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1.
A membrane-bound lytic transglycosylase (Mlt) has been solubilized in the presence of 2% Triton X-100 containing 0.5 M NaCl from membranes of an Escherichia coli mutant that carries a deletion in the slt gene coding for a 70-kDa soluble lytic transglycosylase (Slt70). The enzyme was purified by a four-step procedure including anion-exchange (HiLoad SP-Sepharose and MonoS), heparin-Sepharose, and poly(U)-Sepharose 4B column chromatography. The purified protein that migrated during denaturing sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis as a single band corresponding to an apparent molecular mass of about 38 kDa is referred to as Mlt38. Optimal activity was found in buffers with a pH between 4.0 and 4.5. The enzyme is stimulated by a factor of 2.5 in the presence of Mg2+ at a concentration of 10 mM and loses its activity rapidly at temperatures above 30 degrees C. Besides insoluble murein sacculi, the enzyme was able to degrade glycan strands isolated from murein by amidase treatment. The enzymatic reaction occurred with a maximal velocity of about 2.2 mg/liter/min with murein sacculi as a substrate. The amino acid sequences of four proteolytic peptides showed no identity with known sequences in the data bank. With Mlt38, the number of proteins in E. coli showing lytic transglycosylase activity rises to three.  相似文献   

2.
The localization of the major autolytic enzyme, the soluble lytic transglycosylase, in the different cell compartments of Escherichia coli was investigated by immunoelectron microscopy. Ultrathin sections were labeled with a specific antiserum against purified soluble lytic transglycosylase, and the antibody-enzyme complexes were visualized with colloidal protein A-gold. A preferential localization of the lytic transglycosylase in the envelope was observed, with only 20 to 30% of the enzyme left in the cytoplasm. Most of the enzyme associated with the cell wall was tightly bound to the murein sacculus. Sacculi prepared by boiling of cells in 4% sodium dodecyl sulfate could be immunolabeled with the specific antiserum, indicating a surprisingly strong interaction of the lytic transglycosylase with murein. The enzyme-substrate complex could be reconstituted in vitro by incubating pronase-treated, protein-free murein sacculi with purified lytic transglycosylase at 0 degrees C. Titration of sacculi with increasing amounts of enzyme indicated a limiting number of binding sites for about 1,000 molecules of enzyme per sacculus. Ruptured murein sacculi obtained after penicillin treatment revealed that the enzyme is exclusively bound to the outer surface of the sacculus. This finding is discussed in the light of recent evidence suggesting that the murein of E. coli might be a structure of more than one layer expanding by inside-to-outside growth of patches of murein.  相似文献   

3.
A deletion in the structural gene for the soluble lytic transglycosylase, the predominant murein hydrolase in the soluble fraction of Escherichia coli, has been constructed. The mutant grows normally but exhibits increased sensitivity toward mecillinam, a beta-lactam specific for penicillin-binding protein 2. In the presence of furazlocillin or other beta-lactams with a specificity for penicillin-binding protein 3 which normally cause filamentation, bulges were formed prior to rapid bacteriolysis. Similar morphological alterations are known to develop in wild type E. coli cells when furazlocillin is combined with bulgecin, an antibiotic of unusual glucosaminyl structure. It turned out that bulgecin specifically inhibits the Sl-transglycosylase in a noncompetitive manner. Since bulgecin shows some structural analogy to the murein subunits we postulate that the soluble lytic transglycosylase, in addition to its active site, has a recognition site for specific murein structures. The possibility of an allosteric modulation of the activity of the enzyme by changes in the structure of the murein sacculus is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Lysates of induced E. coli (lambda) lysogens contain two enzymes acting on murein: endopeptidase and murein transglycosylase. The transglycosylase was separated from the endopeptidase and purified to homogeneity. Its bacteriolytic activity was 200-fold higher than of hen egg lysozyme. The bacteriolytic activity of the lysate depends on the presence of the enzyme. The endopeptidase alone not lyse the cells, but it enhances the extent of lysis. The properties of the transglycosylase (molecular weight 17 500, pH optimum at 6.6, inactivation by Zn2+), show that it is entirely different from the bacterial enzyme of the same specificity described by others. Data are presented, which suggest that this enzyme is the phage lambda R-gene product.  相似文献   

5.
Membrane-Bound Lytic Endotransglycosylase in Escherichia coli   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The gene for a novel endotype membrane-bound lytic transglycosylase, emtA, was mapped at 26.7 min of the E. coli chromosome. EmtA is a lipoprotein with an apparent molecular mass of 22 kDa. Overexpression of the emtA gene did not result in bacteriolysis in vivo, but the enzyme was shown to hydrolyze glycan strands isolated from murein by amidase treatment. The formation of tetra- and hexasaccharides, but no disaccharides, reflects the endospecificity of the enzyme. The products are characterized by the presence of 1,6-anhydromuramic acid, indicating a lytic transglycosylase reaction mechanism. EmtA may function as a formatting enzyme that trims the nascent murein strands produced by the murein synthesis machinery into proper sizes, or it may be involved in the formation of tightly controlled minor holes in the murein sacculus to facilitate the export of bulky compounds across the murein barrier.  相似文献   

6.
In addition to the soluble lytic transglycosylase, a murein-metabolizing enzyme with a molecular mass of 70 kDa (Slt70), Escherichia coli possesses a second lytic transglycosylase, which has been described as a membrane-bound lytic transglycosylase (Mlt; 35 kDa; EC 3.2.1.-). The mlt gene, which supposedly encodes Mlt, was cloned, and the complete nucleotide sequence was determined. The open reading frame, identified on a 1.7-kb SalI-PstI fragment, codes for a protein of 323 amino acids (M(r) = 37,410). Two transmembrane helices and one membrane-associated helix were predicted in the N-terminal half of the protein. Lysine and arginine residues represent up to 15% of the amino acids, resulting in a calculated isoelectric point of 10.0. The deduced primary structure did not show significant sequence similarity to Slt70 from E. coli. High-level expression of the presumed mlt gene was not paralleled by an increase in murein hydrolase activity. To clarify the identity of the second transglycosylase, we purified an enzyme with the specificity of a transglycosylase from an E. coli slt deletion strain. The completely soluble transglycosylase, with a molecular mass of approximately 35 kDa, was designated Slt35. Its determined 26 N-terminal amino acids showed similarity to a segment in the middle of the Slt70 primary structure. Polyclonal anti-Mlt antibodies, which had been used for the isolation of the mlt gene, were found to cross-react with Mlt as well as with Slt35, suggesting that the previously described Mlt preparation was contaminated with Slt35. We conclude that the second transglycosylase of E. coli is not a membrane-bound protein but rather is a soluble protein.  相似文献   

7.
Two different species of murein transglycosylase in Escherichia coli.   总被引:14,自引:11,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
We demonstrated that Escherichia coli murein transglycosylase exists in two forms. After mechanical disruption of the cells, one form was found in the soluble fraction and the other, in the cell envelope. The two enzymes differed with respect to molecular weight, isoelectric point, solubility in aqueous buffers, and to some extent in their requirements for maximal catalytic activity. The molecular weight of the membrane-bound transglycosylase (35,000) was half that of the soluble enzyme. Whether the high-molecular-weight soluble protein is a precursor of the membrane-bound enzyme species remains to be elucidated.  相似文献   

8.
Abstract Two lytic transglycosylases, releasing 1,6-anhydromuropeptides from murein sacculi are present in a mutant deleted for the soluble lytic transglycosylase 70 (Slt70). Thus, there are three different lytic transglycosylases in Escherichia coli . One of the remaining enzymes is soluble and one is a membrane protein that can be solubilized by 2% Triton X-100 in 0.5 M NaCl. Both enzymes are exo-muramidases. Only the membrane enzyme, but not the soluble ones, hydrolyses isolated murein glycan strands (poly-GlcNAc-MurNAc). While the soluble enzymes are inhibited by the muropeptide TetraTriLysArg(dianhydro), the membrane enzyme is not. The antibiotic bulgecin that inhibits Slt70 does not inhibit the lytic transglycosylases present in the slt70 deletion mutant.  相似文献   

9.
The soluble lytic transglycosylase (Slt) of Escherichia coli is known to be a powerful murein hydrolase in vitro. It is shown here to act as an autolysin in vivo as well. Rapid autolysis of Slt overproducing cells was induced by protein biosynthesis inhibitors, which also block the fomration of guanosine-5'-diphosphate-3'-diphosphate (ppGpp). When amino acid starvation was used to inhibit protein synthesis, autolysis was suppressed in relA+ but not in relA- cells. These findings indicate that the stringent control modulates the enzymatic activity of the soluble lytic transglycosylase in vivo.  相似文献   

10.
Minicells from Escherichia coli P678-54 are refractory towards procedures known to induce bacteriolysis of DNA-containing E. coli cells. Although still engaged in murein synthesis, minicells could not be lysed by penicillin G. Likewise, endogenous overproduction of the cloned soluble lytic transglycosylase, the predominant murein hydrolytic activity in E. coli, failed to lyse minicells. Furthermore, induction of the phage MS2 lysis protein, a hydrophobic protein assumed to trigger the autolytic system of the host, did not result in bacteriolysis. It is concluded that the murein hydrolases present in minicells are under a tight cellular control.  相似文献   

11.
Enlargement of the stress-bearing murein sacculus of bacteria depends on the coordinated interaction of murein synthases and hydrolases. To understand the mechanism of interaction of these two classes of proteins affinity chromatography and surface plasmon resonance (SPR) studies were performed. The membrane-bound lytic transglycosylase MltA when covalently linked to CNBr-activated Sepharose specifically retained the penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs) 1B, 1C, 2, and 3 from a crude Triton X-100 membrane extract of Escherichia coli. In the presence of periplasmic proteins also PBP1A was specifically bound. At least five different non-PBPs showed specificity for MltA-Sepharose. The amino-terminal amino acid sequence of one of these proteins could be obtained, and the corresponding gene was mapped at 40 min on the E. coli genome. This MltA-interacting protein, named MipA, in addition binds to PBP1B, a bifunctional murein transglycosylase/transpeptidase. SPR studies with PBP1B immobilized to ampicillin-coated sensor chips showed an oligomerization of PBP1B that may indicate a dimerization. Simultaneous application of MipA and MltA onto a PBP1B sensor chip surface resulted in the formation of a trimeric complex. The dissociation constant was determined to be about 10(-6) M. The formation of a complex between a murein polymerase (PBP1B) and a murein hydrolase (MltA) in the presence of MipA represents a first step in a reconstitution of the hypothetical murein-synthesizing holoenzyme, postulated to be responsible for controlled growth of the stress-bearing sacculus of E. coli.  相似文献   

12.
Penicillin-binding protein 1B (PBP1B) of Escherichia coli is a bifunctional murein synthase containing both a transpeptidase domain and a transglycosylase domain. The protein is present in three forms (alpha, beta, and gamma) which differ in the length of their N-terminal cytoplasmic region. Expression plasmids allowing the production of native PBP1B or of PBP1B variants with an inactive transpeptidase or transglycosylase domain or both were constructed. The inactive domains contained a single amino acid exchange in an essential active-site residue. Overproduction of the inactive PBP1B variants, but not of the active proteins, caused lysis of wild-type cells. The cells became tolerant to lysis by inactive PBP1B at a pH of 5.0, which is similar to the known tolerance for penicillin-induced lysis under acid pH conditions. Lysis was also reduced in mutant strains lacking several murein hydrolases. In particular, a strain devoid of activity of all known lytic transglycosylases was virtually tolerant, indicating that mainly the lytic transglycosylases are responsible for the observed lysis effect. A possible structural interaction between PBP1B and murein hydrolases in vivo by the formation of a multienzyme complex is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The predicted catalytic glutamate residue for transglycosylase activity of bacteriophage T7 gp16 is not essential for phage growth, but is shown to be beneficial during infection of Escherichia coli cells grown to high cell density, conditions in which murein is more highly cross-linked. In the absence of the putative transglycosylase, internalization of the phage genome is significantly delayed during infection. The lytic transglycosylase motif of gp16 is essential for phage growth at temperatures below 20 degrees C, indicating that these growth conditions also lead to increased cross-linking of peptidoglycan. Overexpression of sltY, E. coli soluble lytic transglycosylase, partially complements the defect in infection of mutant phage particles, allowing them to infect at higher efficiencies. Conversely, an sltY deletion increases the latent period of wild-type phage.  相似文献   

14.
All proteins of Escherichia coli that covalently bind penicillin have been cloned except for the penicillin-binding protein (PBP) 1C. For a detailed understanding of the mode of action of beta-lactam antibiotics, cloning of the gene encoding PBP1C was of major importance. Therefore, the structural gene was identified in the E. coli genomic lambda library of Kohara and subcloned, and PBP1C was characterized biochemically. PBP1C is a close homologue to the bifunctional transpeptidases/transglycosylases PBP1A and PBP1B and likewise shows murein polymerizing activity, which can be blocked by the transglycosylase inhibitor moenomycin. Covalently linked to activated Sepharose, PBP1C specifically retained PBP1B and the transpeptidases PBP2 and -3 in addition to the murein hydrolase MltA. The specific interaction with these proteins suggests that PBP1C is assembled into a multienzyme complex consisting of both murein polymerases and hydrolases. Overexpression of PBP1C does not support growth of a PBP1A(ts)/PBP1B double mutant at the restrictive temperature, and PBP1C does not bind to the same variety of penicillin derivatives as PBPs 1A and 1B. Deletion of PBP1C resulted in an altered mode of murein synthesis. It is suggested that PBP1C functions in vivo as a transglycosylase only.  相似文献   

15.
The LysM domain is a widespread protein module. It was originally identified in enzymes that degrade bacterial cell walls but is also present in many other bacterial proteins. Several proteins that contain the domain, such as Staphylococcal IgG binding proteins and Escherichia coli intimin, are involved in bacterial pathogenesis. LysM domains are also found in some eukaryotic proteins, apparently as a result of horizontal gene transfer from bacteria. The available evidence suggests that the LysM domain is a general peptidoglycan-binding module. We have determined the structure of this domain from E. coli membrane-bound lytic murein transglycosylase D. The LysM domain has a betaalphaalphabeta secondary structure with the two helices packing onto the same side of an anti- parallel beta sheet. The structure shows no similarity to other bacterial cell surface domains. A potential binding site in a shallow groove on surface of the protein has been identified.  相似文献   

16.
Murein hydrolase activities were analyzed in synchronized cultures of Escherichia coli B/r. Cell wall-bound murein hydrolase activities, including the penicillin-sensitive endopeptidase, increased discontinuously during the cell cycle and showed maximum activity at a cell age of 30 to 35 min (generation time, 43 min). Maximum activity was observed at the same time that the rate of cell wall synthesis reached its maximum. These oscillations depended on the termination of replication: no increase in hydrolase activity was found if deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis was inhibited at an early time in the life cycle. In contrast, the activity of another murein hydrolase that was not tightly bound to the membrane (transglycosylase) increased exponentially with time, even when deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis was inhibited.  相似文献   

17.
The penicillin-binding proteins PBP 1A and 1Bs are the essential murein polymerases of Escherichia coli. Purification of these membrane-bound bifunctional transglycosylase-transpeptidases was a major obstacle in studying the details of both enzymatic reactions. Here we describe a simple, highly specific affinity chromatography method that takes advantage of the availability of the specific inhibitor of the transglycosylase site moenomycin A in order to enrich PBP 1A and 1Bs in one step from crude membrane preparations. Separation of PBP 1A from PBP 1Bs is achieved in a second step employing cation exchange chromatography yielding enzymatically active native murein polymerases.  相似文献   

18.
Leung AK  Duewel HS  Honek JF  Berghuis AM 《Biochemistry》2001,40(19):5665-5673
The three-dimensional structure of the lytic transglycosylase from bacteriophage lambda, also known as bacteriophage lambda lysozyme, complexed to the hexasaccharide inhibitor, hexa-N-acetylchitohexaose, has been determined by X-ray crystallography at 2.6 A resolution. The unit cell contains two molecules of the lytic transglycosylase with two hexasaccharides bound. Each enzyme molecule is found to interact with four N-acetylglucosamine units from one hexasaccharide (subsites A-D) and two N-acetylglucosamine units from the second hexasaccharide (subsites E and F), resulting in all six subsites of the active site of this enzyme being filled. This crystallographic structure, therefore, represents the first example of a lysozyme in which all subsites are occupied, and detailed protein-oligosaccharide interactions are now available for this bacteriophage lytic transglycosylase. Examination of the active site furthermore reveals that of the two residues that have been implicated in the reaction mechanism of most other c-type lysozymes (Glu35 and Asp52 in hen egg white lysozyme), only a homologous Glu residue is present. The lambda lytic transglycosylase is therefore functionally closely related to the Escherichia coli Slt70 and Slt35 lytic transglycosylases and goose egg white lysozyme which also lack the catalytic aspartic acid.  相似文献   

19.
During diaminopimelic acid starvation of Escherichia coli W7, a large fraction of the preexisting murein cross-links are opened by murein endopeptidase and the resulting uncross-linked material is degraded. This is reflected morphologically in a general loss of rigidity of the murein sacculus long before lysis occurs. In growing cells, a dynamic situation is demonstrable. When cells whose murein sacculi are uniformly labeled with [14C]diaminopimelic acid were chased with unlabeled DAP, a significant, rapid shift of [14C]diaminopimelic acid from the donor to the acceptor half of dimers was observed. The shift can be explained by the presence of about 100 separate sites where new murein strands were being inserted between old radioactive strands of murein. Thus, the gradual loss of rigidity of the murein sacculus as endopeptidase continues to function during starvation of E. coli W7 suggests an even distribution of the active endopeptidases. This is consistent with the kinetic data which suggest that endopeptidase, along with murein synthetase and transpeptidase, acts at about 100 distinct sites to elongate the murein sacculus.  相似文献   

20.
On the basis of the published N-terminal amino acid sequence of the soluble lytic transglycosylase 35 (Slt35) of Escherichia coli, an open reading frame (ORF) was cloned from the 60.8 min region of the E. coli chromosome. The nucleotide sequence of the ORF, containing a putative lipoprotein-processing site, was shown by [3H]-palmitate labelling to encode a lipoprotein with an apparent molecular mass of 36 kDa. A larger protein, presumably the prolipoprotein form, accumulated in the presence of globomycin. Over-expression of the gene, designated mltB (for membrane-bound lytic transglycosylase B), caused a 55-fold increase in murein hydrolase activity in the membrane fraction and resulted in rapid cell lysis. After membrane fractionation by sucrose-density-gradient centrifugation, most of the induced enzyme activity was present in the outer and intermediate membrane fractions. Murein hydrolase activity in the soluble fraction of a homogenate of cells induced for MltB increased with time. This release of enzyme activity into the supernatant could be inhibited by the addition of the serine-protease inhibitor phenylmethyl-sulphonyl fluoride. It is concluded that the previously isolated Slt35 protein is a proteolytic degradation product of the murein hydrolase lipoprotein MltB. Surprisingly, a deletion in the mltB gene showed no obvious phenotype.  相似文献   

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