From the Department of Cell Biology, Duke University
Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710 and ¶ Biology
Department, Brookhaven National Laboratory,
Upton, New York 11973
Received for publication, October 3, 2000, and in revised form, December 4, 2000
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ABSTRACT |
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FtsZ is a bacterial homolog of tubulin that is
essential for prokaryotic cytokinesis. In vitro, GTP
induces FtsZ to assemble into straight, 5-nm-wide polymers. Here we
show that the polymerization of these FtsZ filaments most closely
resembles noncooperative (or "isodesmic") assembly; the polymers
are single-stranded and assemble with no evidence of a nucleation phase
and without a critical concentration. We have developed a model for the
isodesmic polymerization that includes GTP hydrolysis in the scheme.
The model can account for the lengths of the FtsZ polymers and their maximum steady state nucleotide hydrolysis rates. It predicts that
unlike microtubules, FtsZ protofilaments consist of GTP-bound FtsZ
subunits that hydrolyze their nucleotide only slowly and are connected
by high affinity longitudinal bonds with a nanomolar KD.
FtsZ is a bacterial homolog of tubulin that is essential for
prokaryotic cytokinesis (for review see Refs. 1-3). In
Escherichia coli, FtsZ assembles into a ring at the center
of the cell just inside the inner membrane. This Z ring assembles early
in the cell cycle, after which other proteins necessary for cell
division are recruited to it. During cytokinesis, the Z ring contracts and disassembles. If the structure, timing, or localization of Z ring
assembly is disrupted, cell division can fail or become aberrant. It is
not yet clear how Z ring assembly is controlled; some properties of
ring formation may derive from the inherent self-assembly
characteristics of FtsZ, whereas others may require regulation or
modification by additional factors in the cell.
FtsZ and tubulin are homologs that share identical folds (4) and
assemble into polymers with many of the same properties. Like tubulin,
FtsZ polymerizes in the presence of GTP (5, 6) and can form straight
protofilaments that are ~5 nm wide, with subunits spaced 4 nm apart
(7, 8). The longitudinal bonds that connect the subunits in a tubulin
protofilament are understood at atomic resolution, and the bonds
between subunits in an FtsZ protofilament are likely to be very similar
(9). Residues on both sides of the longitudinal protein interface are
conserved, and the GTP binds to one side of the interface and is
necessary for formation of a protofilament. In return, hydrolysis
of the GTP occurs only after formation of the longitudinal bond, when residues from the adjoining subunit contact the nucleotide (4).
GTP hydrolysis causes both FtsZ and tubulin filaments to adopt a curved
conformation (7, 10) and become more labile (11). Curved GDP-FtsZ
filaments have been visualized when stabilized by various polycations
and are half the diameter of GDP-tubulin rings, indicating that the
angle of curvature between GDP-FtsZ subunits is the same as that
between the In contrast to the conserved longitudinal contacts within tubulin and
FtsZ protofilaments, the lateral contacts between protofilaments in a
microtubule wall involve protein surfaces that are not conserved in
FtsZ (4). Because FtsZ polymers have not yet been visualized with high
resolution in vivo, it is not known how the protofilaments in the Z ring are associated. Under many conditions in
vitro, GTP induces FtsZ to form individual 5-nm-wide polymers that
are stable without additional lateral interactions (5, 10, 11, 15).
Nonetheless, even these thin FtsZ polymers could consist of two
protofilaments joined along the narrowest 3 nm axis of the protein, and
there is a precedent for such a 6 nm double filament forming in the
presence of Ca2+ (8). FtsZ can form several types of
lateral bonds when exogenous cations are added, resulting in a variety
of paired protofilaments, bundles, double layered sheets, and tubes
(6-8, 10, 16). For tubulin, aberrant lateral bonds can result in the
formation of zinc sheets (17) and hooked and S-shaped polymers (18). It
is unclear for FtsZ whether any of the lateral contacts that form
in vitro are relevant in vivo.
Polymers that are multistranded assemble cooperatively (19).
Cooperative assembly has three distinctive characteristics (see Fig.
1A) as follows: there is a
critical concentration for assembly; there are kinetic lags in
polymerization at low protein concentrations; and at equilibrium,
subunits are distributed into two distinct populations, monomers and
very long polymers. These properties derive from the two different
phases of assembly, an unfavorable nucleation phase followed by a more
favorable growth phase. Nucleation is unfavorable because individual
bonds between monomers are weak, and therefore initiation of the
polymer is difficult. However, once a stable nucleus has assembled,
each new subunit can form multiple bonds to the growing polymer.
Subunit addition becomes favorable and polymer growth rapid. The
critical concentration is the minimum protein concentration at which
any polymer forms; at all concentrations above this, subunits assemble until the concentration of monomer left in solution has fallen to the
critical concentration.
INTRODUCTION
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
THEORY
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
heterodimers in tubulin rings (12). For both
proteins, assembly with GDP requires magnesium and is relatively weak
(KD = 20-50 µM (13, 14)).
View larger version (30K):
[in a new window]
Fig. 1.
Properties of cooperative and isodesmic
polymers. A, cooperative polymers are multistranded and
assemble in two phases. During nucleation, only a single bond forms
between subunits. After nucleation, growth is more favorable because
two or more bonds form during subunit addition to the end of a
multistranded polymer. B, isodesmic polymers are single
stranded and so assemble through the formation of a single bond that is
identical at all steps of polymerization. They therefore have no
nucleation phase. The resultant characteristics of each type of polymer
are listed. (After Oosawa and Kasai (19).)
Most biological polymers are multistranded and assemble cooperatively with the properties described above. Cooperative polymers such as actin and microtubules may be common because they form filaments that are strong in the middle but can easily be remodeled by removing subunits from their ends (20). In addition, a cell can use cooperative assembly to control its spatial organization by localizing polymer nucleation sites and assembling long filaments that can span the cytoplasm.
In contrast to multistranded polymers, single-stranded polymers can be assembled with an identical bond at each step of polymerization (21, 22) (see Fig. 1B). For such isodesmic polymers, there is no separate nucleation and growth phase, and so there is no lag in the assembly kinetics. Instead, assembly is rapid because every monomer in solution can act as a start site for polymer growth. There is also no critical concentration for assembly, and as the total protein concentration rises, both polymer and monomer populations can increase simultaneously. Finally, fragmentation of a single-stranded polymer in the middle requires breaking only a single bond. Disassembly thus occurs not only at the ends of the polymers but also along their length, and isodesmic polymers remain relatively short.
Single-stranded, isodesmic polymers are less common in biology than
cooperative, multistranded polymers, and none so far has been shown to
be the major form of a protein in vivo. Isodesmic assembly
was first analyzed by studying -lactoglobulin (21) and glutamate
dehydrogenase (22), but both these proteins function in vivo
as monomers. The Drosophila septins can assemble in
vitro both isodesmically, forming short, single-stranded polymers
(23), and cooperatively, forming multistranded
filaments,1 depending on
which subunits are combined. Relevant to the present study, tubulin-GDP
can assemble isodesmically into single, curved protofilaments that
eventually close to form tubulin rings (13). Similarly, GDP-FtsZ
assembly is noncooperative and deviates only slightly from isodesmic
polymerization (14).
The two basic mechanisms of assembly described above are often complicated by nucleotide hydrolysis or conformational changes within a subunit. In actin and tubulin, these complications lead to phenomena such as treadmilling and dynamic instability (24, 25). Prion fiber assembly also shows characteristics that do not fall neatly into either mechanism described above. Prion assembly shows lag phases that are concentration-independent, and monomer, small oligomer, and polymer coexist in assembly reactions (26). A conformational change is thought to be necessary to activate the prion protein before it can assemble into multistranded fibers, and preformed fibers may accelerate the rate of this conformational change. For FtsZ, cycles of GTP hydrolysis and conformational changes in the subunit may also introduce complexities into its polymerization mechanism.
The straight 5-nm-wide FtsZ polymers that form in GTP are probably the
building blocks of any larger structure that forms in vivo.
In the cell, controlled nucleation followed by favorable growth would
be an economic explanation of the FtsZ's tight localization and its
ability to span the 3-µm circumference of an E. coli cell. However, if FtsZ polymers have the structure of an isolated tubulin protofilament, they would be single-stranded and would be expected to
show isodesmic assembly. Our goal was to determine whether the assembly
of these protofilaments occurs via isodesmic or cooperative assembly.
Therefore, we determined whether these filaments are in fact
single-stranded, whether there is a concentration-dependent lag phase during assembly indicative of nucleation, and whether there
is a critical concentration for assembly. We found that unlike
microtubules, the assembly of these FtsZ-GTP protofilaments appears isodesmic.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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FtsZ Purification--
E. coli FtsZ was overexpressed
from a pET11b vector (Novagen) and purified largely as in Lu et
al. (27) with a few modifications. Cells were grown in 500 ml of
LB at 37 °C to A600 = 1, induced with
0.5 mM
isopropyl-1-thio--D-galactopyranoside, and grown for an
additional 2 h. Cells were sedimented and resuspended in 10 ml of
50 mM Tris, pH 8, 100 mM NaCl, 1 mM
EDTA, 1 mM 4-(2-aminoethyl)benzenesulfonyl fluoride
and frozen at
80 °C. Cells were thawed, and lysozyme was added to
0.1 mg/ml and incubated for 10 min, and magnesium acetate was added to
10 mM. Cells were sonicated, and DNase was added to 10 µg/ml, and the extract was incubated for 1 h. Lysate was spun
for 30 min at 220,000 × g at 4 °C. The supernatant
was mixed with 0.25 volume saturated (room temperature) ammonium
sulfate, incubated on ice for 20 min and spun at 80,000 × g for 10 min at 4 °C. The supernatant was removed, and
1/12 volume ammonium sulfate was added. This was spun again at
80,000 × g for 10 min at 4 °C. The pellet was
resuspended in 5 ml of polymerization buffer (50 mM
NaMES,2 pH 6.5, 2.5 mM magnesium acetate, 1 mM EGTA) and spun again
at 160,000 × g for 10 min at 4 °C. The final
supernatant was brought to 10% glycerol and 50 µM GDP,
aliquoted, snap-frozen in liquid nitrogen, and stored at
80 °C.
Protein Concentration Determinations and Assembly Reaction Conditions-- Protein concentrations were measured using the BCA assay (Pierce) with bovine serum albumin as a standard, calibrated for the 0.75 color ratio of FtsZ/bovine serum albumin (27). All assembly reactions were carried out in the above polymerization buffer (50 mM NaMES, pH 6.5, 2.5 mM magnesium acetate, 1 mM EGTA). Reactions were supplemented with magnesium acetate so that the total magnesium concentration was 2 mM in excess of any nucleotide. Assembly reactions were performed at room temperature unless otherwise indicated.
FtsZ Cycling-- On the day the protein was to be assayed, the FtsZ was put through a cycle of calcium-aided assembly and disassembly (based on Ref. 16) to select for active, nonaggregated protein. Thawed protein was prespun in a TLA100 rotor for 15 min at 350,000 × g at 4 °C. The protein was then diluted 5-fold in polymerization buffer to lower the glycerol concentration (final protein concentration ~1 mg/ml) and brought to 10 mM CaCl2 and 2 mM GTP. After incubation for 3 min at room temperature, polymer was sedimented for 15 min at 350,000 × g at 20 °C. The pellet was resuspended well in polymerization buffer and incubated on ice for 30 min. A final spin (15 min, 350,000 × g, 4 °C) removed any remaining aggregated protein.
Electron Microscopy and Filament Length Measurements-- Negative stain electron microscopy was used to visualize FtsZ filaments. Carbon-coated copper grids (400 mesh, Electron Microscopy Sciences) were glow discharged for 5 s before use. For some assays, before applying the FtsZ a drop of 0.2 mg/ml cytochrome c was pipetted onto the carbon, incubated for 30 s, and then blotted with filter paper. This procedure aided good staining at low FtsZ concentrations but did not visibly affect filament number or length. Cycled protein was diluted to the desired concentration in polymerization buffer and nucleotide was added, and the reaction was incubated for several minutes at room temperature. A drop of FtsZ solution was then applied to the carbon and incubated for 10 s before the excess was blotted. The grid was immediately rinsed with 3-4 drops 2% uranyl acetate, blotted, and air-dried. Filaments were visualized and photographed using a Phillips 301 electron microscope at × 50,000 magnification.
For length determinations, 0.75-3.5 µM FtsZ was assembled with either 2 mM GTP or 0.5 mM GMPCPP and visualized by negative stain. Image quality improved significantly at the higher protein concentrations, although overlapping filaments made lengths more difficult to measure above 2 µM FtsZ. Three fields on a grid were photographed from 10 different reactions with each nucleotide. The negatives were scanned into a computer at 600 dpi. Filaments were traced using NIH image, and the length distributions for a given grid were pooled and plotted.
The polymer length distributions were largely exponential. However, because the shortest polymers were more likely to be obscured in the noise of an image or overlooked during measurement, the frequency of observing these polymers was lower than expected for an exponential distribution. The peak polymer length correlated with image quality, with the best images showing exponential length distributions down to 8 subunits (32 nm). To avoid biasing the average filament length because of incomplete counting of short filaments, the average filament length for each grid was mathematically calculated from an exponential fitting to the data, and only data from filaments that were longer than 25 subunits were included in the fittings. Changing the cut-off from 25 to 50 subunits did not alter the best fit curve. Because the average length did not change significantly between the FtsZ concentrations tested, the data from all experiments were pooled to determine the final average length reported for each nucleotide.
GTPase Assays-- A malachite green-sodium molybdate assay was used to measure production of inorganic phosphate (28). Protein was diluted to the desired concentration in polymerization buffer at room temperature, and GTP was added to initiate the reaction. At four time intervals, reactions were stopped by addition of a 1× volume of cold 0.6 M perchloric acid. The samples were stored on ice until all time points were collected, at which time a 2× volume of filtered malachite green solution (0.15 g of malachite green, 1 g of sodium molybdate, 0.25 g of Triton X-100 in 0.7 M HCl) was added. The samples were then incubated at room temperature for 30 min, and the A650 was measured. NaPO4 buffer was used to create a standard curve, and the reaction was normalized by including a control without FtsZ.
STEM Analysis-- FtsZ was assembled in polymerization buffer plus either 2 mM GTP/5 mM EDTA or 0.5 mM GMPCPP. A 3-µl sample of the reaction mix was injected into a drop of buffer on a thin (2-3 nm) carbon film supported by a thick holey film over a titanium grid to which tobacco mosaic virus had previously been applied as an internal standard. The grid was washed first 5 times with injection buffer, then 10 times with 20 mM ammonium acetate, blotted to a thin layer, plunged into liquid nitrogen slush, and freeze-dried overnight under vacuum before being transferred to the microscope. The grids were visualized using a custom built microscope (STEM1) at the Brookhaven National Laboratory. The microscope was operated in a dark field mode in which annular detectors collect nearly all the scattered electrons. Because the FtsZ filaments were radiation-sensitive, it was necessary to keep the electron dose low to have meaningful measurements. With a high dose, the mass/length measurements could be lower by 50% (data not shown). However, at lower doses, results became reproducible.
Areas with relatively clean backgrounds and an adequate number of filaments were chosen for analysis. A digital image was saved consisting of 512 × 512 pixels, each of which shows the number of scattered electrons, which is directly proportional to the mass thickness in that pixel. Relatively straight, short (usually ~30 nm) segments were chosen along a filament for mass measurements. Because there were significant numbers of unpolymerized molecules in the background, it was necessary to mask these molecules before the background was computed and subtracted from the intensity summed over the filaments. The microscope calibration factor was checked against that of tobacco mosaic virus, and the summed intensities (minus the background) multiplied by the calibration factor gave the mass values for the specimen.
Light Scattering Assays-- Cycled FtsZ was diluted to the desired concentration in polymerization buffer and introduced into a quartz cuvette in a FluoroMax fluorimeter with a custom-made temperature-controlled cuvette holder. The cuvette was illuminated with 310 nm light, and the 90° light scattering was detected. The slit widths were set at 0.5 mm and the signal was integrated once a second. A base line of scattering for the unpolymerized protein was established and then polymerization was initiated by the addition of 1 mM GTP or GDP or 0.25 mM GMPCPP. The nucleotide was introduced into the solution on the end of a custom-made plunger that fit snugly into the cuvette with a 1-mm clearance around all sides. The plunger was inserted into the cuvette and rapidly withdrawn to mix the contents. Typical dead times were 2-3 s. The noise in the signal increased when using this plunger due to small bubbles coming out of solution as the plunger was rapidly withdrawn.
Sedimentation Assays-- Pre-cycled protein was diluted to the desired concentrations with polymerization buffer. GTP was added to a final concentration of 5-10 mM, GDP to 2 mM, or GMPCPP to 0.5 mM, along with additional magnesium acetate so that there was a 2 mM excess of magnesium over nucleotide. 75 µl of each reaction was added to a polycarbonate tube and centrifuged in the TLA100 rotor in a TL100 ultracentrifuge (Beckman) for 15 min at 350,000 × g at 20 °C. Removing the entire supernatant and assaying the supernatant and pellet gave poorly reproducible results, so we removed and assayed only the upper two-thirds of the supernatant, leaving the pellet undisturbed. The upper 50 µl of supernatant was immediately removed from the tube, and the concentration of protein in the original sample and the supernatant were measured. To limit GTP depletion and diffusion of the pellet from the tube walls after sedimentation, no more than seven reactions were sedimented simultaneously to reduce the handling time. Results were identical using 5 or 10 mM GTP, confirming that the nucleotide is not being significantly depleted during the 25 min required to complete an assay. Each protein concentration was tested 2-4 times per experiment, and 2-4 separate experiments were combined and averaged to obtain accurate data.
To calibrate the assay, seven proteins with known S values between 4.5 and 30 were sedimented in the same manner. The resulting curve was
linear up to 19 S, at which point 94% of the protein sedimented. The
resulting standard curve indicated that the percent protein
sedimented = 3.6 × 103 + 4.9 × 10
2·S (R = 0.97). FtsZ monomers are
3.4 S (14), and the expected S values of single-stranded FtsZ polymers
of a given length were calculated from the theory of Kirkwood (29). The
above calculations predict that 85% of a 3.4 S FtsZ monomer should
remain in the supernatant after centrifugation; 5-mers, which should be
8 S, would be 40% sedimented, and 40-subunit filaments, which should be 14.5 S, would be 70% sedimented.
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THEORY |
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The theory of isodesmic polymer assembly at equilibrium can be used to predict an apparent association constant for assembly of FtsZ into protofilaments. Here we have extended this theory to include a step of GTP hydrolysis followed by rapid subunit dissociation. The modified theory fits the observed maximum hydrolysis rates and length distributions of FtsZ and allows the prediction of a true association constant for the addition of GTP subunits.
Estimating KA, app from Polymer Lengths-- The average length of an isodesmic filament is determined by the affinity constant for assembly and the total protein concentration. To use length measurements to estimate an apparent affinity constant for GTP- and GMPCPP-FtsZ polymerization, we derived the following Equations 1-4, based on previous models for isodesmic assembly (19, 22, 30):
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(Eq. 1) |
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(Eq. 2) |
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(Eq. 3) |
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(Eq. 4) |
At total FtsZ concentrations of ~2 µM, the average
lengths of GTP and GMPCPP filaments were 23 and 38 subunits,
respectively. According to Eq. 4, the apparent affinities needed to
produce filaments of such lengths are
KA, app = 1.25 × 108
and 3.3 × 108
M1, corresponding to dissociation
constants of 8 and 3 nM. These apparent affinity constants
underestimate the actual affinity at a GTP-FtsZ interface because in
addition to dissociation of GTP-bound FtsZ subunits, filaments fragment
due to GTP hydrolysis, as described below.
A Model for Isodesmic Polymerization with GTP Hydrolysis-- The following polymerization Model 1 accounts for the on-off reactions of subunits in both the GTP and GDP states, and the rate of GTP hydrolysis (see also Fig. 7, which will be addressed under "Discussion"):
FT = FtsZ bound to GTP; FD = FtsZ bound to GDP; and F = another subunit of any nucleotide state. The rates are assumed to be identical whether monomers or the ends of long polymers are interacting. In reality, the entropy and diffusion of long polymers will be different from that of monomers, but these deviations from isodesmic assembly are likely to be less than 2-fold, as was found by Rivas et al. (14).
The association of protein subunits was assumed to be diffusion-limited
(kon 5 × 106
M
1 s
1)
(31) for both GTP and GDP-FtsZ. Nucleotide exchange is likely to be
very rapid (knucleotide
35/s), based on the
7 µM KD of GDP for FtsZ monomer (32)
and a diffusion-limited on rate for nucleotide binding (
5 × 106). Dissociation of GDP-FtsZ is also likely to be very
rapid; with a diffusion-limited kon(GDP-FtsZ)
and a KD = 20 µM (14), koff(GDP-FtsZ) would be 100/s.
In contrast to the rapid dissociation at a GDP-FtsZ interface, the dissociation at a GTP-FtsZ interface would be slow, giving rise to the stability of the protofilaments. The 3 nM apparent affinity constant calculated for GMPCPP filaments can be used as a first approximation for the affinity at GTP-FtsZ interfaces. A diffusion-limited on rate then predicts koff(GTP-FtsZ) = 0.014/s.
The GTP hydrolysis rate can be shown to be on the same order as this dissociation rate of GTP-FtsZ. The overall nucleotide turnover rates are known from experimental measurements (in the present study 1.5/min or 0.025/s for GTP, 0.23/min or 0.0038/s for GMPCPP). The model assumes that hydrolysis occurs only after subunit association, and that all subunits in the polymer hydrolyze GTP at a rate characterized by the first order rate constant khydrolysis. At high protein concentrations, these overall turnover rates are valid estimates of khydrolysis. This is because subunit association is no longer rate-limiting, and there is only a small fraction protein that is either monomer or at a polymer end and so not contributing to the turnover rate.
We postulate that the subunits in the protofilaments are largely bound
to GTP and that the KA, app estimated above is determined by three parameters.
kon(GTP-FtsZ) gives the rate of addition of GTP
subunits (or annealing of polymers with GTP at their ends). The off
rate includes both dissociation of the GTP-FtsZ interface
(koff(GTP-FtsZ)) and hydrolysis followed by rapid breakage of the GDP-FtsZ bonds. Because these two off rates
affect all subunit interfaces stochastically, they can simply be added
to give the total off rate. The isodesmic assembly can therefore be
modeled with the following Equation 5:
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(Eq. 5) |
Estimating the Percentage of Polymers >5 Subunits Long--
To
estimate what should be seen when visualizing FtsZ-GDP by electron
microscopy, the concentration of polymers of different lengths
was calculated based on Equations 1 and 2 above. The
concentration of protein in polymers longer than five
subunits = Ct (i = 1-4)
iCi. If the KD is 20 µM, the value reported for FtsZ-GDP (14), and
the Ct is 12.5 µM, then 5% of
the protein should be in polymers longer than five subunits.
This corresponds approximately to what is seen experimentally for the FtsZ-GDP assembly (Fig.
2A).
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Estimating the GTP Hydrolysis Rate-- GTP hydrolysis is likely to be activated only when a longitudinal interface is formed (4, 33). Assuming that khydrolysis is the same for all subunits except those at the plus end of a protofilament (where the GTP is exposed), the rate of hydrolysis would then be predicted to be proportional to the total concentration of FtsZ subunits, minus the concentration of monomers and polymer plus ends. Therefore (see Equation 6),
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(Eq. 6) |
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RESULTS |
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Assembly of Polymers with GDP, GTP, and GMPCPP-- FtsZ was assembled in the presence of various guanine nucleotides to characterize the polymers that form under each condition. We first assembled FtsZ in the presence of GDP and examined it by negative stain electron microscopy. The protein concentration used was a compromise between the high concentrations that favor GDP-FtsZ assembly and the low concentrations that allow good images to be obtained. At 12.5 µM FtsZ, arcs and rings were visible in the middle of abundant unassembled protein (Fig. 2, A and E). The diameter of these rings (24 ± 2 nm) is consistent with previous observations of curved FtsZpolymers formed in the presence of cationic lipids or DEAE-dextran (7, 10). Here, we found that such curved assemblies can form in the presence of GDP alone.
In contrast, polymers assembled with GTP consisted of long, straight filaments (Fig. 2, B and F). At low protein concentrations, the polymers were of uniform width (4.6 ± 0.7 nm) and had a broad length distribution. Polymers as short as 40 nm (10 subunits) were frequently observed (Fig. 2F). Filaments shorter than this were difficult to identify definitively above the noise in an image. The average polymer length was 92 nm or 23 subunits. The scatter in the data between different experiments was too large to see a significant change in polymer length over the small range in protein concentrations at which lengths could be reliably measured (0.75-3.5 µM FtsZ).
GTP is hydrolyzed continually after assembly has been initiated (Fig.
3A) (32, 34, 35). The
hydrolysis rate is dependent on FtsZ concentration (Fig.
3B), with a Vmax of 1.5 ± 0.7 GTP/min/FtsZ in the low potassium assembly buffer used here
(average ± S.D. from eight experiments). At 2.5 µM
FtsZ, the GTP polymers were initially long individual filaments (Fig.
2B), becoming a mixture of long straight filaments and
shorter curled filaments at later time points (data not shown). At
higher protein concentrations (>5 µM), the 5 nm
filaments were partially paired or bundled. Bundling in the presence of
Ca2+ or DEAE-dextran has been shown previously to decrease
GTPase activity, possibly as the result of reduced subunit
turnover in the bundles. In our experiments, the partial
bundling at higher protein concentrations was accompanied by a decrease
in GTPase activity (up to 20%) above 2 µM FtsZ (Fig.
3B).
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Guanylyl-(,
)-methylenediphosphonate (GMPCPP) is a GTP analog that
supports microtubule assembly without nucleotide hydrolysis (36). We
find that GMPCPP can in fact be hydrolyzed by FtsZ, although 3-10
times more slowly than GTP, depending on the FtsZ concentration (Fig.
3, Vmax for three experiments = 0.23 ± 0.03 GMPCPP/min/FtsZ). Long straight polymers formed readily in the presence of GMPCPP (Fig. 2C) and appeared more abundant at
low protein concentrations than those formed with GTP. They were
similar in width and somewhat longer (152 nm or 38 subunits, R = 0.94). As with the GTP polymers, the average length did not change
significantly over the protein concentration range examined.
At 2.5 µM FtsZ, most of the GMPCPP filaments were individual 5 nm wide polymers. They remained largely unpaired for the first 10 min after GMPCPP-induced assembly, but after 30 min, a network of partially bundled filaments formed (Fig. 2D). At concentrations greater than 3.5 µM FtsZ, paired or partially paired filaments could be seen as early as several minutes after initiation of polymerization. The GMPCPP polymers therefore seem to pair or bundle somewhat more readily than GTP polymers do.
Number of Strands in the 5-nm-wide Filaments--
At low protein
concentrations (<2 µM), FtsZ polymer consists entirely
of unpaired 5-nm-wide straight filaments. Scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) was used to determine whether these basic
FtsZ polymers are a single protofilament or whether they are made from
two protofilament strands packed tightly along their narrowest axis,
similar to what has been seen previously in Ca2+ assembled
sheets (8). STEM was used because it involves direct visualization of
individual biological molecules without staining, fixing, or shadowing,
and so allows the mass in a given area to be determined accurately. The
unstained filaments (Fig. 4) were very
similar in structure to those seen by negative stain. We assembled FtsZ
in either GTP or GMPCPP and determined the mass of protein per length
of filament. The average polymer mass per 4 nm (the length of a
subunit) was 39 ± 4 and 41 ± 6 kDa for GTP and GMPCPP
filaments, respectively. This corresponds exactly to the mass density
expected for a single-stranded polymer. These measurements confirm that
the basic FtsZ polymer is a single protofilament.
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FtsZ Assembles Rapidly without a
Concentration-dependent Lag Phase--
To determine
whether FtsZ polymerization exhibits a lag phase during which unstable
nuclei are being formed, kinetic measurements of assembly were made
using 90° light scattering (15). Light scattering has high time
resolution and could detect initial polymerization kinetics when the
dead time due to mixing was sufficiently reduced. The assay has the
disadvantage, however, that when the polymers are shorter than the
wavelength of light, the scattering is not linear with respect to
polymer mass (37) (in our experiments, polymer 100 nm,
wavelength = 310 nm). As a result, at early time points or at low
protein concentrations, when the polymers are the shortest, the signal
is expected to under report the amount of polymer actually present.
Nonetheless, the assay gives an indication of the relative rate and
extent of an assembly reaction and should not obscure any lags that
existed due to nucleation.
Unpolymerized FtsZ was placed in a fluorimeter, and a base-line
scattering level was established. Nucleotide was then rapidly introduced, with a dead time of 2-3 s (Fig.
5A). If GDP was added to the
protein, no increase in light scattering was seen. Instead, at higher
FtsZ concentrations there was often a drop in the scattering due to
protein dilution. In contrast, following GTP addition the scattering
signal rose, with the highest protein concentrations showing the
greatest increases in scattering.
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At 28 °C, FtsZ assembly was complete in ~10 s. FtsZ assembly was much more rapid than that of actin or microtubules, which at low concentrations can take up to an hour to reach a steady state polymer mass (38-40). Such rapid FtsZ assembly, which occurred even at very low protein concentrations, would not be expected if polymer initiation required an unfavorable kinetic step.
In the assays performed at 28 °C, no lag could be detected before the scattering signals began to rise. However, a short lag could be seen at 20 °C and became more pronounced at 7 °C, where FtsZ assembly still occurred (Fig. 5B). In several previous studies (27, 32, 34), GTPase assays with FtsZ exhibited lags of between 15 min and an hour, and these lags could sometimes be eliminated by preincubating the FtsZ with nucleotide (32). In our assays, however, the lags were quite short, and preincubating FtsZ with GDP did not alter their lengths (data not shown).
If these lags are due to nucleated assembly, the length of the lags should be dependent on FtsZ concentration. To determine the effect of FtsZ concentration, the time for polymerization to reach 1/10th completion was plotted versus the total protein concentration (Fig. 5C). At all temperatures, the lag in assembly was independent of FtsZ concentration. This suggests that after GTP has been added to a reaction, a zero order transition within each subunit is necessary to activate it for assembly. For comparison, in Fig. 5C theoretical curves are plotted for nucleated assembly reactions with a nucleus of two subunits (the traditional minimal nucleus size) or a nucleus of one subunit (for a hypothetical cooperative, single-stranded polymer) (slope = (n + 1)/2, n = nucleus size (40, 41)).
The length of the lags also did not depend on whether GMPCPP or GTP was used, even though hydrolysis decreases the tendency of the subunits to assemble. Because the initial assembly kinetics are independent both of protein concentration and of nucleotide hydrolysis, they are consistent with an isodesmic rather than a cooperative assembly mechanism.
There Is No Critical Concentration for Assembly of FtsZ Protofilaments-- To determine whether FtsZ has a critical concentration for assembly, we examined how polymer mass varied with total FtsZ concentration. For a cooperative polymer, as the protein concentration is increased, the protein would remain monomeric until it reached a critical concentration. Above this concentration, there would be a sharp transition, and polymer would form while the unassembled fraction would remain constant. In contrast, for an isodesmic polymer, as the protein concentration is increased, the unassembled fraction would continue to increase even after significant polymer began to form, and so the concentration of unassembled protein would only gradually approach a plateau.
FtsZ was sedimented to separate large polymers from soluble protein (11). Sedimentation has been used to quantitate microtubule and actin assembly, and it reliably separates these polymers from unassembled subunits. However, an isodesmic assembly reaction contains many short polymers whose S values are closer to that of monomer. By calibrating the assay using proteins with known S values, we predicted that monomers would remain largely soluble, tetramers would be 40% sedimented, and a typical 100-nm-long polymer would be >70% sedimented (see "Materials and Methods" for details). The amount of protein in the supernatant therefore overestimates the amount of protein that is monomeric or in very short polymers.
FtsZ was assembled with various guanine nucleotides and sedimented
(Fig. 6). The FtsZ remained 90% soluble
at the lowest protein concentration tested, indicating that the protein
was not aggregated. The soluble fraction dropped to 9% at high FtsZ
concentrations in the presence of GTP, indicating that the majority of
the protein was active and assembled into polymers large enough to be
pelleted. Although the GTP or GMPCPP in a reaction is continually being hydrolyzed, at all protein concentrations used, >95% of the
nucleotide is predicted to remain unhydrolyzed at the end of the
assays.
|
Recently, Rivas et al. (14) performed extensive analytical ultracentrifugation on GDP-FtsZ and determined that it, like GDP-tubulin, assembles with a noncooperative mechanism that is close to isodesmic. Our sedimentation results with GDP-FtsZ agree with theirs (Fig. 6A). In our assays, as the total FtsZ concentration was increased, the unsedimented protein increased gradually to >20 µM (>55% of the total protein) and did not plateau in the concentration range analyzed. There was no abrupt transition that would be indicative of a critical concentration.
Next, the long straight filaments that assemble in the presence of GTP were sedimented. As the total FtsZ concentration was increased, the FtsZ in the supernatant increased smoothly and continuously (Fig. 6B). Significantly less protein was required for efficient assembly in the presence of GTP than was required with GDP, and the curve leveled off with the soluble fraction near 1.5 µM FtsZ at 17 µM total FtsZ.
Sedimentation with GMPCPP was quite similar to that with GTP (Fig.
6C). However, the maximum concentration of soluble protein was slightly lower (~1 µM), indicating that
GMPCPP-bound FtsZ has a greater tendency to assemble than GTP-FtsZ. In
addition, the curve appeared to plateau somewhat more abruptly. If the
flattening of the curve is significant, it may be an indication of
partially cooperative assembly. This cooperativity could be the result
of the protofilament pairing that occurs more readily when nucleotide hydrolysis is slowed, particularly at high protein concentrations or
after long incubations (see Fig. 2D). Such pairing would
increase the affinity of the subunit for the polymer and so could
flatten the curve and make it appear more cooperative at higher FtsZ concentrations.
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DISCUSSION |
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FtsZ Protofilaments Do Not Assemble Cooperatively-- Although there is a large evolutionary distance between prokaryotic FtsZ and eukaryotic tubulin, many of the properties of the two proteins have been conserved. One noteworthy property of tubulin is that its assembly into microtubules is cooperative. We examined whether FtsZ polymers also assemble cooperatively. We found that FtsZ can form single-stranded filaments that are 10-100 subunits long, in contrast to actin and microtubules, which grow to include thousands of subunits in each polymer (42, 43). In addition, FtsZ polymerization is extremely rapid without evidence of a nucleation phase. Finally, there is no critical concentration for assembly of the FtsZ protofilaments. These results indicate that unlike microtubule assembly, FtsZ protofilament polymerization is isodesmic.
Previous studies of FtsZ protofilament assembly have extrapolated data from high protein concentrations to estimate a critical concentration (11, 15). However, they did not address directly whether the transition was abrupt or gradual. Our study found that the transition was more gradual than expected for a cooperative assembly, although when nucleotide hydrolysis was slowed with GMPCPP, bundles of protofilaments formed and polymerization may have become partially cooperative. It was recently found that tuberculosis FtsZ assembles into small bundles of protofilaments (44), and this assembly also exhibited a sudden transition in polymerization, suggesting cooperative assembly. Such changes in FtsZ polymerization upon assembly into a multistranded polymer are consistent with the traditional explanation of cooperative polymerization (19).
In our assays, the appearance of the multistranded bundles was kinetically slow compared with the assembly of the single-stranded, isodesmic polymers. This may explain why it occurred more readily with GMPCPP polymers than with the more rapidly cycling GTP polymer. The slow kinetics of bundling may also explain why the partial cooperativity seen in the GMPCPP sedimentation assays is not reflected as a concentration-dependent lag in the GMPCPP light scattering traces. Instead, in our light scattering assays, there was sometimes a slow rise in the light scattering signal over the course of 10 min or more (data not shown), possibly reflecting the formation of paired and bundled polymers.
Single-stranded FtsZ Polymers Are Stable Without Lateral Interactions-- Both FtsZ and tubulin can form protofilaments that are a single subunit wide. However, tubulin-GTP protofilaments do not exist in isolation and assemble only when stabilized by lateral bonds in a two-dimensional microtubule wall. In contrast, our STEM results clearly show that FtsZ protofilaments are single-stranded polymers whose longitudinal bonds are stable at concentrations that do not favor lateral associations. Protofilament bundles do not become abundant until >5 µM FtsZ, despite the fact that two protofilaments lined side to side present the opportunity for tens of lateral bonds to form simultaneously. There must therefore be a large disparity between the relative strength of the FtsZ longitudinal and lateral interactions, with the lateral bonds much weaker than those in microtubules, and the longitudinal bonds orders of magnitude stronger than those for tubulin.
The Assembly Affinities of GDP- and GTP-FtsZ Protofilaments Are Micromolar and Nanomolar, Respectively-- GDP-FtsZ polymers are curved protofilaments, as seen by electron microscopy. Our sedimentation experiments indicate that the assembly of these curved polymers is isodesmic, with a KD that is on the order of micromolar, consistent with the results of Rivas et al. (14). The electron microscopic images of GDP-FtsZ also support a KD in this range. The images show arcs and rings surrounded by large amounts of unassembled protein (see Fig. 2A). The average length of an isodesmic polymer depends only on its KD for association and the total protein concentration (see Theory for equations). For a polymer with a 20 µM KD, one-third of the protein should be monomeric at 12.5 µM FtsZ, but 5% of the filaments should be greater than five subunits long, allowing them to be visualized by electron microscopy.
When FtsZ was polymerized with GTP and then sedimented, the protein remaining in the supernatant dropped by at least 20-fold. Because the GTP is being hydrolyzed continually, the FtsZ in these reactions is actually cycling between GTP- and GDP-bound forms that each have different KD values for assembly. Therefore, the affinity is a balance between the KD of the two species, and the apparent 20-fold difference represents the minimum difference in affinity between the GTP and GDP-FtsZ species. In addition, sedimentation overestimates the affinity of bonds within FtsZ filaments because short FtsZ polymers are not predicted to be quantitatively depleted from the supernatant (see "Materials and Methods").
An alternative estimate of the affinity of GTP-FtsZ subunits was obtained by comparing the experimentally measured lengths of the protofilaments with predictions from the equations for isodesmic assembly. This estimate implies a much higher affinity for GTP-FtsZ assembly, in the nanomolar rather than micromolar range. If the KD were 1 µM, at the FtsZ concentrations at which we measured polymer lengths (~2 µM), the average polymer should be only a few subunits long (see "Theory" for calculations). However, we found that the average filament was 23 subunits long. Because of the frequent annealing and fragmentation that occurs in a single-stranded polymer, for the polymers to be this long, the apparent KD for isodesmic assembly must be 8 nM. Assembly in GMPCPP may more closely indicate the behavior of GTP-FtsZ subunits, and in this case the filaments were even longer (38 subunits on average), resulting in an apparent KD of 3 nM.
A Model for Isodesmic Assembly with GTP Hydrolysis--
We have a
developed a model for FtsZ assembly that incorporates GTP hydrolysis
into previously developed models for isodesmic polymerization (Fig.
7). In this scheme, equilibrium constants are assumed to be independent of whether an FtsZ subunit is monomeric or at the end of a polymer. The constants depend only on the nucleotide to which the FtsZ is bound (KD(GTP-FtsZ) or
KD(GDP-FtsZ)). Interconversion between the two
nucleotide states occurs through nucleotide hydrolysis
(khyd) and nucleotide exchange
(kexch). Polymer assembly and annealing are
assumed to be diffusion-limited, whereas polymer fragmentation can
occur by one of two pathways as follows: (a) dissociation at
a GTP-FtsZ interface or (b) hydrolysis of a GTP followed by
rapid dissociation at the GDP-FtsZ interface. To estimate the values of
each rate constant, we have incorporated data from our nucleotide
turnover and polymer length measurements, in addition to data found
elsewhere in the literature (see "Theory" for details).
|
The model predicts that even though hydrolysis is continually occurring throughout the polymer, it is occurring very slowly, and almost all of the subunits in a protofilament are bound to GTP. Following hydrolysis, the polymer will rapidly fragment, allowing exchange of the nucleotide back to a GTP-bound state. This is because the breakage of the GDP-FtsZ protein bonds (koff(GDP-FtsZ)) and the subsequent nucleotide exchange (kexch) are both likely to occur at rates of tens per s compared with less than two per min for the overall nucleotide turnover rate.
The length of the polymers is limited by the fragmentation of the filaments through nucleotide hydrolysis or dissociation of the GTP-bound subunits. Each pathway has a single limiting rate constant, khyd and koff(GTP-FtsZ), respectively. These rates are slow and comparable to each other in magnitude. khyd is equal to the overall nucleotide turnover rate (1.5 and 0.23/min for GTP and GMPCPP, respectively). koff(GTP-FtsZ) can be calculated using data from GTP- or GMPCPP-induced polymerization and in both cases equals ~1/min. This gives a value of KD(GTP-FtsZ) = 2-3 nM. Therefore, in GTP-induced assembly, fragmentation occurs via both hydrolysis- and nonhydrolysis-mediated pathways, whereas with GMPCPP, breakage of bonds containing unhydrolyzed nucleotide is the major factor limiting polymer length.
Our model suggests that FtsZ protofilaments differ from microtubules in two important aspects. First, the longitudinal bonds in a protofilament are several orders of magnitude stronger for FtsZ (KD ~ 3 nM, this work) than for tubulin (KD 500 nM to 500 µM). The affinity of an isolated GTP-tubulin longitudinal bond has not been directly measured but is likely to be 10-100-fold lower than the affinity of a subunit for the growing end of the microtubule; it can be derived (45) from estimates of the latter value, which range between 50 nM and 5 µM (46-50). Therefore, isolated FtsZ protofilaments up to 30-50 subunits long can exist at steady state, whereas tubulin protofilaments are only found when stabilized by lateral contacts in the microtubule wall or by the closure of a GDP-tubulin ring. Second, GTP hydrolysis is slow for FtsZ, occurring on the order of a minute after incorporation into the protofilament. Hydrolysis by tubulin occurs in seconds or less (51). As a result of these two differences, subunits in FtsZ protofilaments would all be bound to GTP, whereas those in a microtubule have largely hydrolyzed their GTP to GDP. (A previous FtsZ study observed calcium-induced FtsZ bundles to contain GDP after being sedimented (52). These calcium polymers may be stabilized against depolymerization even after hydrolysis, and additional hydrolysis would likely occur during the 15 min it took to process the polymer.)
An inconsistency remains between our polymerization model and the data on GTP hydrolysis. A nanomolar affinity for FtsZ-GTP assembly implies that GTP hydrolysis should also approach saturation at very low FtsZ concentrations. If KD, app (GTP-FtsZ) = 8 nM, GTP hydrolysis should be 80% saturated at FtsZtotal = 80 nM (see "Theory" for equations). However, the measured hydrolysis rate is extremely low below 0.5 µM FtsZ, and does not saturate until ~1-2 µM (Fig. 3B, see also Refs. 27, 53, and 54). One possible mechanism that could resolve the discrepancy would be for hydrolysis or the subsequent subunit dissociation to involve steps that are accelerated in longer protofilaments. Alternatively, the model might be extended to include an inactive form of FtsZ in equilibrium with active monomer. The existence of an inactive form is also suggested by the concentration-independent lags seen in Fig. 5C. Preliminary analysis suggests that with this modification the model can match the concentration dependence of GTP hydrolysis while still allowing long filaments to form at micromolar FtsZ concentrations. The model will clearly need to be refined and verified by independent experimental approaches in the future.
Implications for the Assembly of the Z Ring in Vivo-- The structure of the FtsZ polymers in the Z ring in vivo is unknown. However, FtsZ forms protofilaments with high affinity bonds under a wide variety of conditions, and these protofilaments are likely to be part of the Z ring in vivo. If the Z ring consisted of unconnected protofilaments, FtsZ polymerization could be isodesmic in vivo as well as in vitro. However, if the protofilaments are organized into a larger, multistranded structure, polymerization of the Z ring would become cooperative.
Several features of the Z ring in vivo might be more readily explained by cooperative than by isodesmic assembly. First, for localization of the Z ring to be due to FtsZ nucleation at the center of the cell, assembly must be cooperative. Initiating an isodesmic filament at the center of the cell would not favor growth there over growth from any other monomer in the cell. However, isodesmic filaments that polymerize throughout the cell might still be localized by preferential association with the membrane at the center of the cell. Second, the rapid appearance of complete Z rings with controlled timing in the cell cycle (55-57) could be explained by the synthesis of FtsZ passing a threshold critical concentration (58). For an isodesmic polymer, rapid assembly might instead require activation of previously synthesized protein. Finally, following GTP hydrolysis, a multistranded structure would be more stable than individual GDP protofilaments. To maintain individual protofilaments in a Z ring, subunits would need to be continually replaced, or to be stabilized by additional factors in the cell that could inhibit disassembly or suppress hydrolysis.
How might FtsZ protofilaments be assembled into multistranded complexes
in vivo? First, localization of FtsZ to the membrane at the
center of the cell would concentrate the filaments and might allow the
relatively weak lateral bonds to be sufficiently stable to organize
larger structures. Cytoplasmic conditions might also alter the strength
of the lateral bonds. Additionally, other proteins required for cell
division might cross-link the FtsZ filaments. For example, ZipA has
been found to cross-link FtsZ filaments in vitro (59, 60).
In addition, several of the E. coli cell division proteins
seem to increase the stability of the Z ring, since fewer Z rings are
observed in vivo when they are mutated (61-67). In
vitro polymerization studies have already provided many details on
the assembly of pure FtsZ polymers; it will be important to determine
what the structure of the Z ring is in vivo and how other
cell division proteins affect FtsZ polymerization properties both
in vivo and in vitro.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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GMPCPP was a generous gift of John Corriea, University of Mississippi. We thank Dr. Michael Caplow, University of North Carolina; Dr. Kyle Miller, Columbia University; and Dr. Timothy Mitchison, Harvard Medical School for helpful discussion and careful reading of the manuscript. The Brookhaven National Laboratory STEM is a National Institutes of Health Supported Resource Center supported by Grant P41-RR01777 with additional support provided by the Department of Energy, Office of Biological and Environmental Research.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* This work was supported in part by National Institutes of Health Grant GM28553.The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
§ Current address and to whom correspondence may be addressed: Institute of Chemical and Cellular Biology, SGM 604, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115. E-mail: Laura_romberg@hms.harvard.edu. Supported by a fellowship from the American Cancer Society.
To whom correspondence may be addressed. E-mail:
H.Erickson@cellbio.duke.edu.
Published, JBC Papers in Press, January 4, 2001, DOI 10.1074/jbc.M009033200
1 M. Glotzer, personal communication.
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ABBREVIATIONS |
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The abbreviations used are:
MES, 4-morpholineethanesulfonic acid;
GMPCPP, guanylyl-(,
)-methylenediphosphonate;
STEM, scanning transmission
electron microscopy.
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