Magnetosomes Are Cell Membrane Invaginations Organized by the Actin-Like Protein MamK
California Institute of Technology · Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Abstract
Magnetosomes are membranous bacterial organelles sharing many features of eukaryotic organelles. Using electron cryotomography, we found that magnetosomes are invaginations of the cell membrane flanked by a network of cytoskeletal filaments. The filaments appeared to be composed of MamK, a homolog of the bacterial actin-like protein MreB, which formed filaments in vivo. In a mamK deletion strain, the magnetosome-associated cytoskeleton was absent and individual magnetosomes were no longer organized into chains. Thus, it seems that prokaryotes can use cytoskeletal filaments to position organelles within the cell.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 14.66
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 21
Authors
4- AKArash KomeiliCorresponding
California Institute of Technology, Howard Hughes Medical Institute
- ZLZhuo LiCorresponding
California Institute of Technology, Howard Hughes Medical Institute
- DKDianne K. Newman
California Institute of Technology, Howard Hughes Medical Institute
- GJGrant J. Jensen
California Institute of Technology, Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Topics & keywords
- MreB
- Magnetosome
- Organelle
- Cytoskeleton
- Cell biology
- Actin
- Biology
- Cytoplasm