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Review of: White, M, et al.. February 10, 2022. “MraZ is a transcriptional inhibitor of cell division in Bacillus subtilis.” bioRxiv. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.02.09.479790]
This review was written collaboratively by undergraduates at Mount Holyoke College (MA, USA) who selected this preprint for an assignment in a course on peer review taught by Dr. Rebeccah S. Lijek, Assistant Professor of Biological Sciences. Student-reviewers who give their permission to list their names are: Madison Dresler, Valentina Shrum, Rossi Wang, Siyu Yin
Disclosures: The review authors declare no conflict of interest and have no personal or financial relationship with the study’s authors. The reviewers acknowledge a limitation of their review is that some of the bacteriology methodology was beyond the scope of their expertise, being undergraduate students and not practicing bacteriologists. We thank the authors for sharing their manuscript as a preprint.
Summary
The manuscript investigates the role of DNA binding protein MraZ in Bacillus subtilis. Microscopy was used to image and analyze B. subtilis expressing mraZ-GFP and other constructs for structural differences, localization, and FtsZ ring formation. RNA-seq technology was used to analyze differential gene regulation in conditions such as the overexpression or deletion of mraZ. The authors found that increased levels of MraZ cause filamentation that results in cell lysis caused by repression of the mra operon. They were also able to see de-condensation of the Z-ring in response to the overexpression of MraZ. This dissolution is attributed to the depletion of FtsL. The authors use these findings to suggest that FtsL plays a role in the maturation and treadmilling of the Z-ring. This study’s findings have potential implications for the role of MraZ and the mra operon in areas such as DNA replication arrest. Similar studies have involved E. coli, and the authors use B. subtilis as a comparison and to separate MraZ’s effects. Overall, we believe this is a well-researched manuscript that may be of interest to the field of bacteriology.
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