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Wiley, FEBS Letters, 1-3(569), p. 43-48, 2004

DOI: 10.1016/j.febslet.2004.05.048

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Polymerization of nucleotide-free, GDP- and GTP-bound cell division protein FtsZ: GDP makes the difference

Journal article published in 2004 by Sonia Huecas ORCID, José Manuel Andreu ORCID
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Stable, more than 98% nucleotide-free apo-FtsZ was prepared from purified Methanococcus jannaschhi FtsZ. This facilitates the study of the functional mechanisms of this FtsZ, an assembling GTPase, which shares a common fold with eukaryotic tubulin. Apo-FtsZ underwent cooperative magnesium-induced polymerization with a similar critical concentration and morphology related to that of reconstituted GTP-bound FtsZ, suggesting that the binding of GTP contributes insignificantly to the stability of the FtsZ polymers. On the other hand, reconstituted GDP-FtsZ polymerized with a larger critical concentration than GTP-FtsZ, indicating that GDP binding destabilizes FtsZ polymers. Upon GTP hydrolysis by FtsZ polymers, in the absence of a continued GTP supply and under macromolecular crowding conditions enhancing FtsZ polymerization, the straight GTP polymers disappeared and were replaced by characteristic helically curved GDP-bound polymers. These results suggest that the roles of GTP binding and hydrolysis by this archaeal FtsZ are simply to facilitate disassembly. In a physiological situation in GTP excess, GDP-bound FtsZ subunits could again bind GTP, or trigger disassembly, or be recognized by FtsZ filament depolymerizing proteins, allowing the Z-ring dynamics during prokaryotic cell division.