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1.
Sci Adv ; 9(11): eade5224, 2023 03 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36921039

ABSTRACT

ESCRT-III family proteins form composite polymers that deform and cut membrane tubes in the context of a wide range of cell biological processes across the tree of life. In reconstituted systems, sequential changes in the composition of ESCRT-III polymers induced by the AAA-adenosine triphosphatase Vps4 have been shown to remodel membranes. However, it is not known how composite ESCRT-III polymers are organized and remodeled in space and time in a cellular context. Taking advantage of the relative simplicity of the ESCRT-III-dependent division system in Sulfolobus acidocaldarius, one of the closest experimentally tractable prokaryotic relatives of eukaryotes, we use super-resolution microscopy, electron microscopy, and computational modeling to show how CdvB/CdvB1/CdvB2 proteins form a precisely patterned composite ESCRT-III division ring, which undergoes stepwise Vps4-dependent disassembly and contracts to cut cells into two. These observations lead us to suggest sequential changes in a patterned composite polymer as a general mechanism of ESCRT-III-dependent membrane remodeling.


Subject(s)
Archaea , Endosomal Sorting Complexes Required for Transport , Endosomal Sorting Complexes Required for Transport/metabolism , Archaea/metabolism , Polymers , Cell Division
2.
RNA Biol ; 18(3): 421-434, 2021 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32957821

ABSTRACT

CRISPR type III systems, which are abundantly found in archaea, recognize and degrade RNA in their specific response to invading nucleic acids. Therefore, these systems can be harnessed for gene knockdown technologies even in hyperthermophilic archaea to study essential genes. We show here the broader usability of this posttranscriptional silencing technology by expanding the application to further essential genes and systematically analysing and comparing silencing thresholds and escape mutants. Synthetic guide RNAs expressed from miniCRISPR cassettes were used to silence genes involved in cell division (cdvA), transcription (rpo8), and RNA metabolism (smAP2) of the two crenarchaeal model organisms Saccharolobus solfataricus and Sulfolobus acidocaldarius. Results were systematically analysed together with those obtained from earlier experiments of cell wall biogenesis (slaB) and translation (aif5A). Comparison of over 100 individual transformants revealed gene-specific silencing maxima ranging between 40 and 75%, which induced specific knockdown phenotypes leading to growth retardation. Exceedance of this threshold by strong miniCRISPR constructs was not tolerated and led to specific mutation of the silencing miniCRISPR array and phenotypical reversion of cultures. In two thirds of sequenced reverted cultures, the targeting spacers were found to be precisely excised from the miniCRISPR array, indicating a still hypothetical, but highly active recombination system acting on the dynamics of CRISPR spacer arrays. Our results indicate that CRISPR type III - based silencing is a broadly applicable tool to study in vivo functions of essential genes in Sulfolobales which underlies a specific mechanism to avoid malignant silencing overdose.


Subject(s)
Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats , Gene Knockdown Techniques , Gene Silencing , Genes, Archaeal , Genes, Essential , Genes, Lethal , Sulfolobales/genetics , Archaeal Proteins/genetics , Archaeal Proteins/metabolism , Base Sequence , CRISPR-Cas Systems , Cell Division/genetics , Gene Order , Gene Targeting , Genetic Vectors/genetics , Mutation , Operon , Phenotype , RNA, Guide, Kinetoplastida , Sulfolobales/metabolism
3.
Science ; 369(6504)2020 08 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32764038

ABSTRACT

Sulfolobus acidocaldarius is the closest experimentally tractable archaeal relative of eukaryotes and, despite lacking obvious cyclin-dependent kinase and cyclin homologs, has an ordered eukaryote-like cell cycle with distinct phases of DNA replication and division. Here, in exploring the mechanism of cell division in S. acidocaldarius, we identify a role for the archaeal proteasome in regulating the transition from the end of one cell cycle to the beginning of the next. Further, we identify the archaeal ESCRT-III homolog, CdvB, as a key target of the proteasome and show that its degradation triggers division by allowing constriction of the CdvB1:CdvB2 ESCRT-III division ring. These findings offer a minimal mechanism for ESCRT-III-mediated membrane remodeling and point to a conserved role for the proteasome in eukaryotic and archaeal cell cycle control.


Subject(s)
Archaeal Proteins/physiology , Cell Division , Endosomal Sorting Complexes Required for Transport/physiology , Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex/physiology , Sulfolobus acidocaldarius/cytology , Archaeal Proteins/chemistry , Bortezomib/chemistry , Bortezomib/pharmacology , Endosomal Sorting Complexes Required for Transport/chemistry , Models, Molecular , Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex/chemistry , Proteasome Inhibitors/chemistry , Proteasome Inhibitors/pharmacology , Proteolysis , Sulfolobus acidocaldarius/drug effects , Sulfolobus acidocaldarius/enzymology
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