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y The E. coli MinCDE system in the regulation of protein patterns and gradients

期刊

CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR LIFE SCIENCES
卷 76, 期 21, 页码 4245-4273

出版社

SPRINGER BASEL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s00018-019-03218-x

关键词

Reaction-diffusion mechanism; Spatiotemporal regulation; ParA-type ATPase; Geometry sensing; Reconstitution; FtsZ

资金

  1. Max Planck Society
  2. DFG Collaborative Research Centre Spatiotemporal dynamics of bacterial cells [TRR 174/2017]
  3. DFG fellowship through the Graduate School of Quantitative Biosciences Munich (QBM)
  4. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF)
  5. project A09 within the collaborative research program 1032 Nanoagents for the spatiotemporal control of molecular and cellular reactions of the German Research Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Molecular self-organziation, also regarded as pattern formation, is crucial for the correct distribution of cellular content. The processes leading to spatiotemporal patterns often involve a multitude of molecules interacting in complex networks, so that only very few cellular pattern-forming systems can be regarded as well understood. Due to its compositional simplicity, the Escherichia coli MinCDE system has, thus, become a paradigm for protein pattern formation. This biological reaction diffusion system spatiotemporally positions the division machinery in E. coli and is closely related to ParA-type ATPases involved in most aspects of spatiotemporal organization in bacteria. The ATPase MinD and the ATPase-activating protein MinE self-organize on the membrane as a reaction matrix. In vivo, these two proteins typically oscillate from pole-to-pole, while in vitro they can form a variety of distinct patterns. MinC is a passenger protein supposedly operating as a downstream cue of the system, coupling it to the division machinery. The MinCDE system has helped to extract not only the principles underlying intracellular patterns, but also how they are shaped by cellular boundaries. Moreover, it serves as a model to investigate how patterns can confer information through specific and non-specific interactions with other molecules. Here, we review how the three Min proteins self-organize to form patterns, their response to geometric boundaries, and how these patterns can in turn induce patterns of other molecules, focusing primarily on experimental approaches and developments.

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