Nature Communications (Nov 2022)

Cytoskeletal components can turn wall-less spherical bacteria into kinking helices

  • Carole Lartigue,
  • Bastien Lambert,
  • Fabien Rideau,
  • Yorick Dahan,
  • Marion Decossas,
  • Mélanie Hillion,
  • Jean-Paul Douliez,
  • Julie Hardouin,
  • Olivier Lambert,
  • Alain Blanchard,
  • Laure Béven

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-34478-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

Read online

The cell wall and cytoplasmic MreB polymers are important for bacterial cell shape. However, Spiroplasma cells lack a cell wall and still display a helical shape and kink-based motility, which is thought to rely on five MreB isoforms and a fibril protein. Here, Lartigue et al. show that heterologous expression of a single Spiroplasma MreB isoform confers helical shape and kinking ability to Mycoplasma cells, which are naturally spherical and non-motile.