Study Sheds Light on Bacterial Cell Division
A recent paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences by a UC Merced professor and colleagues at Stanford University describes how a critical component of bacterial cell division works.
That research could lead to figuring out how to control harmful bacterial growth.
"It’s not the first few bacteria that get you," said physics Professor Ajay Gopinathan, "it’s when they multiply."
The ability to manipulate bacterial growth could eventually have huge implications for preventing and treating a multitude of medical conditions such as staph, e-coli, meningitis, MRSA and botulism – just a few of the thousands of bacterial infections that plague people all over the world.
Gopinathan got involved in this project while on sabbatical at Stanford University in Spring 2011. He joined his Stanford bioengineering colleague K.C. Huang and Huang’s postdoctoral student Jennifer Hsin, who were performing detailed simulations of a protein essential to divide bacterial cells.
Picture a capsule that pinches in the middle, forming two new capsules. Like all other dividing cells, bacterial cells split to form more of themselves.
But where human cells have “motors” that drive the splitting, bacterial cells do not. They use a filament-like protein called FtsZ, which is a long chain of identical units that coils in on itself to split the cell; rather like a purse-string drawing shut.
FtsZ units binds to two kinds of “fuel cell” molecules called GTP and GDP. The researchers discovered that when the individual FtsZ units are bound to GTP, the filament remains in a straight line. But as the GTP fuel is spent and becomes GDP, the filament bends, forming the coil that divides the cell.
“This work gives us a fundamental understanding of the bacterial cell division process that we did not have before.” Gopinathan said. “The paper was on the theory, and now experiments will get us closer to being able to design therapies and drugs that manipulate cell division.”