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  1. Søgaard-Andersen, Lotte (Ed.)
    ABSTRACT Myxococcus xanthususes short-range C-signaling to coordinate multicellular mound formation with sporulation during fruiting body development. AcsgAmutant deficient in C-signaling can cheat on wild type (WT) in mixtures and form spores disproportionately, but our understanding of cheating behavior is incomplete. We subjected mixtures of WT andcsgAcells at different ratios to co-development and used confocal microscopy and image analysis to quantify the arrangement and morphology of cells. At a ratio of one WT to fourcsgAcells (1:4), mounds failed to form. At 1:2, only a few mounds and spores formed. At 1:1, mounds formed with a similar number and arrangement of WT andcsgArods early in development, but later the number ofcsgAspores near the bottom of these nascent fruiting bodies (NFBs) exceeded that of WT. This cheating after mound formation involvedcsgAforming spores at a greater rate, while WT disappeared at a greater rate, either lysing or exiting NFBs. At 2:1 and 4:1,csgArods were more abundant than expected throughout the biofilm both before and during mound formation, and cheating continued after mound formation. We conclude that C-signaling restricts cheating behavior by requiring sufficient WT cells in mixtures. Excess cheaters may interfere with positive feedback loops that depend on the cellular arrangement to enhance C-signaling during mound building. Since long-range signaling could not likewise communicate the cellular arrangement, we propose that C-signaling was favored evolutionarily and that other short-range signaling mechanisms provided selective advantages in bacterial biofilm and multicellular animal development. IMPORTANCEBacteria communicate using both long- and short-range signals. Signaling affects community composition, structure, and function. Adherent communities called biofilms impact medicine, agriculture, industry, and the environment. To facilitate the manipulation of biofilms for societal benefits, a better understanding of short-range signaling is necessary. We investigated the susceptibility of short-range C-signaling to cheating duringMyxococcus xanthusbiofilm development. A mutant deficient in C-signaling fails to form mounds containing spores (i.e., fruiting bodies) but cheats on C-signaling by wild type in starved cell mixtures and forms spores disproportionately. We found that cheating requires sufficient wild-type cells in the initial mix and can occur both before mound formation and later during the sporulation stage of development. By restricting cheating behavior, short-range C-signaling may have been favored evolutionarily rather than long-range diffusible signaling. Cheating restrictions imposed by short-range signaling may have likewise driven the evolution of multicellularity broadly. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available November 13, 2025
  2. Goley, Erin (Ed.)
    Bacterial microcompartments (BMCs) are widespread, protein-based organelles that regulate metabolism. The model for studying BMCs is the carboxysome, which facilitates carbon fixation in several autotrophic bacteria. Carboxysomes can be distinguished as type α or β, which are structurally and phyletically distinct. We recently characterized the maintenance of carboxysome distribution (Mcd) systems responsible for spatially regulating α- and β-carboxysomes, consisting of the proteins McdA and McdB. McdA is an ATPase that drives carboxysome positioning, and McdB is the adaptor protein that directly interacts with carboxysomes to provide cargo specificity. The molecular features of McdB proteins that specify their interactions with carboxysomes, and whether these are similar between α- and β-carboxysomes, remain unknown. Here, we identify C-terminal motifs containing an invariant tryptophan necessary for α- and β-McdBs to associate with α- and β-carboxysomes, respectively. Substituting this tryptophan with other aromatic residues reveals corresponding gradients in the efficiency of carboxysome colocalization and positioning by McdB in vivo. Intriguingly, these gradients also correlate with the ability of McdB to form condensates in vitro. The results reveal a shared mechanism underlying McdB adaptor protein binding to carboxysomes, and potentially other BMCs. Our findings also implicate condensate formation as playing a key role in this association. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available August 1, 2025
  3. Abstract High-resolution imaging of biomolecular condensates in living cells is essential for correlating their properties to those observed through in vitro assays. However, such experiments are limited in bacteria due to resolution limitations. Here we present an experimental framework that probes the formation, reversibility, and dynamics of condensate-forming proteins inEscherichia colias a means to determine the nature of biomolecular condensates in bacteria. We demonstrate that condensates form after passing a threshold concentration, maintain a soluble fraction, dissolve upon shifts in temperature and concentration, and exhibit dynamics consistent with internal rearrangement and exchange between condensed and soluble fractions. We also discover that an established marker for insoluble protein aggregates, IbpA, has different colocalization patterns with bacterial condensates and aggregates, demonstrating its potential applicability as a reporter to differentiate the two in vivo. Overall, this framework provides a generalizable, accessible, and rigorous set of experiments to probe the nature of biomolecular condensates on the sub-micron scale in bacterial cells. 
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  4. Across bacteria, protein-based organelles called bacterial microcompartments (BMCs) encapsulate key enzymes to regulate their activities. The model BMC is the carboxysome that encapsulates enzymes for CO2fixation to increase efficiency and is found in many autotrophic bacteria, such as cyanobacteria. Despite their importance in the global carbon cycle, little is known about how carboxysomes are spatially regulated. We recently identified the two-factor system required for the maintenance of carboxysome distribution (McdAB). McdA drives the equal spacing of carboxysomes via interactions with McdB, which associates with carboxysomes. McdA is a ParA/MinD ATPase, a protein family well studied in positioning diverse cellular structures in bacteria. However, the adaptor proteins like McdB that connect these ATPases to their cargos are extremely diverse. In fact, McdB represents a completely unstudied class of proteins. Despite the diversity, many adaptor proteins undergo phase separation, but functional roles remain unclear. Here, we define the domain architecture of McdB from the model cyanobacteriumSynechococcus elongatusPCC 7942, and dissect its mode of biomolecular condensate formation. We identify an N-terminal intrinsically disordered region (IDR) that modulates condensate solubility, a central coiled-coil dimerizing domain that drives condensate formation, and a C-terminal domain that trimerizes McdB dimers and provides increased valency for condensate formation. We then identify critical basic residues in the IDR, which we mutate to glutamines to solubilize condensates. Finally, we find that a condensate-defective mutant of McdB has altered association with carboxysomes and influences carboxysome enzyme content. The results have broad implications for understanding spatial organization of BMCs and the molecular grammar of protein condensates. 
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  5. Goley, Erin (Ed.)
    Carboxysomes, the most prevalent and well-studied anabolic bacterial microcompartment, play a central role in efficient carbon fixation by cyanobacteria and proteobacteria. In previous studies, we identified the two-component system called McdAB that spatially distributes carboxysomes across the bacterial nucleoid. Maintenance of carboxysome distribution protein A (McdA), a partition protein A (ParA)-like ATPase, forms a dynamic oscillating gradient on the nucleoid in response to the carboxysome-localized Maintenance of carboxysome distribution protein B (McdB). As McdB stimulates McdA ATPase activity, McdA is removed from the nucleoid in the vicinity of carboxysomes, propelling these proteinaceous cargos toward regions of highest McdA concentration via a Brownian-ratchet mechanism. How the ATPase cycle of McdA governs its in vivo dynamics and carboxysome positioning remains unresolved. Here, by strategically introducing amino acid substitutions in the ATP-binding region of McdA, we sequentially trap McdA at specific steps in its ATP cycle. We map out critical events in the ATPase cycle of McdA that allows the protein to bind ATP, dimerize, change its conformation into a DNA-binding state, interact with McdB-bound carboxysomes, hydrolyze ATP, and release from the nucleoid. We also find that McdA is a member of a previously unstudied subset of ParA family ATPases, harboring unique interactions with ATP and the nucleoid for trafficking their cognate intracellular cargos. 
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  6. Komeili, Arash (Ed.)
    ABSTRACT Cyanobacteria are the prokaryotic group of phytoplankton responsible for a significant fraction of global CO 2 fixation. Like plants, cyanobacteria use the enzyme ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxidase (Rubisco) to fix CO 2 into organic carbon molecules via the Calvin-Benson-Bassham cycle. Unlike plants, cyanobacteria evolved a carbon-concentrating organelle called the carboxysome—a proteinaceous compartment that encapsulates and concentrates Rubisco along with its CO 2 substrate. In the rod-shaped cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942, we recently identified the McdAB system responsible for uniformly distributing carboxysomes along the cell length. It remains unknown what role carboxysome positioning plays with respect to cellular physiology. Here, we show that a failure to distribute carboxysomes leads to slower cell growth, cell elongation, asymmetric cell division, and elevated levels of cellular Rubisco. Unexpectedly, we also report that even wild-type S. elongatus undergoes cell elongation and asymmetric cell division when grown at the cool, but environmentally relevant, growth temperature of 20°C or when switched from a high- to ambient-CO 2 environment. The findings suggest that carboxysome positioning by the McdAB system functions to maintain the carbon fixation efficiency of Rubisco by preventing carboxysome aggregation, which is particularly important under growth conditions where rod-shaped cyanobacteria adopt a filamentous morphology. IMPORTANCE Photosynthetic cyanobacteria are responsible for almost half of global CO 2 fixation. Due to eutrophication, rising temperatures, and increasing atmospheric CO 2 concentrations, cyanobacteria have gained notoriety for their ability to form massive blooms in both freshwater and marine ecosystems across the globe. Like plants, cyanobacteria use the most abundant enzyme on Earth, Rubisco, to provide the sole source of organic carbon required for its photosynthetic growth. Unlike plants, cyanobacteria have evolved a carbon-concentrating organelle called the carboxysome that encapsulates and concentrates Rubisco with its CO 2 substrate to significantly increase carbon fixation efficiency and cell growth. We recently identified the positioning system that distributes carboxysomes in cyanobacteria. However, the physiological consequence of carboxysome mispositioning in the absence of this distribution system remains unknown. Here, we find that carboxysome mispositioning triggers changes in cell growth and morphology as well as elevated levels of cellular Rubisco. 
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  7. StarvingMyxococcus xanthusbacteria use short-range C-signaling to coordinate their movements and construct multicellular mounds, which mature into fruiting bodies as rods differentiate into spherical spores. Differentiation requires efficient C-signaling to drive the expression of developmental genes, but how the arrangement of cells within nascent fruiting bodies (NFBs) affects C-signaling is not fully understood. Here, we used confocal microscopy and cell segmentation to visualize and quantify the arrangement, morphology, and gene expression of cells near the bottom of NFBs at much higher resolution than previously achieved. We discovered that “transitioning cells” (TCs), intermediate in morphology between rods and spores, comprised 10 to 15% of the total population. Spores appeared midway between the center and the edge of NFBs early in their development and near the center as maturation progressed. The developmental pattern, as well as C-signal–dependent gene expression in TCs and spores, were correlated with cell density, the alignment of neighboring rods, and the tangential orientation of rods early in the development of NFBs. These dynamic radial patterns support a model in which the arrangement of cells within the NFBs affects C-signaling efficiency to regulate precisely the expression of developmental genes and cellular differentiation in space and time. Developmental patterns in other bacterial biofilms may likewise rely on short-range signaling to communicate multiple aspects of cellular arrangement, analogous to juxtacrine and paracrine signaling during animal development. 
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