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    <rdf:Description rdf:about="https://research-explorer.ista.ac.at/record/1990">
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        <dc:title>The bacterial cell division proteins ftsA and ftsZ self-organize into dynamic cytoskeletal patterns</dc:title>
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                <foaf:name></foaf:name>
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        <bibo:abstract>Bacterial cytokinesis is commonly initiated by the Z-ring, a cytoskeletal structure that assembles at the site of division. Its primary component is FtsZ, a tubulin superfamily GTPase, which is recruited to the membrane by the actin-related protein FtsA. Both proteins are required for the formation of the Z-ring, but if and how they influence each other&apos;s assembly dynamics is not known. Here, we reconstituted FtsA-dependent recruitment of FtsZ polymers to supported membranes, where both proteins self-organize into complex patterns, such as fast-moving filament bundles and chirally rotating rings. Using fluorescence microscopy and biochemical perturbations, we found that these large-scale rearrangements of FtsZ emerge from its polymerization dynamics and a dual, antagonistic role of FtsA: recruitment of FtsZ filaments to the membrane and negative regulation of FtsZ organization. Our findings provide a model for the initial steps of bacterial cell division and illustrate how dynamic polymers can self-organize into large-scale structures.</bibo:abstract>
        <bibo:volume>16</bibo:volume>
        <bibo:startPage>38 - 46</bibo:startPage>
        <bibo:endPage>38 - 46</bibo:endPage>
        <dc:publisher>Nature Publishing Group</dc:publisher>
        <bibo:doi rdf:resource="10.1038/ncb2885" />
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