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Dive into the research topics where Vladimir Jakovljevic is active.

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Featured researches published by Vladimir Jakovljevic.


Molecular Microbiology | 2009

Regulation of the type IV pili molecular machine by dynamic localization of two motor proteins

Iryna Bulyha; Carmen Schmidt; Peter Lenz; Vladimir Jakovljevic; Andrea Höne; Berenike Maier; Michael Hoppert; Lotte Søgaard-Andersen

Type IV pili (T4P) are surface structures that undergo extension/retraction oscillations to generate cell motility. In Myxococcus xanthus, T4P are unipolarly localized and undergo pole‐to‐pole oscillations synchronously with cellular reversals. We investigated the mechanisms underlying these oscillations. We show that several T4P proteins localize symmetrically in clusters at both cell poles between reversals, and these clusters remain stationary during reversals. Conversely, the PilB and PilT motor ATPases that energize extension and retraction, respectively, localize to opposite poles with PilB predominantly at the piliated and PilT predominantly at the non‐piliated pole, and these proteins oscillate between the poles during reversals. Therefore, T4P pole‐to‐pole oscillations involve the disassembly of T4P machinery at one pole and reassembly of this machinery at the opposite pole. Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching experiments showed rapid turnover of YFP–PilT in the polar clusters between reversals. Moreover, PilT displays bursts of accumulation at the piliated pole between reversals. These observations suggest that the spatial separation of PilB and PilT in combination with the noisy PilT accumulation at the piliated pole allow the temporal separation of extension and retraction. This is the first demonstration that the function of a molecular machine depends on disassembly and reassembly of its individual parts.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2008

PilB and PilT are ATPases acting antagonistically in type IV pilus function in Myxococcus xanthus.

Vladimir Jakovljevic; Simone Leonardy; Michael Hoppert; Lotte Søgaard-Andersen

Type IV pili (T4P) are dynamic surface structures that undergo cycles of extension and retraction. T4P dynamics center on the PilB and PilT proteins, which are members of the secretion ATPase superfamily of proteins. Here, we show that PilB and PilT of the T4P system in Myxococcus xanthus have ATPase activity in vitro. Using a structure-guided approach, we systematically mutagenized PilB and PilT to resolve whether both ATP binding and hydrolysis are important for PilB and PilT function in vivo. PilB as well as PilT ATPase activity was abolished in vitro by replacement of conserved residues in the Walker A and Walker B boxes that are involved in ATP binding and hydrolysis, respectively. PilB proteins containing mutant Walker A or Walker B boxes were nonfunctional in vivo and unable to support T4P extension. PilT proteins containing mutant Walker A or Walker B boxes were also nonfunctional in vivo and unable to support T4P retraction. These data provide genetic evidence that both ATP binding and hydrolysis by PilB are essential for T4P extension and that both ATP binding and hydrolysis by PilT are essential for T4P retraction. Thus, PilB and PilT are ATPases that act at distinct steps in the T4P extension/retraction cycle in vivo.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2009

High-Force Generation Is a Conserved Property of Type IV Pilus Systems

Martin Clausen; Vladimir Jakovljevic; Lotte Søgaard-Andersen; Berenike Maier

The type IV pilus (T4P) system of Neisseria gonorrhoeae is the strongest linear molecular motor reported to date, but it is unclear whether high-force generation is conserved between bacterial species. Using laser tweezers, we found that the average stalling force of single-pilus retraction in Myxococcus xanthus of 149 +/- 14 pN exceeds the force generated by N. gonorrhoeae. Retraction velocities including a bimodal distribution were similar between M. xanthus and N. gonorrhoeae, but force-dependent directional switching was not. Force generation by pilus retraction is energized by the ATPase PilT. Surprisingly, an M. xanthus mutant lacking PilT apparently still retracted T4P, although at a reduced frequency. The retraction velocity was comparable to the high-velocity mode in the wild type at low forces but decreased drastically when the force increased, with an average stalling force of 70 +/- 10 pN. Thus, M. xanthus harbors at least two different retraction motors. Our results demonstrate that the major physical properties are conserved between bacteria that are phylogenetically distant and pursue very different lifestyles.


Developmental Cell | 2008

Regulated Secretion of a Protease Activates Intercellular Signaling during Fruiting Body Formation in M. xanthus

Anne Rolbetzki; Meike Ammon; Vladimir Jakovljevic; Anna Konovalova; Lotte Søgaard-Andersen

In response to starvation Myxococcus xanthus initiates a developmental program that culminates in fruiting body formation. There are two morphogenetic events in this program, aggregation and sporulation, which are temporally and spatially coordinated by the contact-dependent intercellular C-signal protein (p17). p17 is generated by proteolytic cleavage of the p25 precursor protein, which accumulates in the outer membrane of vegetative and starving cells. However, p17 generation is restricted to starving cells. Here we identify the subtilisin-like protease PopC that is directly responsible for cleavage of p25. PopC accumulates in the cytoplasm of vegetative cells but is selectively secreted during starvation coinciding with the generation of p17. Consequently, p25 and PopC only encounter each other in starving cells. Thus, restriction of p25 cleavage to starving cells occurs by a compartmentalization mechanism that depends on selective secretion of PopC during starvation. Our results provide evidence for regulated proteolysis via regulated secretion.


Letters in Applied Microbiology | 2009

A polyphasic approach assigns the pathogenic Erwinia strains from diseased pear trees in Japan to Erwinia pyrifoliae.

K. Geider; G. Auling; Vladimir Jakovljevic; Beate Völksch

Aims:  Bacterial shoot blight of pear in Japan (BSBP) is caused by Erwinia strains which were formerly associated with the species Erwinia amylovora, the causative agent of fire blight. The description of Erwinia pyrifoliae as a pear pathogen in Korea renewed a possible connection of the pear pathogens in both countries.


Microbial Biotechnology | 2008

Hypersensitive response and acyl‐homoserine lactone production of the fire blight antagonists Erwinia tasmaniensis and Erwinia billingiae

Vladimir Jakovljevic; Susanne Jock; Z Du; Klaus Geider

Fire blight caused by the Gram‐negative bacterium Erwinia amylovora can be controlled by antagonistic microorganisms. We characterized epiphytic bacteria isolated from healthy apple and pear trees in Australia, named Erwinia tasmaniensis, and the epiphytic bacterium Erwinia billingiae from England for physiological properties, interaction with plants and interference with growth of E. amylovora. They reduced symptom formation by the fire blight pathogen on immature pears and the colonization of apple flowers. In contrast to E. billingiae, E. tasmaniensis strains induced a hypersensitive response in tobacco leaves and synthesized levan in the presence of sucrose. With consensus primers deduced from lsc as well as hrpL, hrcC and hrcR of the hrp region of E. amylovora and of related bacteria, these genes were successfully amplified from E. tasmaniensis DNA and alignment of the encoded proteins to other Erwinia species supported a role for environmental fitness of the epiphytic bacterium. Unlike E. tasmaniensis, the epiphytic bacterium E. billingiae produced an acyl‐homoserine lactone for bacterial cell‐to‐cell communication. Their competition with the growth of E. amylovora may be involved in controlling fire blight.


Interface Focus | 2012

Pattern-formation mechanisms in motility mutants of Myxococcus xanthus

Jörn Starruß; Fernando Peruani; Vladimir Jakovljevic; Lotte Søgaard-Andersen; Andreas Deutsch; Markus Bär

Formation of spatial patterns of cells is a recurring theme in biology and often depends on regulated cell motility. Motility of the rod-shaped cells of the bacterium Myxococcus xanthus depends on two motility machineries, type IV pili (giving rise to S-motility) and the gliding motility apparatus (giving rise to A-motility). Cell motility is regulated by occasional reversals. Moving M. xanthus cells can organize into spreading colonies or spore-filled fruiting bodies, depending on their nutritional status. To ultimately understand these two pattern-formation processes and the contributions by the two motility machineries, as well as the cell reversal machinery, we analyse spatial self-organization in three M. xanthus strains: (i) a mutant that moves unidirectionally without reversing by the A-motility system only, (ii) a unidirectional mutant that is also equipped with the S-motility system, and (iii) the wild-type that, in addition to the two motility systems, occasionally reverses its direction of movement. The mutant moving by means of the A-engine illustrates that collective motion in the form of large moving clusters can arise in gliding bacteria owing to steric interactions of the rod-shaped cells, without the need of invoking any biochemical signal regulation. The two-engine strain mutant reveals that the same phenomenon emerges when both motility systems are present, and as long as cells exhibit unidirectional motion only. From the study of these two strains, we conclude that unidirectional cell motion induces the formation of large moving clusters at low and intermediate densities, while it results in vortex formation at very high densities. These findings are consistent with what is known from self-propelled rod models, which strongly suggests that the combined effect of self-propulsion and volume exclusion interactions is the pattern-formation mechanism leading to the observed phenomena. On the other hand, we learn that when cells occasionally reverse their moving direction, as observed in the wild-type, cells form small but strongly elongated clusters and self-organize into a mesh-like structure at high enough densities. These results have been obtained from a careful analysis of the cluster statistics of ensembles of cells, and analysed in the light of a coagulation Smoluchowski equation with fragmentation.


International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 2006

Erwinia tasmaniensis sp. nov., a non-phytopathogenic bacterium from apple and pear trees.

Klaus Geider; Georg Auling; Z Du; Vladimir Jakovljevic; Susanne Jock; Beate Völksch


Physiological and Molecular Plant Pathology | 2004

Creation and genetic restoration of Erwinia amylovora strains with low levan synthesis

Z Du; Vladimir Jakovljevic; Heike Salm; Klaus Geider


Acta Horticulturae | 2006

Exopolysaccharides of Erwinia amylovora and related pathogens

Klaus Geider; Z Du; M. Hildebrand; Won-Sik Kim; Vladimir Jakovljevic; Susanne Jock

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Z Du

Max Planck Society

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Andreas Deutsch

Dresden University of Technology

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