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1.
MurQ is an N-acetylmuramic acid-phosphate (MurNAc-P) etherase that converts MurNAc-P to N-acetylglucosamine-phosphate and is essential for growth on MurNAc as the sole source of carbon (T. Jaegar, M. Arsic, and C. Mayer, J. Biol. Chem. 280:30100-30106, 2005). Here we show that MurQ is the only MurNAc-P etherase in Escherichia coli and that MurQ and AnmK kinase are required for utilization of anhydro-MurNAc derived either from cell wall murein or imported from the medium.  相似文献   

2.
The ubiquitous bacterial cell wall sugar N-acetylmuramic acid (MurNAc) carries a unique D-lactyl ether substituent at the C3 position. Recently, we proposed an etherase capable of cleaving this lactyl ether to be part of the novel bacterial MurNAc dissimilation pathway (Dahl, U., Jaeger, T., Nguyen, B. T., Sattler, J. M., Mayer, C. (2004) J. Bacteriol. 186, 2385-2392). Here, we report the identification of the first known MurNAc etherase. The encoding gene murQ is located at 55 min on the Escherichia coli chromosome adjacent to murP, the MurNAc-specific phosphotransferase system. A murQ deletion mutant could not grow on MurNAc as the sole source of carbon and energy but could be complemented by expressing murQ from a plasmid. The mutant had no obvious phenotype when grown on different carbon sources but accumulated MurNAc 6-phosphate at millimolar concentrations from externally supplied MurNAc. Purified MurQ-His6 fusion protein and extracts of cells expressing murQ both catalyze the cleavage of MurNAc 6-phosphate, with GlcNAc 6-phosphate and D-lactate being the primary products. The 18O label from enriched water is incorporated into the sugar molecule, showing that the C3-O bond is cleaved and reformed by the enzyme. Moreover, an intermediate was detected and identified as an unsaturated sugar molecule. Based on this observation, we suggested a lyase-type mechanism (beta-elimination/hydration) for the cleavage of the lactyl ether bond of MurNAc 6-phosphate. Close homologs of murQ were found on the chromosome of several bacteria, and amino acid sequence similarity with the N-terminal domain of human glucokinase-regulatory protein (GckR or GKRP) was recognized.  相似文献   

3.
4.
We report here that wild-type Escherichia coli grows on N-acetylmuramic acid (MurNAc) as the sole source of carbon and energy. Analysis of mutants defective in N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) catabolism revealed that the catabolic pathway for MurNAc merges into the GlcNAc pathway on the level of GlcNAc 6-phosphate. Furthermore, analysis of mutants defective in components of the phosphotransferase system (PTS) revealed that a PTS is essential for growth on MurNAc. However, neither the glucose-, mannose/glucosamine-, nor GlcNAc-specific PTS (PtsG, ManXYZ, and NagE, respectively) was found to be necessary. Instead, we identified a gene at 55 min on the E. coli chromosome that is responsible for MurNAc uptake and growth. It encodes a single polypeptide consisting of the EIIB and C domains of a so-far-uncharacterized PTS that was named murP. MurP lacks an EIIA domain and was found to require the activity of the crr-encoded enzyme IIA-glucose (EIIA(Glc)), a component of the major glucose transport system for growth on MurNAc. murP deletion mutants were unable to grow on MurNAc as the sole source of carbon; however, growth was rescued by providing murP in trans expressed from an isopropylthiogalactopyranoside-inducible plasmid. A functional His(6) fusion of MurP was constructed, isolated from membranes, and identified as a polypeptide with an apparent molecular mass of 37 kDa by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and Western blot analysis. Close homologs of MurP were identified in the genome of several bacteria, and we believe that these organisms might also be able to utilize MurNAc.  相似文献   

5.
Lytic transglycosylases catalyze the cleavage of the beta-1, 4-glycosidic bond between N-acetylmuramic acid (MurNAc) and N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) in peptidoglycan with concomitant formation of a 1,6-anhydro bond in the MurNAc residue. To understand the reaction mechanism of Escherichia coli lytic transglycosylase Slt35, three crystal structures have been determined of Slt35 in complex with two different peptidoglycan fragments and with the lytic transglycosylase inhibitor bulgecin A. The complexes define four sugar-binding subsites (-2, -1, +1, and +2) and two peptide-binding sites in a large cleft close to Glu162. The Glu162 side chain is between the -1 and +1 sugar-binding sites, in agreement with a function as catalytic acid/base. The complexes suggest additional contributions to catalysis from Ser216 and Asn339, residues which are conserved among the MltB/Slt35 lytic transglycosylases.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Peptidoglycan (PGN) consists of repeating units of N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) and N-acetylmuramic acid (MurNAc), which are cross-linked by short peptides. It is well known that PGN forms a major cell wall component of bacteria making it an important ligand for the recognition by peptidoglycan recognition proteins (PGRPs) of the host. The binding studies showed that PGN, GlcNAc, and MurNAc bind to camel PGRP-S (CPGRP-S) with affinities corresponding to dissociation constants of 1.3 × 10(-9), 2.6 × 10(-7), and 1.8 × 10(-7) M, respectively. The crystal structure determinations of the complexes of CPGRP-S with GlcNAc and MurNAc showed that the structures consist of four crystallographically independent molecules, A, B, C, and D, in the asymmetric unit that exists as A-B and C-D units of two neighboring linear polymers. The structure determinations showed that compounds GlcNAc and MurNAc bound to CPGRP-S at the same subsite in molecule C. Both GlcNAc and MurNAc form several hydrogen bonds and extensive hydrophobic interactions with protein atoms, indicating the specific nature of their bindings. Flow cytometric studies showed that PGN enhanced the secretions of TNF-α and IL-6 from human peripheral blood mononuclear cells. The introduction of CPGRP-S to the PGN-challenged cultured peripheral blood mononuclear cells reduced the expressions of proinflammatory cytokines, TNF-α and IL-6. This showed that CPGRP-S inhibited PGN-induced production of proinflammatory cytokines and down-regulated macrophage-mediated inflammation, indicating its potential applications as an antibacterial agent.  相似文献   

8.
Phage lysozyme has catalytic activity similar to that of hen egg white lysozyme, but the amino acid sequences of the two enzymes are completely different.The binding to phage lysozyme of several saccharides including N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc), N-acetylmuramic acid (MurNAc) and (GlcNAc)3 have been determined crystallographically and shown to occupy the pronounced active site cleft. GlcNAc binds at a single location analogous to the C site of hen egg white lysozyme. MurNAc binds at the same site. (GlcNAc)3 clearly occupies sites B and C, but the binding in site A is ill-defined.Model building suggests that, with the enzyme in the conformation seen in the crystal structure, a saccharide in the normal chair configuration cannot be placed in site D without incurring unacceptable steric interference between sugar and protein. However, as with hen egg white lysozyme, the bad contacts can be avoided by assuming the saccharide to be in the sofa conformation. Also Asp20 in T4 lysozyme is located 3 Å from carbon C(1) of saccharide D, and is in a position to stabilize the developing positive charge on a carbonium ion intermediate. Prior genetic evidence had indicated that Asp20 is critically important for catalysis. This suggests that in phage lysozyme catalysis is promoted by a combination of steric and electronic effects, acting in concert, The enzyme shape favors the binding in site D of a saccharide with the geometry of the transition state, while Asp20 stabilizes the positive charge on the oxocarbonium ion of this intermediate. Tn phage lysozyme, the identity of the proton donor is uncertain. In contrast to hen egg white lysozyme, where Glu35 is 3 Å from the glycosidic DOE bond, and is in a non-polar environment, phage lysozyme has an ion pair, Glull … Arg145, 5 Å away from the glycosidic oxygen. Possibly Glull undergoes a conformational adjustment in the presence of bound substrate, and acts as the proton donor. Alternatively, the proton might come from a bound water molecule.  相似文献   

9.
It has been shown that muropeptide CB, the chemically defined product of Escherichia coli B murein digestion by phage lambda endolysin, is the substrate for T4 lysozyme. This is the tetrasaccharide GlcNAc-MurNAc-GlcNAc-anMurNAc in which the carboxyl groups of MurNAc and anMurNAc residues are substituted by tetrapeptide LAla-DGlu-msA2pm-DAla (MurNAc = N-acetylmuramic acid, GlcNAc = N-acetyl-D-glucosamine, anMurNAc = 1,6-anhydro-N-acetylmuramic acid, LAla = L-alanine, DGlu = D-glutamic acid, msA2pm = meso-diaminopimelic acid). The substrate contains one bond hydrolysable by T4 lysozyme. The products of hydrolysis are the easily identifiable disaccharide muropeptides C6 (GlcNAc-MurNAc-LAla-DGlu-msA2pm-DAla) and CA (GlcNAc-anMurNac-LAla-DGlu-msA2pm-DAla). Thus the substrate may be used for the specific identification of murein N-acetylmuramoylhydrolases of the T4 lysozyme type, as well as for any quantitative measurement of the enzymatic reaction.  相似文献   

10.

D, deuterium
δ D(NMR), chemical shift axis in a deuterium NMR spectrum
F6P, fructose-6-phosphate
G6P, glucose-6-phosphate
IRMS, isotope ratio mass spectrometry
NMR, nuclear magnetic resonance
PGI, phosphoglucose isomerase

Intramolecular deuterium distributions of the carbon-bound hydrogens of glucose were measured using deuterium nuclear magnetic resonance. Glucose isolated from leaf starch of common bean ( Phaseolus vulgaris cv. Linden) or spinach ( Spinacia oleracea cv. Giant nobel) was depleted in deuterium in the C(2) position, compared with glucose isolated from leaf sucrose or bean endosperm starch. In beans, the depletion of C(2) was independent of the light intensity during growth (150 or 700 μ mol photons s–1 m–2). The ratio of glucose-6-phosphate to fructose-6-phosphate ([G6P]/[F6P]) in bean chloroplasts was 0·9 in high light, indicating that the phosphoglucose isomerase reaction was not in equilibrium ([G6P]/[F6P]) ≈ 3). This implies that the kinetic isotope effect of phosphoglucose isomerase depleted deuterium in the C(2) position of G6P. Because the depletion was the same, the chloroplastic ([G6P]/[F6P]) ratio was in disequilibrium irrespective of the light intensity. If the ([G6P]/[F6P]) ratio was in equilibrium, a large chloroplastic pool of G6P would be unavailable for regeneration of ribulose-1,5-bisphospate. We argue that chloroplast phosphoglucose isomerase activity is regulated to avoid this. The deuterium depletion of C(2) explains the known low overall deuterium abundance of leaf starch. This example shows that measurements of intramolecular deuterium distributions can be essential to understand overall deuterium abundances of plant material.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Class II fructose 1,6-bisphosphate aldolases (FBP-aldolases) catalyse the zinc-dependent, reversible aldol condensation of dihydroxyacetone phosphate (DHAP) and glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate (G3P) to form fructose 1,6-bisphosphate (FBP). Analysis of the structure of the enzyme from Escherichia coli in complex with a transition state analogue (phosphoglycolohydroxamate, PGH) suggested that substrate binding caused a conformational change in the beta5-alpha7 loop of the enzyme and that this caused the relocation of two glutamate residues (Glu181 and Glu182) into the proximity of the active site. Site-directed mutagenesis of these two glutamate residues (E181A and E182A) along with another active site glutamate (Glu174) was carried out and the mutant enzymes characterised using steady-state kinetics. Mutation of Glu174 (E174A) resulted in an enzyme which was severely crippled in catalysis, in agreement with its position as a zinc ligand in the enzyme's structure. The E181A mutant showed the same properties as the wild-type enzyme indicating that the residue played no major role in substrate binding or enzyme catalysis. In contrast, mutation of Glu182 (E182A) demonstrated that Glu182 is important in the catalytic cycle of the enzyme. Furthermore, the measurement of deuterium kinetic isotope effects using [1(S)-(2)H]DHAP showed that, for the wild-type enzyme, proton abstraction was not the rate determining step, whereas in the case of the E182A mutant this step had become rate limiting, providing evidence for the role of Glu182 in abstraction of the C1 proton from DHAP in the condensation direction of the reaction. Glu182 lies in a loop of polypeptide which contains four glycine residues (Gly176, Gly179, Gly180 and Gly184) and a quadruple mutant (where each glycine was converted to alanine) showed that flexibility of this loop was important for the correct functioning of the enzyme, probably to change the microenvironment of Glu182 in order to perturb its pK(a) to a value suitable for its role in proton abstraction. These results highlight the need for further studies of the dynamics of the enzyme in order to fully understand the complexities of loop closure and catalysis in this enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
Purine nucleoside phosphorylase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MtPNP) is numbered among targets for persistence of the causative agent of tuberculosis. Here, it is shown that MtPNP is more specific to natural 6-oxopurine nucleosides and synthetic compounds, and does not catalyze the phosphorolysis of adenosine. Initial velocity, product inhibition and equilibrium binding data suggest that MtPNP catalyzes 2′-deoxyguanosine (2dGuo) phosphorolysis by a steady-state ordered bi bi kinetic mechanism, in which inorganic phosphate (Pi) binds first followed by 2dGuo, and ribose 1-phosphate dissociates first followed by guanine. pH-rate profiles indicated a general acid as being essential for both catalysis and 2dGuo binding, and that deprotonation of a group abolishes Pi binding. Proton inventory and solvent deuterium isotope effects indicate that a single solvent proton transfer makes a modest contribution to the rate-limiting step. Pre-steady-state kinetic data indicate that product release appears to contribute to the rate-limiting step for MtPNP-catalyzed reaction.  相似文献   

14.
Argyrou A  Blanchard JS 《Biochemistry》2004,43(14):4375-4384
1-Deoxy-D-xylulose-5-phosphate (DXP) isomeroreductase catalyzes the isomerization and reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate- (NADPH-) dependent reduction of DXP to generate 2-C-methylerythritol 4-phosphate (MEP) in the first committed step of the MEP pathway of isoprenoid biosynthesis. We have cloned the gene encoding the Mycobacterium tuberculosis DXP isomeroreductase, expressed the protein in Escherichia coli, and purified the enzyme to homogeneity using conventional column chromatography methods. DXP isomeroreductase is a metal ion-activated enzyme displaying superior specificity for Co(2+), good specificity for Mn(2+), and poor specificity for Mg(2+). Although NADPH is preferred over reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) about 100-fold as evaluated by the relative k(cat)/K(m) values, the maximum turnover numbers are similar, suggesting that the 2'-phosphate of NADPH contributes predominantly to binding and not to catalysis. While k(cat) was independent of pH in the region 6.0 相似文献   

15.
BACKGROUND: Lytic transglycosylases are bacterial muramidases that catalyse the cleavage of the beta- 1,4-glycosidic bond between N-acetylmuramic acid (MurNAc) and N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) in peptidoglycan with concomitant formation of a 1,6-anhydrobond in the MurNAc residue. These muramidases play an important role in the metabolism of the bacterial cell wall and might therefore be potential targets for the rational design of antibacterial drugs. One of the lytic transglycosylases is Slt35, a naturally occurring soluble fragment of the outer membrane bound lytic transglycosylase B (MltB) from Escherichia coli. RESULTS: The crystal structure of Slt35 has been determined at 1.7 A resolution. The structure reveals an ellipsoid molecule with three domains called the alpha, beta and core domains. The core domain is sandwiched between the alpha and beta domains. Its fold resembles that of lysozyme, but it contains a single metal ion binding site in a helix-loop-helix module that is surprisingly similar to the eukaryotic EF-hand calcium-binding fold. Interestingly, the Slt35 EF-hand loop consists of 15 residues instead of the usual 12 residues. The only other prokaryotic proteins with an EF-hand motif identified so far are the D-galactose-binding proteins. Residues from the alpha and core domains form a deep groove where the substrate fragment GlcNAc can be bound. CONCLUSIONS: The three-domain structure of Slt35 is completely different from the Slt70 structure, the only other lytic transglycosylase of known structure. Nevertheless, the core domain of Slt35 closely resembles the fold of the catalytic domain of Slt70, despite the absence of any obvious sequence similarity. Residue Glu162 of Slt35 is in an equivalent position to Glu478, the catalytic acid/base of Slt70. GlcNAc binds close to Glu162 in the deep groove. Moreover, mutation of Glu162 into a glutamine residue yielded a completely inactive enzyme. These observations indicate the location of the active site and strongly support a catalytic role for Glu162.  相似文献   

16.
Peptidoglycan (PG) N-acetyl muramic acid (MurNAc) O-acetylation is widely spread in gram-positive bacteria and is generally associated with resistance against lysozyme and endogenous autolysins. We report here the presence of O-acetylation on N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) in Lactobacillus plantarum PG. This modification of glycan strands was never described in bacteria. Fine structural characterization of acetylated muropeptides released from L. plantarum PG demonstrated that both MurNAc and GlcNAc are O-acetylated in this species. These two PG post-modifications rely on two dedicated O-acetyltransferase encoding genes, named oatA and oatB, respectively. By analyzing the resistance to cell wall hydrolysis of mutant strains, we showed that GlcNAc O-acetylation inhibits N-acetylglucosaminidase Acm2, the major L. plantarum autolysin. In this bacterial species, inactivation of oatA, encoding MurNAc O-acetyltransferase, resulted in marked sensitivity to lysozyme. Moreover, MurNAc over-O-acetylation was shown to activate autolysis through the putative N-acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine amidase LytH enzyme. Our data indicate that in L. plantarum, two different O-acetyltransferases play original and antagonistic roles in the modulation of the activity of endogenous autolysins.  相似文献   

17.
The glycosyl transferase of the Escherichia coli bifunctional penicillin-binding protein (PBP) 1b catalyzes the assembly of lipid-transported N-acetylglucosaminyl-beta-1,4-N-acetylmuramoyl-L-Ala-gamma-D-Glu-meso-A2pm-D-Ala-D-Ala units (lipid II) into linear peptidoglycan chains. These units are linked, at C1 of N-acetylmuramic acid (MurNAc), to a C55 undecaprenyl pyrophosphate. In an in vitro assay, lipid II functions both as a glycosyl donor and as a glycosyl acceptor substrate. Using substrate analogues, it is suggested that the specificity of the enzyme for the glycosyl donor substrate differs from that for the acceptor. The donor substrate requires the presence of both N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) and MurNAc and a reactive group on C1 of the MurNAc and does not absolutely require the lipid chain which can be replaced by uridine. The enzyme appears to prefer an acceptor substrate containing a polyprenyl pyrophosphate on C1 of the MurNAc sugar. The problem of glycan chain elongation that presumably proceeds by the repetitive addition of disaccharide peptide units at their reducing end is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
In D(2)O, scytalone exchanges its two C2 hydrogen atoms for deuterium atoms at different rates. At pD 7.0 and 25 degrees C, half-lives for the exchanges are 0.8 and 10 days for the pro-S and pro-R hydrogens, respectively. The differential exchange rates allow for the preparation of multiple scytalone samples (through incubation of scytalone in D(2)O and then back exchanging with H(2)O) having differential levels of deuterium enrichment at the C2 pro-S and pro-R positions. From these samples, the stereochemical preference for hydrogen abstraction during the dehydration reaction mediated by the enzyme scytalone dehydratase was determined. At pH 7. 0, deuterium at the pro-S position has little effect on enzyme catalysis, whereas deuterium at the pro-R position produces kinetic isotope effects of 2.3 (25 degrees C), 5.1 (25 degrees C), and 6.7 (6.8 degrees C) on k(cat), k(cat)/K(m), and the single-turnover rate, respectively. The results are fully consistent with the enzyme catalyzing a syn elimination through an E1cb-like mechanism. The syn elimination is compatible with the interactions realized between a scytalone boat conformation and key active site residues as modeled from multiple X-ray crystal structures of the enzyme in complexes with inhibitors.  相似文献   

19.
A set of enzymes dedicated to recycling of the amino sugar components of peptidoglycan has previously been identified in Escherichia coli. The complete pathway includes the nagA-encoded enzyme, N-acetylglucosamine-6-phosphate (GlcNAc6P) deacetylase, of the catabolic pathway for use of N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc). Mutations in nagA result in accumulation of millimolar concentrations of GlcNAc6P, presumably by preventing peptidoglycan recycling. Mutations in the genes encoding the key enzymes upstream of nagA in the dedicated recycling pathway (ampG, nagZ, nagK, murQ, and anmK), which were expected to interrupt the recycling process, reduced but did not eliminate accumulation of GlcNAc6P. A mutation in the nagE gene of the GlcNAc phosphotransferase system (PTS) was found to reduce by 50% the amount of GlcNAc6P which accumulated in a nagA strain and, together with mutations in the dedicated recycling pathway, eliminated all the GlcNAc6P accumulation. This shows that the nagE-encoded PTS transporter makes an important contribution to the recycling of peptidoglycan. The manXYZ-encoded PTS transporter makes a minor contribution to the formation of cytoplasmic GlcNAc6P but appears to have a more important role in secretion of GlcNAc and/or GlcNAc6P from the cytoplasm.Peptidoglycan (PG) or murein, the rigid shape-forming layer of the bacterial cell envelope, undergoes extensive degradation and resynthesis during normal bacterial growth. It is estimated that 40 to 50% of the PG is broken down and reused each generation (for a review, see reference 22). PG is a matrix of chains of alternating N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) and N-acetylmuramic acid (MurNAc) sugars cross-linked by peptide bridges. Over the last 20 years the pathways for recycling both the peptide and amino sugar portions of the PG have been elucidated, and a number of genes involved in this process have been identified. Most of the genes involved encode dedicated enzymes whose only function seems to be to recover the material produced during PG turnover and to reuse it to synthesize more PG or as a source of energy. However, some of the enzymes shown to be involved have apparently been recruited from another metabolic pathway (e.g., murQ- and nagA-encoded enzymes [see below]), while other specialized PG-recycling enzymes have a subsidiary function (e.g., ampG- and ampD-encoded enzymes in β-lactamase induction [20]).The pathway for recycling the amino sugar part of PG in Escherichia coli is shown in Fig. Fig.11 (for a review, see reference 22). Periplasmic hydrolases (lytic transglycosylases, Slt) and endopeptidases break the PG backbone, liberating anhydro-muropeptides (principally GlcNAc-anhydro-MurNAc [anhMurNAc]-tetrapeptide), which are transported into the cytoplasm by the ampG-encoded transporter (10). The peptide portion is cleaved off either by the membrane-associated amiD-encoded amidase (28) or by the ampD-encoded cytoplasmic amidase (11), liberating the disaccharide. The tetrapeptide is converted to a tripeptide and free d-Ala, both of which are reused to produce UDP-MurNAc-pentapeptide (11). The GlcNAc-anhMurNAc disaccharide is cleaved by the nagZ-encoded β-N-acetylglucosaminidase (2, 32), and then both sugars are converted to their 6-phosphate forms by the specific kinases NagK (29) and AnmK (31). The latter produces MurNAc-6-phosphate (MurNAc6P), which is converted to GlcNAc6P by the murQ-encoded etherase (12, 30). MurNAc6P is also the product of transport of MurNAc by the MurNAc-specific phosphotransferase system (PTS) transporter MurP. The murP and murQ genes form an operon for use of MurNAc as a carbon source (4). Thus, the MurQ protein has both catabolic and recycling functions (12, 30). Similarly, further use of the GlcNAc6P involves an enzyme normally involved in the catabolism of GlcNAc, the nagA-encoded GlcNAc6P deacetylase of the GlcNAc degradation pathway (21). The deacetylase converts GlcNAc6P to glucosamine-6-phosphate (GlcN6P), which can be converted to UDP-GlcNAc, the first dedicated compound for the synthesis of the cell wall components, by the glmM- and glmU-encoded enzymes (16, 17).Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Scheme for recycling of PG in E. coli. The enzymes and substrates are described in the text. Slt is the major soluble lytic transglycosylase. OM, outer membrane; PP, periplasm; IM, inner membrane. The enzymes involved in converting UDP-GlcNAc into the components of the PG and outer membrane are not shown. Arrows with a question mark indicate the pathways postulated to exist based on the results described in this work.It has been known for many years that mutations in nagA lead to very high levels of GlcNAc6P (33). Strains carrying nagA mutations are NagSensitive (i.e., they do not grow in medium containing GlcNAc and another carbon source). The toxicity of the accumulated sugar phosphates means that secondary mutations that alleviate this toxicity arise spontaneously in vivo (33). GlcNAc6P is the inducing signal for the NagC repressor of the nag regulon, and the accumulation of GlcNAc6P in the nagA strain results in derepression (endogenous induction) of the nag regulon (25). One class of suppressor mutations result in noninducible versions of NagC that are not sensitive to GlcNAc6P, so that the nag genes stay repressed (23), implying that overexpression of the nag regulon genes is one cause of the toxicity. Amino sugars are essential constituents of the bacterial PG and lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in gram-negative bacteria. In the absence of an exogenous supply of amino sugars, glmS, encoding GlcN6P synthase, is an essential gene (for a review, see reference 7). As GlcNAc6P accumulates in nagA cells growing in medium devoid of amino sugars, it must ultimately be derived from the de novo synthesis of GlcN6P by GlmS, which is destined for synthesis of PG and the LPSs of the outer membrane. As no acetyltransferase for GlcN6P has been characterized, the most likely origin of the GlcNAc6P in nagA strains is recycling of the PG. The LPS of the outer membrane of gram-negative bacteria also contains GlcN, but it is not known to undergo any turnover and the work of Park (21) showed that radioactive GlcN was stably incorporated into the LPS fraction, whereas radioactivity was slowly lost from the PG of isolated sacculi.In this work the effect of mutations in the recycling pathway on the accumulation of GlcNAc6P in vivo was investigated. The results show that mutations in one or more genes of the recycling pathway reduce but do not eliminate GlcNAc6P accumulation in nagA strains. However, when these mutations are present in the same strain with a mutation in the nagE gene encoding the GlcNAc6P-specific transporter of the GlcNAc PTS, GlcNAc6P levels decrease to the background level. This shows that the GlcNAc PTS is another pathway that is involved in recycling the GlcNAc component of PG. The manXYZ-encoded PTS transporter is also capable of GlcNAc uptake, and its effect on the recycling process was also examined.  相似文献   

20.
We report here the cloning and characterization of a cytoplasmic kinase of Clostridium acetobutylicum, named MurK (for murein sugar kinase). The enzyme has a unique specificity for both amino sugars of the bacterial cell wall, N-acetylmuramic acid (MurNAc) and N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc), which are phosphorylated at the 6-hydroxyl group. Kinetic analyses revealed Km values of 190 and 127 μM for MurNAc and GlcNAc, respectively, and a kcat value (65.0 s(-1)) that was 1.5-fold higher for the latter substrate. Neither the non-N-acetylated forms of the cell wall sugars, i.e., glucosamine and/or muramic acid, nor epimeric hexoses or 1,6-anhydro-MurNAc were substrates for the enzyme. MurK displays low overall amino acid sequence identity (24%) with human GlcNAc kinase and is the first characterized bacterial representative of the BcrAD/BadFG-like ATPase family. We propose a role of MurK in the recovery of muropeptides during cell wall rescue in C. acetobutylicum. The kinase was applied for high-sensitive detection of the amino sugars in cell wall preparations by radioactive phosphorylation.  相似文献   

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