Mature spores of the bacterium Bacillus subtilis are encased by two concentric shells: an inner shell (the 'cortex'), made of peptidoglycan; and an outer proteinaceous shell (the 'coat'), whose basement layer is anchored to the surface of the developing spore via a 26-amino-acid-long protein called SpoVM. During sporulation, initiation of cortex assembly depends on the successful initiation of coat assembly, but the mechanisms that co-ordinate the morphogenesis of both structures are largely unknown. Here, we describe a sporulation pathway involving SpoVM and a 37-amino-acid-long protein named 'CmpA' that is encoded by a previously un-annotated gene and is expressed under control of two sporulation-specific transcription factors (σ(E) and SpoIIID). CmpA localized to the surface of the developing spore and deletion of cmpA resulted in cells progressing through the sporulation programme more quickly. Overproduction of CmpA did not affect normal growth or cell division, but delayed entry into sporulation and abrogated cortex assembly. In those cells that had successfully initiated coat assembly, CmpA was removed by a post-translational mechanism, presumably in order to overcome the sporulation inhibition it imposed. We propose a model in which CmpA participates in a developmental checkpoint that ensures the proper orchestration of coat and cortex morphogenesis by repressing cortex assembly until coat assembly successfully initiates.
Published 2012. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.