@phdthesis{Wagner2021, author = {Wagner, Rabea Marie}, title = {The Bacterial Exo- and Endo-Cytoskeleton Spatially Confines Functional Membrane Microdomain Dynamics in \(Bacillus\) \(subtilis\)}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-21745}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-217458}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2021}, abstract = {Cellular membranes form a boundary to shield the inside of a cell from the outside. This is of special importance for bacteria, unicellular organisms whose membranes are in direct contact with the environment. The membrane needs to allow the reception of information about beneficial and harmful environmental conditions for the cell to evoke an appropriate response. Information gathering is mediated by proteins that need to be correctly organized in the membrane to be able to transmit information. Several principles of membrane organization are known that show a heterogeneous distribution of membrane lipids and proteins. One of them is functional membrane microdomains (FMM) which are platforms with a distinct lipid and protein composition. FMM move within the membrane and their integrity is important for several cellular processes like signal transduction, membrane trafficking and cellular differentiation. FMM harbor the marker proteins flotillins which are scaffolding proteins that act as chaperones in tethering protein cargo to FMM. This enhances the efficiency of cargo protein oligomerization or complex formation which in turn is important for their functionality. The bacterium Bacillus subtilis contains two flotillin proteins, FloA and FloT. They form different FMM assemblies which are structurally similar, but differ in the protein cargo and thus in the specific function. In this work, the mobility of FloA and FloT assemblies in the membrane was dissected using live-cell fluorescence microscopy techniques coupled to genetic, biochemical and molecular biological methods. A characteristic mobility pattern was observed which revealed that the mobility of both flotillins was spatially restricted. Restrictions were bigger for FloT resulting in a decreased diffusion coefficient compared to FloA. Flotillin mobility depends on the interplay of several factors. Firstly, the intrinsic properties of flotillins determine the binding of different protein interaction partners. These proteins directly affect the mobility of flotillins. Additionally, binding of interaction partners determines the assembly size of FloA and FloT. This indirectly affects the mobility, as the endo-cytoskeleton spatially restricts flotillin mobility in a size-dependent manner. Furthermore, the extracellular cell wall plays a dual role in flotillin mobility: its synthesis stimulates flotillin mobility, while at the same time its presence restricts flotillin mobility. As the intracellular flotillins do not have spatial access to the exo-cytoskeleton, this connection is likely mediated indirectly by their cell wall-associated protein interaction partners. Together the exo- and the endo-cytoskeleton restrict the mobility of FloA and FloT. Similar structural restrictions of flotillin mobility have been reported for plant cells as well, where the actin cytoskeleton and the cell wall restrict flotillin mobility. These similarities between eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells indicate that the restriction of flotillin mobility might be a conserved mechanism.}, subject = {Heubacillus}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Schneider2015, author = {Schneider, Johannes}, title = {Functional diversification of membrane microdomains in Bacillus subtilis}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-127569}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2015}, abstract = {Eukaryotic cells are considered as evolutionary complex organisms because they possess organelles that enable them to regulate the spatio-temporal organization of cellular processes. Spatio-temporal organization of signal transduction cascades occurs in eukaryotic cells via organization of membrane-associated microdomains or lipid rafts. Lipid rafts are nanoscale-sized domains in the plasma membrane that are constituted by a specific set of lipids and proteins and harbor a number of proteins related to signal transduction and trafficking. The integrity of lipid rafts is important for the assembly and functional coordination of a plethora of signaling networks and associated processes. This integrity is partially mediated by a chaperone protein called flotillin. Disruption of lipid raft integrity, for example via depletion or overproduction of flotillin, alters raft-associated signal transduction cascades and causes severe diseases like Alzheimer's, Parkinson's disease or cardiovascular disease. It was traditionally assumed that a sophisticated compartmentalization of cellular processes like the one exhibited in lipid rafts was exclusive to eukaryotic cells and therefore, lipid rafts have been considered as a hallmark in the evolution of cellular complexity, suggesting that prokaryotic cells were too simple organisms to organize such sophisticated membrane platforms. However, it was recently discovered that bacteria are also able to organize Functional Membrane Microdomains (FMMs) in their cellular membrane that are able to organize and catalyze the functionality of many diverse cellular processes. These FMMs of bacterial membranes contain flotillin-like proteins which play important roles in the organization of FMM-associated cellular processes. In this dissertation I describe the structural and biological significance of the existence of two distinct flotillin proteins, FloA and FloT, in the FMMs of the bacterial model Bacillus subtilis. Localization studies, proteomic data and transcriptomic analyses show that FloA and FloT are individual scaffold proteins that activate different regulatory programs during bacterial growth. Using the tractable bacterial model system, I show that the functionality of important regulatory proteins, like the protease FtsH or the signaling kinases KinC, PhoR and ResE, is linked to the activity of FMMs and that this is a direct consequence of the scaffold activity of the bacterial flotillins. FloA and FloT distribute heterogeneously along the FMMs of B. subtilis thereby generating a heterogeneous population of FMMs that compartmentalize different signal transduction cascades. Interestingly, diversification of FMMs does not occur randomly, but rather in a controlled spatio-temporal program to ensure the activation of given signaling networks at the right place and time during cell growth.}, subject = {Heubacillus}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Demir2010, author = {Demir, Fatih}, title = {Lipid rafts in Arabidopsis thaliana leaves}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-53223}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2010}, abstract = {Arabidopsis thaliana (A.th.) mesophyll cells play a pivotal role in the regulation of the drought stress response. The signaling \& transport components involved in drought stress regulation within lipid rafts of the plasma membrane were investigated by DRM isolation from highly purified plasma membranes. Detergent treatment with Brij-98 and Triton X-100 resulted in a total of 246 DRM proteins which were identified by nano HPLC-MS/MS. The majority of these proteins could be isolated by Triton X-100 treatment (78.5 \%) which remains the "golden" standard for the isolation of DRMs. Comparing in-gel and in-solution digestion approaches disclosed additional protein identifications for each method but the in-gel approach clearly delivered the majority of the identified proteins (81.8 \%). Functionally, a clear bias on signaling proteins was visible - almost 1/3 of the detected DRM proteins belonged to the group of kinases, phosphatases and other signaling proteins. Especially leucine-rich repeat receptor-like protein kinases and calcium-dependent protein kinases were present in Brij-98 \& Triton X-100 DRMs, for instance the calcium-dependent protein kinase CPK21. Another prominent member of DRMs was the protein phosphatase 2C 56, ABI1, which is a key regulator of the ABA-mediated drought stress response in A.th. The lipid raft localization of the identified DRM proteins was confirmed by sterol-depletion with the chemical drug MCD. Proteins which depend upon a sterol-rich environment are depleted from DRMs by MCD application. Especially signaling proteins exhibited a strong sterol-dependency. They represented the vast majority (41.5 \%) among the Triton X-100 DRM proteins which were no longer detected following MCD treatment. AtRem 1.2 \& 1.3 could be shown to be sterol-dependent in mesophyll cells as well as two CPKs (CPK10 \& CPK21) and the protein phosphatase ABI1. AtRem 1.2 \& 1.3 could be proven to represent ideal plant lipid raft marker proteins due to their strong presence in Triton X-100 DRMs and dependency upon a sterol-rich environment. When fluorescence labeled AtRem 1.2 \& 1.3 were transiently expressed in A.th. leaves, they localized to small, patchy structures at the plasma membrane. CPK21 was an intrinsic member of Triton X-100 DRMs and displayed extreme susceptibility to sterol-depletion by MCD in immunological and proteomic assays. Calcium-dependent protein kinases (CPKs) have already been studied to be involved in drought stress regulation, for instance at the regulation of S-type anion channels in guard cells. Hence, further transient expression studies with the anion channel SLAH3, protein kinase CPK21 and its counterpart, protein phosphatase ABI1 were performed in Nicotiana benthamiana. Transient co-expression of CPK21 and the anion channel SLAH3, a highly mesophyll- specific homologue of the guard cell anion channel SLAC1, resulted in a combined, sterol-dependent localization of both proteins in DRMs. Supplementary co-expression of the counterpart protein phosphatase ABI1 induced dislocation of SLAH3 from DRMs, probably by inactivation of the protein kinase CPK21. CPK21 is known to regulate the anion channel SLAH3 by phosphorylation. ABI1 dephosphorylates CPK21 thus leading to deactivation and dislocation of SLAH3 from DRMs. All this regulative events are taking place in DRMs of A.th. mesophyll cells. This study presents the first evidence for a lipid raft-resident protein complex combining signaling and transport functions in A.th. Future perspectives for lipid raft research might target investigations on the lipid raft localization of candidate DRM proteins under presence of abiotic and biotic stress factors. For instance, which alterations in the DRM protein composition are detectable upon exogenous application of the plant hormone ABA? Quantitative proteomics approaches will surely increase our knowledge of the post-transcriptional regulation of gene activity under drought stress conditions.}, subject = {Ackerschmalwand}, language = {en} }