbon sources influence cell size and morphology in the context of a phototrophic metabolism, as found in the multicellular cyanobacterium Anabaena . In Anabaena , the expression of the MreB, MreC, and MreD proteins, which influence cell size and length, are regulated by NtcA, a transcription factor that globally coordinates cellular responses to the C-to-N balance of the cells. Moreover, MreB, MreC, and MreD also influence septal peptidoglycan construction, thus affecting filament length and, possibly, intercellular molecular exchange that is required for diazotrophic growth. Thus, here we identified new roles for Mre proteins in relation to the phototrophic and multicellular character of a cyanobacterium, Anabaena .