#PAGE_PARAMS# #ADS_HEAD_SCRIPTS# #MICRODATA#

A Dynamic Response Regulator Protein Modulates G-Protein–Dependent Polarity in the Bacterium


Migrating cells employ sophisticated signal transduction systems to respond to their environment and polarize towards attractant sources. Bacterial cells also regulate their polarity dynamically to reverse their direction of movement. In Myxococcus xanthus, a GTP-bound Ras-like G-protein, MglA, activates the motility machineries at the leading cell pole. Reversals are provoked by pole-to-pole switching of MglA, which is under the control of a chemosensory-like signal transduction cascade (Frz). It was previously known that the asymmetric localization of MglA at one cell pole is regulated by MglB, a GTPase Activating Protein (GAP). In this process, MglB specifically localizes at the opposite lagging cell pole and blocks MglA localization at that pole. However, how MglA is targeted to the leading pole and how Frz activity switches the localizations of MglA and MglB synchronously remained unknown. Here, we show that MglA requires RomR, a previously known response regulator protein, to localize to the leading cell pole efficiently. Specifically, RomR-MglA and RomR-MglB complexes are formed and act complementarily to establish the polarity axis, segregating MglA and MglB to opposite cell poles. Finally, we present evidence that Frz signaling may regulate MglA localization through RomR, suggesting that RomR constitutes a link between the Frz-signaling and MglAB polarity modules. Thus, in Myxococcus xanthus, a response regulator protein governs the localization of a small G-protein, adding further insight to the polarization mechanism and suggesting that motility regulation evolved by recruiting and combining existing signaling modules of diverse origins.


Published in the journal: A Dynamic Response Regulator Protein Modulates G-Protein–Dependent Polarity in the Bacterium. PLoS Genet 8(8): e32767. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1002872
Category: Research Article
doi: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1002872

Summary

Migrating cells employ sophisticated signal transduction systems to respond to their environment and polarize towards attractant sources. Bacterial cells also regulate their polarity dynamically to reverse their direction of movement. In Myxococcus xanthus, a GTP-bound Ras-like G-protein, MglA, activates the motility machineries at the leading cell pole. Reversals are provoked by pole-to-pole switching of MglA, which is under the control of a chemosensory-like signal transduction cascade (Frz). It was previously known that the asymmetric localization of MglA at one cell pole is regulated by MglB, a GTPase Activating Protein (GAP). In this process, MglB specifically localizes at the opposite lagging cell pole and blocks MglA localization at that pole. However, how MglA is targeted to the leading pole and how Frz activity switches the localizations of MglA and MglB synchronously remained unknown. Here, we show that MglA requires RomR, a previously known response regulator protein, to localize to the leading cell pole efficiently. Specifically, RomR-MglA and RomR-MglB complexes are formed and act complementarily to establish the polarity axis, segregating MglA and MglB to opposite cell poles. Finally, we present evidence that Frz signaling may regulate MglA localization through RomR, suggesting that RomR constitutes a link between the Frz-signaling and MglAB polarity modules. Thus, in Myxococcus xanthus, a response regulator protein governs the localization of a small G-protein, adding further insight to the polarization mechanism and suggesting that motility regulation evolved by recruiting and combining existing signaling modules of diverse origins.

Introduction

In living organisms, cell polarization underlies many developmental and cellular processes, such as budding in yeast, cell migration and bacterial differentiation [1][3]. In eukaryotic cells, polarization mechanisms ensure the asymmetric positioning of subcellular organelles and its transmission upon cell division [4]. Due to their small sizes bacterial cells have long been thought to be unorganized compartments, proven a misconception with the discovery that bacterial cells also contain subcellular structures and micro-compartments [5], [6]. In particular, the bacterial cell pole orchestrates many processes, for example chemotaxis, flagellum assembly and even chromosome segregation [5], [7][10]. Polar targeting often resides on scaffolding proteins or complexes targeted to the pole through several possible mechanisms: interaction with the forming division septum [7], [8], recognition of specific lipid polar microdomains [11], [12] and even direct geometric recognition of polar curvature [13], [14]. In some cases polar localization must be dynamically regulated to segregate cell division inhibitors [9], [10], degrade a cell cycle regulator [15], or invert the direction of cell movement [16], [17]. In this study, we identify a regulator directing dynamic pole-specific activation of motility complexes in the bacterium Myxococcus xanthus.

In Myxococcus xanthus, a rod-shaped delta-proteobacterium, two distinct macromolecular machines drive motility. The first system, a type-IV pilus (T4P) engine located at the leading cell pole binds to neighboring cells or the extracellular matrix to pull the cells forward by retraction (S-motility, [18]). The second system, the recently characterized Agl-Glt complex, is also assembled at the leading cell pole where it forms focal adhesion-like complexes which distribute along the cell body to propel the cell (A-motility, [19][21]). Myxococcus cells direct their motility by changing their direction of movement periodically in a process where the poles exchange roles, allowing the cells to resume movement in the opposite direction. These reversals require switching the directionality of the A- and S- molecular engines synchronously. Recent cytological experiments have suggested that pre-assembled T4P exist at both cell poles but are only active at one cell pole, due to asymmetric pilus-associated proteins like FrzS, Tgl, PilB and PilT [22][24]. The switching of pilus directionality would thus occur following pole-to-pole switching of these factors, which has been experimentally observed for FrzS and PilT [22], [24]. The mechanism allowing the directional switch of the A-motility system is less clear but seems to involve the synchronous pole-to-pole switching of essential Agl-Glt complex proteins, which has been shown for AglZ and AglQ [21], [25].

What drives the dynamic behavior of the A (AglZ, AglQ) and S motility proteins (FrzS, PilT) during reversals? Recent studies identified the MglA and MglB proteins as central regulators of the reversal cycle. MglA is the founding member of a group of bacterial G-proteins of the Ras superfamily [16], [17], [26]. As for all other Ras-like G-proteins, MglA is a nucleotide (GTP)-dependent molecular switch protein, cycling between active (GTP-bound) and inactive (GDP-bound) states [26]. During motility, MglA-GTP localizes essentially at the leading cell pole and activates both T4P and the Agl/Glt system. The exact activation mechanism is unknown but may involve direct interactions with FrzS and AglZ [27]. The MglA GTP-hydrolysis activity is intrinsically low and is assisted in vivo by MglB, a GTPase-Activating Protein [16], [17]. MglB is a spatial regulator of MglA and localizes at the opposite lagging cell pole to inhibit MglA binding at that pole [16], [17]. Therefore, MglA and MglB form a polarity axis that can be inverted by the synchronous pole-to-pole switching of MglA and MglB, thus provoking a reversal [16], [17], [28]. Switching of MglAB is a regulated process and involves the signaling activity of the Frz signal transduction pathway, a chemosensory-like apparatus [16], [17], [28]. However, how Frz regulates the MglAB switch at the molecular level remains unknown. In summary, Myxococcus reversals are provoked by switching the activity of the motility systems (A and S) to the opposite cell pole which is under the control of MglA and the Frz signal transduction pathway.

In this study, we investigated how MglA localizes to the cell poles. We found that the polar localization of MglA requires RomR. Previously, it was shown that RomR, an essential A-motility protein, localizes to the cell poles in a Frz-controlled bipolar asymmetric pattern where it accumulates mostly at the lagging cell pole [29]. Since RomR contains a response regulator domain, its phosphorylation by the Frz kinase (FrzE) may directly contribute to A-motility regulation [29]. Revisiting the role of RomR, we found that RomR functions both for A- and S-motility and acts upstream from MglA, recruiting it to the cell pole. The results further show that the polarity axis builds from the formation of RomR-MglA and RomR-MglB complexes, leading to robust asymmetric protein localization at the poles. Finally, the evidence suggests that RomR may constitute a link between the Frz and the MglAB polarity control systems.

Results

Analysis of the switch motility protein localization interdependence network

Figure 1A&B recapitulates the known localization pattern of the previously studied switch and motility proteins, MglA, MglB, FrzS, AglZ and RomR. Previous works suggested an ordered pathway where Frz activates MglAB pole-to-pole switching to switch the localization of downstream motility system specific regulators such as FrzS (S-motility), AglZ and RomR (A-motility) [16], [17], [27], [29]. To confirm these studies in a definitive manner and identify localization interdependencies between these proteins, we systematically analyzed the localization of functional YFP/mCherry (mCh) fusions to MglA, MglB, FrzS, AglZ and RomR ([16], Figure S1, S2, S3) in all single mutants (summarized in Figure 1C and S2, S3, S4, S5). Most of the results were consistent with previous reports and confirmed that MglA and MglB are required to establish a polarity axis for motility: in the mglA mutant, AglZ-YFP became diffuse and failed to accumulate both at the pole and at periodic sites; FrzS-GFP, RomR-mCh and MglB-YFP localized only to one cell pole (Figure 1C [16], [17], [27], [29]). In the mglB mutant, all four proteins MglA-YFP, FrzS-YFP, AglZ-YFP and RomR-mCh showed bipolar symmetrical patterns (Figure 1C, Figure S2 and [16], [17]). The absence of FrzS or AglZ did not affect the localization of any of the other four proteins and thus must be branched downstream from MglA and MglB to regulate S- and A-motility, respectively (Figure 1C, S3, S4 and [27]).

Fig. 1. Analysis of motility protein localization interdependence network.
Analysis of motility protein localization interdependence network.
(A) Schematic of the regulation cascade compiled from previous works. The essential signaling Frz components and established phosphate flow are shown. Plain arrows indicate established interactions and dotted arrows indicate suspected interactions. The protein color code applies throughout the manuscript. (B) Motility protein dynamics during the reversal cycle. The cartoon (left) is compiled from time-lapse studies of functional YFP fusions to MglA, MglB, FrzS, AglZ and RomR-mCherry during movement (right). The asymmetry of MglA, MglB, RomR, AglZ and FrzS at the poles is illustrated by circles of different sizes. The localization of MglA and AglZ along internal fixed A-motility clusters is also shown. The arrows represent the direction of movement. (C) Summary of motility protein localization patterns in WT and single deletion mutants. Black arrows denote a correlation between dynamic protein localization and cell reversals. Bipolar symbol of different sizes reflect asymmetric polar localization patterns as opposed to symmetric polar localization. The presence of internal fixed clusters is symbolized by distributed dots for simplicity.

In a romR mutant, MglA-YFP and AglZ-YFP showed severe localization defects: AglZ-YFP was completely diffuse (Figure 1C and S5) and MglA-YFP localized in a largely diffuse pattern with only occasional minor polar foci forming in some cells (Figure 1C and 2A). The localizations of FrzS-YFP and MglB-YFP were less affected: both proteins localized to one cell pole but showed no dynamic pole-to-pole oscillations (Figure 1C, S5 and data not shown).

Fig. 2. Localization of MglA and MglB in romR mutants.
Localization of MglA and MglB in <i>romR</i> mutants.
(A) Localization of MglA-YFP in WT, romR mutant and romR mglB mutant. (B) Localization of MglB-YFP in WT, romR mutant and romR mglA mutant. Insets: Corresponding phase contrast images. Histograms represent the occurrence of fluorescent clusters as a function of cell position divided in 15 equal segments (x-axis) for n = 100 cells of each strain (see methods for more details). Scale bar = 2 µm.

RomR is required for MglA polar localization

In the romR mutant, the mis-localization of MglA cannot result from protein expression and/or stability defects because MglA accumulates to WT steady-state levels in the mutant as determined by Western blot analysis (Figure S6). Therefore, we further investigated the mechanism of RomR-dependent MglA polar localization. In absence of RomR, MglA mis-localization could either result from a direct defect in polar targeting or, more indirectly because MglB dynamics are affected, perturbing the spatial regulation of the MglB GAP activity. To discriminate between these possibilities, we tested whether deletion of mglB restores MglA-YFP localization. In WT cells, MglA-YFP mostly accumulates at the leading cell pole and gradually accumulates at the opposite cell pole between reversals [16], [17]. As a result, a fluorescence snapshot of MglA-YFP expressing cells shows a mix of cells with unipolar (60%) or with bipolar MglA-YFP clusters (40%, Figure 2A). Comparison of MglA-YFP in a romR and in a romR mglB mutant revealed that MglA-YFP localization is perturbed to comparable levels in the mutants: in both mutants, MglA-YFP was mostly diffuse and only accumulated as a minor unipolar cluster in less than 20% of the cells (Figure 2A). Thus, in a romR mutant, MglA-YFP mis-localization is largely independent from MglB and may result directly from the absence of RomR.

In the romR mutant, mis-localized MglA could interfere with MglB dynamics. To test this, we asked whether MglB-YFP dynamics are restored in a romR mglA double mutant. Consistent with its pole-to-pole dynamics MglB-YFP showed a mix of unipolar (75%) or bipolar patterns (25%) in WT cells (Figure 2B). In both romR and romR mglA mutants, MglB-YFP was strictly unipolar showing that MglB-YFP dynamics are not significantly restored in the romR mglA mutant. Therefore, the absence of MglB-YFP pole-to-pole dynamics in the romR mutant is not simply caused by MglA-mediated interferences but likely results from the global loss of function of MglA. Consistent with this, any mutant that lacks MglA (mglA mutant) or cannot localize it (romR mutant) is affected in MglB and other motility protein switching, for example FrzS (Figure 1C and S5).

MglB is required for preferential accumulation of RomR at the lagging cell pole

In WT cells, RomR localizes in a bipolar asymmetrical pattern and accumulates in larger amounts at the lagging cell pole (Figure 3A). How is this asymmetry generated and how does it relate to RomR function? RomR-mCh localized symmetrically to both cell poles in a double mglAB mutant, showing that RomR does not require MglA and MglB to bind to the cell poles (Figure 3A). Since RomR also localizes in a bipolar symmetrical pattern in the mglB mutant (Figure 1C) but only at one cell pole in the mglA mutant (Figure 1C and 3B), these results suggest that a RomR-MglB interaction captures RomR to the lagging cell pole. Consistent with this, dual-labeling experiments showed that RomR-mCh and MglB-YFP fusions localized to the same pole in the mglA mutant (Figure 3B). Of note, FrzS-GFP, which normally accumulates mostly at the leading cell pole [22], also co-localized with MglB-mCh (a functional MglB-mCherry fusion, [16]) and RomR-mCh in absence of MglA (Figure 3B, data not shown, see discussion). In total, these results suggest that RomR binds indiscriminately to the cell poles and that its asymmetric localization in WT cells stems from interactions with MglA at the leading cell pole and MglB at the lagging cell pole.

Fig. 3. Polar localization of RomR is independent from MglAB but is regulated by MglB.
Polar localization of RomR is independent from MglAB but is regulated by MglB.
(A) RomR localizes in a bipolar symmetrical pattern in absence of MglA and MglB. Inset: RomR localizes in a bipolar asymmetrical pattern in a WT cell. Cartoons: quantifications of the distinct localization patterns in either WT (black) or mglB mglA double mutant cells. Scale bar = 2 µm. (B) RomR, MglB and FrzS localizes to the same pole in absence of MglA. Protein localization in two-color mglA mutant strains expressing MglB-mCh/FrzS-GFP and RomR-mCh/MglB-YFP. Scale bar = 2 µm.

RomR forms individual complexes with MglA and MglB

We next tested whether the localization interdependencies between RomR, MglA and MglB stem from direct protein interactions at the cell poles. To test potential RomR-MglA and RomR-MglB interactions, we complemented the romR mutant strain with a construct allowing expression of RomR fused to a hexahistidine motif (His6) at its C-terminus, under the control of the romR promoter from a chromosome integration at the Mx8 phage attachment site [16]. Expression of RomR-His6 complemented the romR deletion showing that the tagged protein is fully functional (Figure S1). Interaction between RomR, MglA and MglB was then tested by affinity chromatography of Myxococcus soluble extracts on nickel columns (see Methods). Under these conditions, RomR readily co-purified with MglA and MglB, suggesting that MglA and MglB both interact with RomR (Figure 4). To further test whether RomR can form a complex with MglA and MglB independently, we conducted affinity chromatography of soluble extracts containing RomR-His6 expressed in mglA or mglB genetic backgrounds. Again, RomR-His6 co-purified with MglB and MglA in each case (Figure 4), suggesting that RomR forms independent complexes with MglA and MglB at cellular poles.

Fig. 4. RomR interacts with both MglB and MglA independently.
RomR interacts with both MglB and MglA independently.
A functional RomRHis6 was expressed from its endogenous promoter in the romR mutant respectively in otherwise WT, mglA and mglB mutant backgrounds and used in co-purification assays as described in the methods section. Co-purification specificity controls (RomR) are shown for each experiment and show that MglA and MglB are co-eluted only when RomRHis6 is expressed (see methods).

RomR acts downstream from MglB and upstream from MglA to control motility

We next tested how a romR mutation affects A- and S-motility. We first analyzed the behavior of single A-motile cells on hard agar, a condition where S-motility is inefficient [30]. In this assay, romR mutant cells showed a severe motility defect and only exhibited limited back and forth movements (Figure 5A and Movie S1). This movement could be attributed to the A-motility system alone because it was still detectable in a romR pilA (S-) mutant but fully absent from a romR aglQ A-motility motor double mutant (Figure 5A and data not shown). The strong romR mutant A-motility defect is consistent with conclusions from Leonardy et al. [29] and the observed mis-localization of both MglA-YFP and AglZ-YFP in this mutant. To test the epistatic relationships between romR and mglB, we compared the motility defects of the romR mutant with the mglB and the romR mglB mutants. As previously reported, mglB mutant cells moved with a similar efficiency as WT cells but hyper-reversed (Figure 5A and Movie S2). In contrast, romR mglB mutant cells showed severely crippled motility, a motility phenotype that was comparable to the romR mutant phenotype (Figure 5A & Movie S1 & S3). Therefore, we conclude that RomR acts downstream from MglB to control A-motility. To determine whether romR acts upstream from mglA, we also compared the motility phenotypes of mglA, mglA mglB, romR mglA and romR mglB mglA mutants. All strains were completely non-motile and indistinguishable from the mglA mutant strain (and aglQ mutant strain), showing that MglA acts downstream from RomR and MglB (Figure 5A and Movie S4).

Fig. 5. RomR acts downstream from MglB and upstream from MglA to control motility.
RomR acts downstream from MglB and upstream from MglA to control motility.
(A) Single cell motility (A-motility) of the different strains on hard (1.5% w/w) agar. Shown are box plots of the measured cumulated distance traveled by isolated cells in 10 min for each strain. Gray circles represent each individual cell. The black bold vertical bar represents the average values for each strain and n indicates the number of cells that were tracked. Single mglA, mglAB, romR mglA, and romR mglAB mutant cells were completely non motile in this assay and were therefore collapsed in a single representative data set (mglA mutants). (B) RomR controls S-motility upstream from MglA. Soft (0.5% w/w) agar S-motility patterns of WT, aglQ, romR, romR aglQ and pilA mutant colonies. A representative micrograph is shown for mutant categories displaying identical swarming patterns: romR, mglB, romR mglB mutants and pilA, mglA, mglAB, romR mglA, romR mglAB mutants. Scale bar = 1 mm.

Since MglA is also important for S-motility, a romR mutation would also be expected to impact S-motility. This is further suggested by the fact that FrzS, an essential S-motility protein, fails to localize to both cell poles in the romR mutant (Figure 3B and S5). S-motility involves the movement of large cell groups and can be tested on soft agar (0.5% w/w), a substrate where A-motility is not effective [30]. In this assay and in WT cells, S-motility produces characteristic radial flares that emerge from a colony (Figure 5B). This pattern is unaltered in an aglQ mutant, confirming that A-motility is not active on soft agar (Figure 5B). On the contrary, a romR mutant displayed a severely defective swarm pattern (Figure 5B). This pattern results from a bona fide S-motility defect because a romR aglQ (A) double mutant was defective to a similar extent (Figure 5B). In this highly qualitative assay, the comparison of the romR mutant with mglB and romR mglB mutants was not informative because all mutants displayed similar defective phenotypes (Figure 5B). However, clear epistatic relationships could be determined with mglA mutants: mglA, mglAB, romR mglA and romR mglA mglB mutants were all completely S, showing that MglA acts downstream from RomR and MglB to control S-motility (Figure 5B). In total, the data strongly suggest that RomR acts downstream from MglB and upstream from MglA to both control A- and S-motility. The motility results are consistent with the localization results and a scenario where RomR acts as a polar targeting factor of MglA, the most downstream motility regulator. Finally, the correlation between motility phenotypes and localization defects suggests that polar localization of MglA is essential for its function.

RomR regulates MglA localization downstream from Frz

The discovery that Myxococcus cell polarity arises from dynamic interactions between RomR, MglA and MglB raises the possibility that RomR acts immediately downstream from the FrzE histidine kinase to trigger the polarity switch. Several lines of evidence suggest that RomR is a possible Frz-output regulator. First, RomR is a modular protein containing both an N-terminal response regulator domain (RR) and a proline-rich C-terminal domain [29] and is thus a candidate substrate for FrzE. Consistent with this, RomR pole-to-pole switching is regulated by FrzE, which specifically requires the RomR receiver domain [29]. Additionally, expression of a RomRD53E variant in which the conserved phosphorylatable Asp53 residue has been substituted by a Glutamate (a mutation expected to mimic a constitutively active state) bypassed the requirement for FrzE to trigger reversals [29]. Finally, there is evidence that Frz signaling is still transmitted to MglA in the absence of MglB, suggesting that Frz-signalling can be conveyed directly to MglA (Figure 6A, see [16] for details). Therefore, it is conceivable that RomR is part of this branch linking FrzE to MglA.

Fig. 6. RomR regulates MglA localization in Frz-dependent and MglB-independent manners.
RomR regulates MglA localization in Frz-dependent and MglB-independent manners.
(A) Frz-signaling trajectories to MglA and their predicted effect on MglA pole-to-pole dynamics. It is proposed that Frz regulates MglA through branched pathways involving MglB (major branch, thick arrows) and an additional regulator, possibly RomR (minor branch, thin arrows). In absence of MglB, FrzE signaling to RomR would be insufficient to support MglA dynamics. However, if Frz-signaling is enhanced (frzon mutation, red thick arrows), sustained activation of the minor branch could restore MglA dynamics. (B) RomR-mCh dynamic localization in mglB mutant cells. Fluorescence micrographs and quantification of the corresponding fluorescence intensities (arbitrary units, au) of RomR-mCh at both poles over time are shown. Red line: initial lagging pole, blue line: initial leading pole. Reversals are indicated by thick black lines and orange rectangles on the micrograph and its corresponding graph. (C) RomR-mCh dynamic localization during reversals in mglB frzon cells. Legend reads as in (B). (D) MglA-YFP dynamic localization in mglB frzon cells. Legend reads as in (B). Scale bars = 2 µm. (E) Cross correlation between RomR-mCh and MglA-YFP pole-to-pole switching events and physical reversals in distinct genetic backgrounds. Red line = RomR-mCh in mglB background; Blue line = RomR-mCh in mglB frzon background; Green line = MglA-YFP in mglB frzon background.

To test this possibility, we reasoned that a class of gain-of-function mutations in the frzCD receptor gene, the frzon mutations (frzCDc, [16]), may restore RomR and MglA pole-to-pole dynamics in absence of MglB. frzon mutations are thought to activate the Frz pathway constitutively [31], [32] and may thus hyper activate signals from FrzE to MglA via RomR (Figure 6A). In an mglB mutant, both MglA-YFP and RomR-mCh accumulated symmetrically at the cell poles and did not switch when cells reverse (Figure 6B, S2 and [16], [17]). Strikingly, RomR pole-to-pole switching was restored inversely in frzon mglB mutant cells: RomR switched from leading cell pole-to leading cell pole, as opposed to WT cells where it switches from lagging cell pole to lagging cell pole (Figure 6C and [29]). As would be expected if RomR were the major MglA localization factor, MglA-YFP pole-to-pole switching was restored coincidently in frzon mglB cells (Figure 6D). A cross correlation analysis done for 30 cells of each strain showed that significant Rxy scores (>0.4) near a 0–1 min time delay value were only obtained for RomR-mCh and MglA-YFP in frzon mglB backgrounds, confirming that RomR-mCh and MglA-YFP polar fluorescence dynamics are correlated with physical reversals in mglB frzon mutant cells but not in mglB mutant cells (Figure 6E, see methods). To test whether RomR acts upstream from MglA in this regulation, we constructed an mglB romR frzon strain. mglB romR frzon mutant cells showed a romR-like motility defect (Figure 5A). Therefore, a romR mutation is epistatic over a frzon mutation, establishing that RomR acts downstream from Frz in the control of MglA dynamics. Finally, the results suggest that Frz signals do not require MglB to be conveyed to MglA.

Discussion

MglA defines the leading cell pole

What is the role of MglA polar localization? In all tested romR mutants, the severe mis-localization of MglA correlates with a profound motility defect, suggesting that polar MglA is essential to activate the A- and S-motility systems. It is possible that MglA regulates A- and S-motility in different ways. The S-motility proteins, FrzS and PilT, still localize to the pole in an mglA mutant (this work and [16], [17], [27], [29]). Importantly, FrzS and MglB/RomR, which are normally addressed to different poles, co-localize in mglA mutant cells. Therefore, MglA is not per se an S-motility protein polar localization factor but rather functions as an S-motility polar switching system. On the contrary, MglA is absolutely required for AglZ localization (this work and [27]). Therefore, the RomR-MglA-AglZ branch could determine localization of the A-motility machinery, while MglB and FrzS could be part of an A- (MglB) and S-motility (MglB and FrzS) polar switching pathway. In Myxococcus, MglA is thus required to differentiate a leading cell pole, similar to other Ras-family proteins defining the leading edge in chemotaxing eukaryotic cells [33]. How MglA does this exactly remains to be determined.

Unidentified polar cue(s) must exist to localize RomR, MglB and FrzS, which could be anchored by a common polar determinant or dedicated polar anchors. Motility machinery components themselves are likely not involved in this targeting because mutations in structural T4P or Agl/Glt proteins do not affect the reciprocal motility system [20], [34], [35] and any mutation that perturbs RomR or MglB localization would be expected to affect both systems. The polar cue(s) may be a general cell organizing structure, for example the cytokinetic machinery, lipid microdomains or membrane curvature itself [7], [8], [12], [14], [36].

A three-protein interaction network creates a polarity axis

In a parallel study, Keilberg et al. obtained similar results and additionally suggested that RomR co-evolved with a subfamily of MglA-MglB systems [37]. More specifically, the results from both studies suggest strongly that Myxococcus dynamic polarity results from the action of three proteins, MglA, MglB and RomR. In this work, several lines of evidence suggest that a major function of RomR is to recruit MglA to the poles: (i) MglA localization depends on RomR but not vice versa. Additionally, MglA localization is not restored in a romR mglB double mutant, showing that RomR does not regulate MglA upstream from MglB. (ii), In mglB mutant cells, RomR and MglA localizations coincide in a bipolar symmetrical pattern. (iii), RomR and MglA switch poles coincidently in a frzon mglB mutant. (iv), RomR is important for both A- and S-motility, which must be expected for any factor that regulates MglA. (v), RomR forms a complex with MglA in a co-purification assay. Last, Keilberg et al. [37] did not observe the restoration of MglA polar localization when YFP-MglAQ82A, an MglA GTP-locked variant [26], was expressed in the romR mutant, strongly suggesting that RomR is a direct MglA polar determinant. However, we cannot fully exclude that RomR also regulates the nucleotide-binding state of MglA (see below).

The MglA polar recruitment function of RomR was not initially obvious from its subcellular localization because RomR accumulates preferentially at the lagging pole where MglB is mostly present (Figure 1B & S1). In this study we show that MglB is directly responsible for this asymmetry and forms a complex with RomR at the back of the cells. The purpose of this regulation remains to be elucidated. We speculate that the MglB-RomR complex may further modulate accumulation of MglA–GTP at the leading pole as RomR becomes titrated by MglB. Therefore, MglB may exert two independent controls over MglA localization: directly with its GAP activity and indirectly, by trapping its localization factor RomR at the opposite cell pole. In the future, it could be interesting to determine if MglA and MglB compete for RomR binding to test this hypothesis. In summary, we propose that proper segregation of MglA and MglB at opposite cell poles requires a three-protein interaction network: first, RomR-MglA complexes direct MglA indiscriminately to the cell poles (Figure 7A). Second, MglB-MglA interactions repel MglA to the opposite cell pole and third, MglB-RomR interactions further modulate MglA levels at the leading cell pole. These concerted interactions thus create a robust polarity axis (Figure 7A).

Fig. 7. Polarity axis control by RomR, MglA, and MglB.
Polarity axis control by RomR, MglA, and MglB.
(A) The interplay between RomR, MglA and MglB establish cell polarity. RomR is proposed to recognize the cell poles and direct efficient MglA localization to the poles. MglB polarizes the axis, which potentially results from two effects: the intrinsic MglB GAP activity and RomR attraction to the lagging cell pole. (B) Proposed regulatory cascade. Interactions established by this and previous works are represented by solid lines sum. Dotted arrows indicate possible connections between the upstream switch control system (Frz) and the polarity-control system (RomR-MglA-MglB), including RomR phosphorylation by FrzE and FrzZ-RomR, FrzZ-MglA and FrzZ-MglB interactions. MglB is proposed to act both positively to trigger MglA localization at the leading by its GAP activity (solid arrow) and negatively, by trapping RomR at the lagging cell pole (inhibitory symbol).

How does Frz trigger the polarity switch?

What is the genetic pathway leading to programmed cellular reversals? We propose a new genetic pathway that compiles this and previous studies (Figure 7B). In total, three main functional gene categories can be defined based on phenotypes: frz genes control the reversal frequency and thus trigger the polarity switch; romR, mglA and mglB form a cellular compass and thus affect both motility systems; aglZ and frzS are respectively specific to the A- and S-motility branch and thus connect the upstream genes to the motility apparatus. While MglA has been physically linked to AglZ and FrzS, how it is connected to the upstream Frz proteins remains unknown. The RomR protein itself is a strong candidate to connect FrzE kinase activity and MglA directly because RomR contains a response regulator (RR) domain and the intracellular dynamics of RomR are regulated by Frz-signaling (Figure 6 and [29]). Also, mutations in the conserved phosphorylatable Aspartate of the RomR receiver domain (D53N and D53E) are epistatic to a frzE mutation in the reversal pathway [29].

How is polarity switched dynamically by Frz-signaling? While the genetic data suggests that RomR is a likely FrzE output protein, biochemical evidence showing that RomR accepts phosphates directly from FrzE is still lacking. Other questions must also be resolved to model the switch mechanism. The interactions between the various players may be regulated at different levels and the proteins exist in several states, which may affect the protein localization interdependencies. For example, RomR phosphorylation may change its affinity for MglA and/or B, or even differentially to A and B. The formation of the RomR-MglA complex could also be dictated by the nucleotide state of MglA. Conversely, RomR may also regulate the nucleotide state of MglA, directly or indirectly by regulating MglB. As mentioned above, MglA and MglB could compete for RomR binding. Last, the Frz system may use several ouput proteins (Figure 7B). For example, the Frz pathway itself encodes two other receiver domain containing proteins, which are likely part of the regulatory pathway: the cognate FrzE receiver domain and the FrzZ protein [38], [39]. While the FrzE receiver domain may not be a direct Frz output domain and mostly regulate the phosphate flow in the system [38], [39], the phosphorylation of FrzZ is indispensable for the reversal switch [38], [39]. Therefore, the exact function of FrzZ and its exact connection with the RomR-MglAB system will also have to be clarified. In the future, a thorough biochemical analysis of Frz and RomR-MglAB interactions is required to elucidate the switch mechanism (Figure 7B).

Conclusions

In bacteria, response-regulators are broadly used to target proteins to cellular poles. In Caulobacter crescentus, the cell-specific clearance of the master regulator CtrA licenses cell cycle progression [40]. In this regulation, CtrA is cleared specifically at the incipient stalked pole, by the combined action of two polar response regulator proteins [15], [41]. Response regulator proteins also regulate enzymes spatially. In another Caulobacter example, PleD an RR-containing protein localizes to the swarmer cell pole and orchestrates cell pole morphogenesis by activating local synthesis of the second messenger cyclic-di-GMP [42], [43]. Thus, RR domains implement subcellular organization by recruiting output proteins or domains to specific subcellular sites [44]. This versatility is further exemplified in Myxococcus where an RR protein (RomR) recruits a Ras-like G-protein (MglA) to the cell pole. This modular architecture is unique because it connects proto-typical prokaryotic and eukaryotic systems: a bacterial chemosensory-like pathway and a Ras-GAP system. In eukaryotes, Ras-GAP pairs generally act downstream from seven transmembrane receptors, the so-called G-Protein-coupled Receptors (GPCR), which sense ligands (ie cAMP) to activate Ras family proteins spatially [33]. In Myxococcus, where GPCRs are absent, the Frz pathway may therefore constitute a substitute activating module. This further illustrates how novel functions can arise from the conjunction of existing functional modules across the living kingdoms.

Materials and Methods

Bacterial strains, plasmids, growth conditions, and genetic constructs

See Table S1 for plasmids and Table S2 for strains and their mode of construction. Primer sequences and plasmid construction schemes are provided in Tables S3 and S4. M. xanthus strains were grown at 32°C in CYE rich media as previously described [45]. Plasmids were introduced in M. xanthus by electroporation. Mutants and transformants were obtained by homologous recombination based on a previously reported method [45]. Complementation, expression of the fusion and mutant proteins were either obtained by ectopic integration of the genes of interest at the Mx8-phage attachment site [16] under the control of their own promoter in appropriate deletion backgrounds or by expression from the endogenous locus (Table S2). Localization studies were performed using previously described FrzS-YFP, AglZ-YFP, MglB-mCherry/YFP functional fusions [16]. In the case of MglA-YFP, localization studies were performed in a merodiploid background where both MglA-YFP and MglA are expressed, a context where expression of MglA-YFP is not associated with detectable motility defects [16]. A functional RomR-mCh fusion protein was constructed for this study and expressed from the endogenous romR locus (Table S1, S2, S3, S4 and Figure S1).

For phenotypic assays, cells were spotted on CYE plates containing an agar concentration of 1.5% or 0.5% at a concentration of 4×109 cfu ml−1, incubated at 32°C and photographed after 48 h with an Olympus SZ61 binocular or a Nikon Eclipse (model TE2000E) microscope.

Western blotting

Western blotting was performed as previously described [16] with 1/10,000 dilutions of penta-His (QIAGEN), MglA or MglB antisera.

Fluorescence imaging and fluorescence intensity measurements

Time-lapse experiments were performed as previously described [46]. Microscopic analysis was performed using an automated and inverted epifluorescence microscope TE2000-E-PFS (Nikon, France). The microscope is equipped with “The Perfect Focus System” (PFS) that automatically maintains focus so that the point of interest within a specimen is always kept in sharp focus at all times, in spite of any mechanical or thermal perturbations. Images were recorded with a CoolSNAP HQ 2 (Roper Scientific, Roper Scientific SARL, France) and a 40×/0.75 DLL “Plan-Apochro- mat” or a 100×/1.4 DLL objective. All fluorescence images were acquired with a minimal exposure time to minimize bleaching and phototoxicity effects.

Averaged fluorescent intensity profiles were computed as follows. A two-dimensional graph of the pixel intensities along the cell axis was first computed for each cell. The cell boundaries were then defined using a threshold value and the resulting restricted profile was spliced in 15 segments of equal length. The cluster probability distribution histograms were obtained as follows: the occurrence of a fluorescence cluster within a segment was detected by defining a minimal cluster intensity threshold value and the same threshold value was used for all conditions.

Cell tracking and time-lapse fluorescence microscopy

Cell tracking was performed automatically using a previously described macro [46] under the METAMORPH software (Molecular devices); when appropriate, manual measurements were also performed to correct tracking errors with tools built into the software. Images were processed under both ImageJ 1.40 g (National Institute of Health, USA) and METAMORPH.

A measured single cell traveled distance represents the net distance travelled by a given cell, irrespective of its direction of movement. Therefore, reversals or any sort of back and forth movements are not accounted for in these measurements. The values were computed as the sum of the traveled distance by a given cell centroid in pixels during a 10 min reference time frame.

Statistical analysis of cell reversals was performed as previously described for 30 reversing cells of each tested strain [16]. The time-lapse movies are composed of 30 s time frames to avoid phototoxicity and photobleaching. Since a reversal takes on average 30 s between the initial pause and movement resumption, it is difficult to capture the exact time of the pause and fluorescence switching in our movies, creating noise in the analysis. Nevertheless, a reversal time was scored as soon as movement was detected in the opposite direction. MglA-YFP and RomR-mCh switching were scored when the maximum fluorescence was reached at the new leading pole. The cross-correlation coefficient (Rxy) between scored reversals and fluorescence pole-to-pole switchings for a time of delay (m) was calculated with the following equation:

Co-purification assays

Co-purification experiments were conducted by expressing a functional RomRHis6 from its endogenous promoter at the Mx8 site in the romR mutant (which fully complemented the mutant, Figure S1), respectively in WT, mglA and mglB mutant backgrounds. As a control, co-purification specificity experiments were conducted in parallel using WT, mglA and mglB single mutants expressing un-tagged RomR to show that MglA and MglB were only recovered when RomRHis6 is expressed. Co-purifications were conducted, after re-inoculating cells into 1L flasks to OD600 0.4–0.8. The cells were collected by spinning at 5000 rpm for 20 min. The supernatant was discarded and the pellet was washed twice in wash buffer (NaH2PO4 50 mM, NaCl 100 mM, MgCl2 5 mM, pH 8.0) before being resuspended in 20 ml lysis buffer (NaH2PO4 50 mM, NaCl 100 mM, MgCl2 5 mM, 3 µl β-ME (Bio-Rad), 200 µl Protease Inhibitor Cocktail (PIC, Clontech), 10 µM GDP, 3 µl benzonase (Sigma), 20 mM Imidazole pH 8.0). The cells were then disrupted with a French press and spun down at 18,000 rpm, 4°C for 1 hour. The supernatants were then transferred into 50 ml Falcon tubes on ice and mixed with pre-equilibrated Nickel beads (Biorad). Beads and lysates were subsequently incubated at 4°C for 2 hours on a rotating wheel at 25 rpm. The bead-bound RomR complexes were then collected by low speed centrifugation (1 min at 2500 rpm) and washed three times in 50 ml lysis buffer. Elution was conducted by adding 100 µl of protein loading buffer (Leammli) directly to the beads and boiling at 100°C, for 10 min. Western blots were then conducted over 20 µL of the total elution volume under standard conditions to detect RomRHis6, MglA and MglB.

Supporting Information

Attachment 1

Attachment 2

Attachment 3

Attachment 4

Attachment 5

Attachment 6

Attachment 7

Attachment 8

Attachment 9

Attachment 10

Attachment 11

Attachment 12

Attachment 13

Attachment 14


Zdroje

1. TongZ, GaoX-D, HowellAS, BoseI, LewDJ, et al. (2007) Adjacent positioning of cellular structures enabled by a Cdc42 GTPase-activating protein-mediated zone of inhibition. J Cell Biol 179: 1375–1384 doi:10.1083/jcb.200705160.

2. ZhangS, CharestPG, FirtelRA (2008) Spatiotemporal regulation of Ras activity provides directional sensing. Curr Biol 18: 1587–1593 doi:10.1016/j.cub.2008.08.069.

3. ShapiroL, McAdamsHH, LosickR (2002) Generating and exploiting polarity in bacteria. Science 298: 1942–1946.

4. BornensM (2008) Organelle positioning and cell polarity. Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol 9: 874–886 doi:10.1038/nrm2524.

5. MaddockJR, ShapiroL (1993) Polar location of the chemoreceptor complex in the Escherichia coli cell. Science 259: 1717–1723.

6. KomeiliA, LiZ, NewmanDK, JensenGJ (2006) Magnetosomes are cell membrane invaginations organized by the actin-like protein MamK. Science 311: 242–245.

7. LamH, SchofieldWB, Jacobs-WagnerC (2006) A landmark protein essential for establishing and perpetuating the polarity of a bacterial cell. Cell 124: 1011–1023.

8. HuitemaE, PritchardS, MattesonD, RadhakrishnanSK, ViollierPH (2006) Bacterial birth scar proteins mark future flagellum assembly site. Cell 124: 1025–1037.

9. BowmanGR, ComolliLR, ZhuJ, EckartM, KoenigM, et al. (2008) A polymeric protein anchors the chromosomal origin/ParB complex at a bacterial cell pole. Cell 134: 945–955 doi:10.1016/j.cell.2008.07.015.

10. EbersbachG, BriegelA, JensenGJ, Jacobs-WagnerC (2008) A self-associating protein critical for chromosome attachment, division, and polar organization in caulobacter. Cell 134: 956–968 doi:10.1016/j.cell.2008.07.016.

11. RomantsovT, StalkerL, CulhamDE, WoodJM (2008) Cardiolipin controls the osmotic stress response and the subcellular location of transporter ProP in Escherichia coli. J Biol Chem 283: 12314–12323 doi:10.1074/jbc.M709871200.

12. LópezD, KolterR (2010) Functional microdomains in bacterial membranes. Genes Dev 24: 1893–1902 doi:10.1101/gad.1945010.

13. LenarcicR, HalbedelS, VisserL, ShawM, WuLJ, et al. (2009) Localisation of DivIVA by targeting to negatively curved membranes. EMBO J 28: 2272–2282 doi:10.1038/emboj.2009.129.

14. RamamurthiKS, LecuyerS, StoneHA, LosickR (2009) Geometric cue for protein localization in a bacterium. Science 323: 1354–1357 doi:10.1126/science.1169218.

15. IniestaAA, McGrathPT, ReisenauerA, McAdamsHH, ShapiroL (2006) A phospho-signaling pathway controls the localization and activity of a protease complex critical for bacterial cell cycle progression. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 103: 10935–10940 doi:10.1073/pnas.0604554103.

16. ZhangY, FrancoM, DucretA, MignotT (2010) A bacterial Ras-like small GTP-binding protein and its cognate GAP establish a dynamic spatial polarity axis to control directed motility. PLoS Biol 8: e1000430 doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1000430.

17. LeonardyS, MiertzschkeM, BulyhaI, SperlingE, WittinghoferA, et al. (2010) Regulation of dynamic polarity switching in bacteria by a Ras-like G-protein and its cognate GAP. Embo J 29: 2276–2289.

18. LiY, SunH, MaX, LuA, LuxR, et al. (2003) Extracellular polysaccharides mediate pilus retraction during social motility of Myxococcus xanthus. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 100: 5443–5448.

19. NanB, ChenJ, NeuJC, BerryRM, OsterG, et al. (2011) Myxobacteria gliding motility requires cytoskeleton rotation powered by proton motive force. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 108: 2498–2503 doi:10.1073/pnas.1018556108.

20. LucianoJ, AgrebiR, Le GallAV, WartelM, FiegnaF, et al. (2011) Emergence and modular evolution of a novel motility machinery in bacteria. PLoS Genet 7: e1002268 doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1002268.

21. SunM, WartelM, CascalesE, ShaevitzJW, MignotT (2011) Motor-driven intracellular transport powers bacterial gliding motility. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 108: 7559–7564 doi:10.1073/pnas.1101101108.

22. MignotT, MerlieJP, ZusmanDR (2005) Regulated pole-to-pole oscillations of a bacterial gliding motility protein. Science 310: 855–857.

23. NudlemanE, WallD, KaiserD (2006) Polar assembly of the type IV pilus secretin in Myxococcus xanthus. Mol Microbiol 60: 16–29.

24. BulyhaI, SchmidtC, LenzP, JakovljevicV, HöneA, et al. (2009) Regulation of the type IV pili molecular machine by dynamic localization of two motor proteins. Mol Microbiol 74: 691–706 doi:10.1111/j.1365-2958.2009.06891.x.

25. MignotT, ShaevitzJW, HartzellPL, ZusmanDR (2007) Evidence that focal adhesion complexes power bacterial gliding motility. Science 315: 853–856 doi:10.1126/science.1137223.

26. MiertzschkeM, KoernerC, VetterIR, KeilbergD, HotE, et al. (2011) Structural analysis of the Ras-like G protein MglA and its cognate GAP MglB and implications for bacterial polarity. EMBO J 30: 4185–4197 doi:10.1038/emboj.2011.291.

27. MaurielloEM, MouhamarF, NanB, DucretA, DaiD, et al. (2010) Bacterial motility complexes require the actin-like protein, MreB and the Ras homologue, MglA. Embo J 29: 315–326.

28. BulyhaI, HotE, HuntleyS, Søgaard-AndersenL (2011) GTPases in bacterial cell polarity and signalling. Curr Opin Microbiol 14: 726–733 doi:10.1016/j.mib.2011.09.001.

29. LeonardyS, FreymarkG, HebenerS, EllehaugeE, Sogaard-AndersenL (2007) Coupling of protein localization and cell movements by a dynamically localized response regulator in Myxococcus xanthus. Embo J 26: 4433–4444.

30. ShiW, ZusmanDR (1993) The two motility systems of Myxococcus xanthus show different selective advantages on various surfaces. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 90: 3378–3382.

31. BlackhartBD, ZusmanDR (1985) “Frizzy” genes of Myxococcus xanthus are involved in control of frequency of reversal of gliding motility. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 82: 8767–8770.

32. AstlingDP, LeeJY, ZusmanDR (2006) Differential effects of chemoreceptor methylation-domain mutations on swarming and development in the social bacterium Myxococcus xanthus. Mol Microbiol 59: 45–55.

33. CharestPG, FirtelRA (2007) Big roles for small GTPases in the control of directed cell movement. Biochem J 401: 377–390.

34. WuSS, KaiserD (1995) Genetic and functional evidence that Type IV pili are required for social gliding motility in Myxococcus xanthus. Mol Microbiol 18: 547–558.

35. NanB, MaurielloEMF, SunI-H, WongA, ZusmanDR (2010) A multi-protein complex from Myxococcus xanthus required for bacterial gliding motility. Mol Microbiol 76: 1539–1554 doi:10.1111/j.1365-2958.2010.07184.x.

36. RennerLD, WeibelDB (2011) Cardiolipin microdomains localize to negatively curved regions of Escherichia coli membranes. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 108: 6264–6269 doi:10.1073/pnas.1015757108.

37. KeilbergD, WuichetK, DrescherF, Søgaard-AndersenL (2012) A response regulator interfaces between the Frz chemosensory system and the MglA/MglB GTPase/GAP module to regulate polarity in Myxococcus xanthus. Submitted

38. InclanYF, VlamakisHC, ZusmanDR (2007) FrzZ, a dual CheY-like response regulator, functions as an output for the Frz chemosensory pathway of Myxococcus xanthus. Mol Microbiol 65: 90–102.

39. InclanYF, LaurentS, ZusmanDR (2008) The receiver domain of FrzE, a CheA-CheY fusion protein, regulates the CheA histidine kinase activity and downstream signalling to the A- and S-motility systems of Myxococcus xanthus. Mol Microbiol 68: 1328–1339.

40. KirkpatrickCL, ViollierPH (2012) Decoding Caulobacter development. FEMS Microbiol Rev 36: 193–205 doi:10.1111/j.1574-6976.2011.00309.x.

41. TsokosCG, PerchukBS, LaubMT (2011) A dynamic complex of signaling proteins uses polar localization to regulate cell-fate asymmetry in Caulobacter crescentus. Dev Cell 20: 329–341 doi:10.1016/j.devcel.2011.01.007.

42. PaulR, WeiserS, AmiotNC, ChanC, SchirmerT, et al. (2004) Cell cycle-dependent dynamic localization of a bacterial response regulator with a novel di-guanylate cyclase output domain. Genes Dev 18: 715–727 doi:10.1101/gad.289504.

43. AbelS, ChienP, WassmannP, SchirmerT, KaeverV, et al. (2011) Regulatory cohesion of cell cycle and cell differentiation through interlinked phosphorylation and second messenger networks. Mol Cell 43: 550–560 doi:10.1016/j.molcel.2011.07.018.

44. JenalU, GalperinMY (2009) Single domain response regulators: molecular switches with emerging roles in cell organization and dynamics. Curr Opin Microbiol 12: 152–160 doi:10.1016/j.mib.2009.01.010.

45. BustamanteVH, Martinez-FloresI, VlamakisHC, ZusmanDR (2004) Analysis of the Frz signal transduction system of Myxococcus xanthus shows the importance of the conserved C-terminal region of the cytoplasmic chemoreceptor FrzCD in sensing signals. Mol Microbiol 53: 1501–1513.

46. DucretA, MaisonneuveE, NotareschiP, GrossiA, MignotT, et al. (2009) A microscope automated fluidic system to study bacterial processes in real time. PLoS ONE 4: e7282 doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0007282.

Štítky
Genetika Reprodukčná medicína

Článok vyšiel v časopise

PLOS Genetics


2012 Číslo 8
Najčítanejšie tento týždeň
Najčítanejšie v tomto čísle
Kurzy

Zvýšte si kvalifikáciu online z pohodlia domova

Aktuální možnosti diagnostiky a léčby litiáz
nový kurz
Autori: MUDr. Tomáš Ürge, PhD.

Všetky kurzy
Prihlásenie
Zabudnuté heslo

Zadajte e-mailovú adresu, s ktorou ste vytvárali účet. Budú Vám na ňu zasielané informácie k nastaveniu nového hesla.

Prihlásenie

Nemáte účet?  Registrujte sa

#ADS_BOTTOM_SCRIPTS#