A load-bearing function for the cytoplasmic membrane of Escherichia coli
Discuss this preprint
Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
The structural integrity of bacterial cells is traditionally attributed to the peptidoglycan cell wall, and more recently to the outer membrane, with the cytoplasmic membrane assumed to be mechanically passive. Cells lacking filaments of the actin homolog MreB are more bendable, suggesting a role for the cytoskeleton in cell stiffness. Here, we show that MreB does not stiffen the envelope directly, but instead mechanically couples the cell wall to the cytoplasmic membrane through its role in peptidoglycan synthesis, increasing resistance to bending. Under hyperosmotic stress, MreB relocalized to the poles, forming linkages that prevent membrane detachment from the cell wall and attenuate cytoplasmic contraction. Disruption of MreB filament formation, nutrient starvation, or inactivation of glycan elongation factors abolished or reduced this coupling, revealing that peptidoglycan biosynthesis actively mediates stress distribution across surface layers. Our findings redefine the bacterial envelope as a mechanically integrated composite, with the cytoplasmic membrane having substantial load-bearing capacity.