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1.
Lipoteichoic acid (LTA) is an important cell wall component of Gram‐positive bacteria. In Staphylococcus aureus it consists of a polyglycerolphosphate‐chain that is retained within the membrane via a glycolipid. Using an immunofluorescence approach, we show here that the LTA polymer is not surface exposed in S. aureus, as it can only be detected after digestion of the peptidoglycan layer. S. aureus mutants lacking LTA are enlarged and show aberrant positioning of septa, suggesting a link between LTA synthesis and the cell division process. Using a bacterial two‐hybrid approach, we show that the three key LTA synthesis proteins, YpfP and LtaA, involved in glycolipid production, and LtaS, required for LTA backbone synthesis, interact with one another. All three proteins also interacted with numerous cell division and peptidoglycan synthesis proteins, suggesting the formation of a multi‐enzyme complex and providing further evidence for the co‐ordination of these processes. When assessed by fluorescence microscopy, YpfP and LtaA fluorescent protein fusions localized to the membrane while the LtaS enzyme accumulated at the cell division site. These data support a model whereby LTA backbone synthesis proceeds in S. aureus at the division site in co‐ordination with cell division, while glycolipid synthesis takes place throughout the membrane.  相似文献   

2.
Lipoteichoic acid (LTA) is an important cell wall polymer in Gram-positive bacteria. The enzyme responsible for polyglycerolphosphate LTA synthesis is LtaS, first described in Staphylococcus aureus. Four LtaS orthologues, LtaS(BS) , YfnI, YqgS and YvgJ, are present in Bacillus subtilis. Using an in vitro enzyme assay, we determined that all four proteins are Mn(2+) -dependent metal enzymes that use phosphatidylglycerol as a substrate. We show that LtaS(BS) , YfnI and YqgS can produce polymers, suggesting that these three proteins are bona-fide LTA synthases while YvgJ functions as an LTA primase, as indicated by the accumulation of a GroP-Glc(2) -DAG glycolipid. Western blot analysis of LTA produced by ltaS(BS) , yfnI, yqgS and yvgJ single, triple and the quadruple mutant, showed that LTA production was only abolished in the quadruple and the YvgJ-only expressing mutant. B. subtilis strains expressing YfnI in the absence of LtaS(BS) produced LTA of retarded mobility, presumably caused by an increase in chain length as suggested by a structural analysis of purified LTA. Taken together, the presented results indicate that the mere presence or absence of LTA cannot account for cell division and sporulation defects observed in the absence of individual enzymes and revealed an unexpected enzymatic interdependency of LtaS-type proteins in B. subtilis.  相似文献   

3.
Lipoteichoic acid (LTA) is a zwitterionic polymer found in the cell wall of many Gram-positive bacteria. A widespread and one of the best-studied forms of LTA consists of a polyglycerolphosphate (PGP) chain that is tethered to the membrane via a glycolipid anchor. In this review, we will summarize our current understanding of the enzymes involved in glycolipid and PGP backbone synthesis in a variety of different Gram-positive bacteria. The recent identification of key LTA synthesis proteins allowed the construction and analysis of mutant strains with defined defects in glycolipid or backbone synthesis. Using these strains, new information on the functions of LTA for bacterial growth, physiology and during developmental processes was gained and will be discussed. Furthermore, we will reintroduce the idea that LTA remains in close proximity to the bacterial membrane for its function during bacterial growth rather than as a surface-exposed structure.  相似文献   

4.
Lipoteichoic acid (LTA) is an important cell wall component of Gram-positive bacteria. The key enzyme responsible for polyglycerolphosphate lipoteichoic acid synthesis in the Gram-positive pathogen Staphylococcus aureus is the membrane-embedded lipoteichoic acid synthase enzyme, LtaS. It is presumed that LtaS hydrolyzes the glycerolphosphate head group of the membrane lipid phosphatidylglycerol (PG) and catalyzes the formation of the polyglycerolphosphate LTA backbone chain. Here we describe an in vitro assay for this new class of enzyme using PG with a fluorescently labeled fatty acid chain (NBD-PG) as the substrate and the recombinant soluble C-terminal enzymatic domain of LtaS (eLtaS). Thin-layer chromatography and mass spectrometry analysis of the lipid reaction products revealed that eLtaS is sufficient to cleave the glycerolphosphate head group from NBD-PG, resulting in the formation of NBD-diacylglycerol. An excess of soluble glycerolphosphate could not compete with the hydrolysis of the fluorescently labeled PG lipid substrate, in contrast to the addition of unlabeled PG. This indicates that the enzyme recognizes and binds other parts of the lipid substrate, besides the glycerolphosphate head group. Furthermore, eLtaS activity was Mn2+ ion dependent; Mg2+ and Ca2+ supported only weak enzyme activity. Addition of Zn2+ or EDTA inhibited enzyme activity even in the presence of Mn2+. The pH optimum of the enzyme was 6.5, characteristic for an enzyme that functions extracellularly. Lastly, we show that the in vitro assay can be used to study the enzyme activities of other members of the lipoteichoic acid synthase enzyme family.Lipoteichoic acid (LTA) is a crucial component of the cell wall envelope in Gram-positive bacteria. Diverse functions have been ascribed to LTA, including regulation of the activity of hydrolytic enzymes (4), an essential role in divalent cation homeostasis (2, 26, 37), and retention of noncovalently attached proteins within the cell wall envelope (20, 41). In addition, functions of LTA in host-pathogen interactions have been reported (44). d-Alanine modifications on LTA protect bacteria from killing by cationic antimicrobial peptides (36, 43) and are critical during the infection and colonization processes (1, 5, 10). On the other hand, LTA may also play a positive role for the host in wound healing, by preventing excessive inflammation (25).In the Gram-positive bacterial pathogen Staphylococcus aureus and in many other bacteria belonging to the Firmicutes, including Bacillus, Listeria, Streptococcus, Enterococcus, and Lactococcus spp., LTA is composed of a linear 1,3-linked polyglycerolphosphate backbone chain that is tethered via a glycolipid anchor to the bacterial membrane (6, 9). Recently, the staphylococcal protein LtaS was identified and shown to be responsible for polyglycerolphosphate LTA synthesis in vivo (14). An S. aureus strain depleted of LtaS is unable to synthesize LTA and shows severe growth and morphological defects (14); an S. aureus ltaS deletion strain is viable at 30°C only in a growth medium containing at least 1% NaCl or at higher temperatures at high salt (7.5%) or high sucrose (40%) concentrations (35). Taken together, these findings provide further evidence for the importance of this abundant cell envelope component for normal cell morphology and physiology.Pulse-chase experiments have provided strong biochemical evidence that the glycerolphosphate subunits of LTA are derived from the head group of the membrane lipid phosphatidylglycerol (PG) (7, 8, 12). A rapid and almost complete turnover of the nonacylated glycerolphosphate group of PG into LTA is observed in S. aureus and other Gram-positive bacteria that synthesize polyglycerolphosphate LTA (23, 24). It is assumed that the LtaS enzyme cleaves the head group of PG and uses this glycerolphosphate subunit to polymerize the LTA backbone chain.One or more LtaS-like enzymes are encoded in the genomes of Gram-positive bacteria that synthesize polyglycerolphosphate LTA (14). S. aureus LtaS and all other members of this enzyme family are predicted to contain five N-terminal transmembrane helices followed by an extracellular C-terminal enzymatic domain (eLtaS) (14, 29). The LtaS enzyme is processed in S. aureus, and the eLtaS domain is released into the culture supernatant as well as partially retained within the cell wall envelope (11, 29, 45). The crystal structure of the S. aureus eLtaS domain, alone and in a complex with soluble glycerolphosphate and the soluble domain of the Bacillus subtilis LtaS (LtaSBs) enzyme (YflE), identified a threonine as the catalytic residue. This is based on the location of the glycerolphosphate head group in the active site for S. aureus LtaS and on threonine phosphorylation in the B. subtilis enzyme structure (29, 37). Replacement of this threonine residue with an alanine renders the S. aureus enzyme inactive and unable to synthesize LTA in vivo (29). In addition, a Mn2+ ion was detected in the active center of the S. aureus LtaS structure, while the B. subtilis enzyme contained a Mg2+ ion.To provide insight into the enzymatic activity of the S. aureus lipoteichoic acid synthase enzyme, we developed an in vitro assay for this enzyme using purified recombinant eLtaS and fluorescently labeled PG as a substrate. Using thin-layer chromatography (TLC) and mass spectrometry analysis of the lipid reaction products, we show that eLtaS protein is sufficient to cleave the glycerolphosphate head group from NBD-PG, resulting in the formation of NBD-diacylglycerol (NBD-DAG). Furthermore, we provide experimental evidence that LtaS requires Mn2+ for enzyme activity, while Zn2+ inhibits enzyme function. Our results suggest that LtaS has a narrow substrate specificity, with PG serving as a substrate while phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), phosphatidylcholine (PC), and phosphatidylserine (PS) do not. Lastly, we show that this in vitro assay can be used to study the enzyme functions of other members of this protein family, such as the Listeria monocytogenes LTA synthase (LtaSLm) and LTA primase (LtaPLm) enzymes. This study is the first in vitro characterization of lipoteichoic acid synthase enzymes and an important first step towards the development of an assay to screen and identify enzyme-specific inhibitors for this new and important class of bacterial enzymes.  相似文献   

5.
Lipoteichoic acid (LTA) is a crucial cell envelope component in Gram-positive bacteria. In Staphylococcus aureus, the polyglycerolphosphate LTA molecule is synthesized by LtaS, a membrane-embedded enzyme with five N-terminal transmembrane helices (5TM domain) that are connected via a linker region to the C-terminal extracellular enzymatic domain (eLtaS). The LtaS enzyme is processed during bacterial growth, and the eLtaS domain is released from the bacterial membrane. Here we provide experimental evidence that the proteolytic cleavage following residues 215Ala-Leu-Ala217 is performed by the essential S. aureus signal peptidase SpsB, as depletion of spsB results in reduced LtaS processing. In addition, the introduction of a proline residue at the +1 position with respect to the cleavage site, a substitution known to inhibit signal peptidase-dependent cleavage, abolished LtaS processing at this site. It was further shown that the 5TM domain is crucial for enzyme function. The observation that the construction of hybrid proteins between two functional LtaS-type enzymes resulted in the production of proteins unable to synthesize LTA suggests that specific interactions between the 5TM and eLtaS domains are required for function. No enzyme activity was detected upon expression of the 5TM and eLtaS domains as separate fragments, indicating that the two domains cannot assemble postsynthesis to form a functional enzyme. Taken together, our data suggest that only the full-length LtaS enzyme is active in the LTA synthesis pathway and that the proteolytic cleavage step is used as a mechanism to irreversibly inactivate the enzyme.  相似文献   

6.
7.
8.
9.
Staphylococcus aureus lipoteichoic acid (LTA) is composed of a linear 1,3-linked polyglycerolphosphate chain and is tethered to the bacterial membrane by a glycolipid (diglucosyl-diacylglycerol [Glc2-DAG]). Glc2-DAG is synthesized in the bacterial cytoplasm by YpfP, a processive enzyme that transfers glucose to diacylglycerol (DAG), using UDP-glucose as its substrate. Here we present evidence that the S. aureus alpha-phosphoglucomutase (PgcA) and UTP:alpha-glucose 1-phosphate uridyltransferase (GtaB) homologs are required for the synthesis of Glc2-DAG. LtaA (lipoteichoic acid protein A), a predicted membrane permease whose structural gene is located in an operon with ypfP, is not involved in Glc2-DAG synthesis but is required for synthesis of glycolipid-anchored LTA. Our data suggest a model in which LtaA facilitates the transport of Glc2-DAG from the inner (cytoplasmic) leaflet to the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane, delivering Glc2-DAG as a substrate for LTA synthesis, thereby generating glycolipid-anchored LTA. Glycolipid anchoring of LTA appears to play an important role during infection, as S. aureus variants lacking ltaA display defects in the pathogenesis of animal infections.  相似文献   

10.
对单核细胞增多性李斯特菌(简称单增李斯特菌)lmo1711基因编码的氨基肽酶进行克隆表达与纯化,并研究该重组蛋白的体外酶学特性。首先通过生物信息学分析预测Lmo1711与氨基肽酶家族成员的亲缘关系及关键活性位点的保守性。利用SWISS-MODEL模拟预测该蛋白的空间结构;构建Lmo1711原核表达载体并转化入E.coli Rosetta中,诱导表达重组目的蛋白,并利用镍离子亲和层析方法纯化目的蛋白;以氨基酸-对硝基苯胺偶联物为底物,Lmo1711通过水解底物N端氨基酸残基产生游离对硝基苯胺单体,405 nm处检测吸光值对该产物进行检测从而分析Lmo1711的酶学特性。在此基础上系统研究Lmo1711对不同氨基酸残基底物的催化特异性,及不同金属离子对该酶活性的影响。经原核表达纯化获得49.3 kDa的重组Lmo1711蛋白,与预测分子量一致;生物信息学分析推测Lmo1711属于M29氨基肽酶家族,且存在保守关键氨基酸活性位点(Glu250、Glu316、His345、Tyr352、His378、Asp380);酶活分析显示,Lmo1711具有较强的氨基肽酶活性,针对不同底物的结合和催化能力差异较大,对亮氨酸残基的亲和程度最高;Lmo1711氨基肽酶活性具有金属离子依赖性,Co~(2+)、Cd~(2+)、Zn~(2+)等多种金属离子均能显著增强其活性,其中Co~(2+)的激活效应最显著。本试验首次发现并证实,单增李斯特菌Lmo1711属于M29氨基肽酶家族成员,具有较强的催化活性,且对金属离子具有不同程度的依赖性。  相似文献   

11.
Lipoteichoic acid from Listeria monocytogenes.   总被引:4,自引:1,他引:3  
A lipoteichoic acid (LTA) was extracted from Listeria monocytogenes (serotype 1) by phenol-water partition and isolated by gel-filtration chromatography. The LTA exhibited amphiphilic properties by changes in gel-filtration mobility in the presence of detergent buffers and after mild base hydrolysis. In a hemagglutination assay, Listeria LTA bound antibody prepared against a known LTA from Streptococcus spp. Listeria LTA inhibited the binding of anti-LTA antibody to a Lactobacillus LTA in a hemagglutination inhibition assay. The Listeria LTA contained glucose, galactose, fatty acids, glycerol, and phosphate with molar ratios of 0.05, 0.07, 0.21, 0.94, and 1.0 to phosphate, respectively. Adjacent glycerols were linked between the C-1 and C-3 positions by phosphodiesters (structural type 1). The average chain length was 19 +/- 2 (standard deviation) glycerol-phosphate repeating units. Approximately one glycosyl side chain was present per LTA molecule. The side chain was a galactose-containing disaccharide. The lipid portion of the LTA was a galactose- and glucose-containing glycolipid which may have been a phosphoglycolipid, but the structure was not confirmed. Major fatty acids of LTA and the glycolipid were 17:anteiso, 15:anteiso, 16:iso, 16:n, and 18:n. L. monocytogenes contained cell wall products typical of gram-positive bacteria which is in contrast to the reports by others of the presence of lipopolysaccharides from L. monocytogenes.  相似文献   

12.
We determined the chemical structure of lipoteichoic acid (LTA) from Lactobacillus gasseri JCM 1131T. The repeating unit was comprised of glycerolphosphate and 2-alanylglycerolphosphate. The glycolipid anchor was tetrahexosylglycerol with two or three acyl groups. To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of a tetrahexose structure in an LTA glycolipid anchor.  相似文献   

13.
Teichoic acids (TAs) are anionic polymers that constitute a major component of the cell wall in most Gram‐positive bacteria. Despite decades of study, their function has remained unclear. TAs are covalently linked either to the cell wall peptidoglycan (wall TA (WTA)) or to the membrane (lipo‐TA (LTA)). We have characterized the key enzyme of LTA synthesis in Bacillus subtilis, LTA synthase (LtaS). We show that LTA is needed for divalent cation homoeostasis and that its absence has severe effects on cell morphogenesis and cell division. Inactivation of both LTA and WTA is lethal and comparison of the individual mutants suggests that they have differentiated roles in elongation (WTA) and division (LTA). B. subtilis has four ltaS paralogues and we show how their roles are partially differentiated. Two paralogues have a redundant role in LTA synthesis during sporulation and their absence gives a novel absolute block in sporulation. The crystal structure of the extracytoplasmic part of LtaS, solved at 2.4‐Å resolution, reveals a phosphorylated threonine residue, which provides clues about the catalytic mechanism and identifies the active site of the enzyme.  相似文献   

14.
Listeria monocytogenes, a Gram-positive food-borne human pathogen, is able to grow at temperatures close to 0°C and is thus of great concern for the food industry. In this work, we investigated the physiological role of one DExD-box RNA helicase in Listeria monocytogenes. The RNA helicase Lmo1722 was required for optimal growth at low temperatures, whereas it was dispensable at 37°C. A Δlmo1722 strain was less motile due to downregulation of the major subunit of the flagellum, FlaA, caused by decreased flaA expression. By ribosomal fractionation experiments, it was observed that Lmo1722 was mainly associated with the 50S subunit of the ribosome. Absence of Lmo1722 decreased the fraction of 50S ribosomal subunits and mature 70S ribosomes and affected the processing of the 23S precursor rRNA. The ribosomal profile could be restored to wild-type levels in a Δlmo1722 strain expressing Lmo1722. Interestingly, the C-terminal part of Lmo1722 was redundant for low-temperature growth, motility, 23S rRNA processing, and appropriate ribosomal maturation. However, Lmo1722 lacking the C terminus showed a reduced affinity for the 50S and 70S fractions, suggesting that the C terminus is important for proper guidance of Lmo1722 to the 50S subunit. Taken together, our results show that the Listeria RNA helicase Lmo1722 is essential for growth at low temperatures, motility, and rRNA processing and is important for ribosomal maturation, being associated mainly with the 50S subunit of the ribosome.  相似文献   

15.
16.
The main aim of our study was to determine the physiological function of NagA enzyme in the Listeria monocytogenes cell. The primary structure of the murein of L. monocytogenes is very similar to that of Escherichia coli, the main differences being amidation of diaminopimelic acid and partial de-N-acetylation of glucosamine residues. NagA is needed for the deacetylation of N-acetyl-glucosamine-6 phosphate to glucosamine-6 phosphate and acetate. Analysis of the L. monocytogenes genome reveals the presence of two proteins with NagA domain, Lmo0956 and Lmo2108, which are cytoplasmic putative proteins. We introduced independent mutations into the structural genes for the two proteins. In-depth characterization of one of these mutants, MN1, deficient in protein Lmo0956 revealed strikingly altered cell morphology, strongly reduced cell wall murein content and decreased sensitivity to cell wall hydrolase, mutanolysin and peptide antibiotic, colistin. The gene products of operon 150, consisting of three genes: lmo0956, lmo0957, and lmo0958, are necessary for the cytosolic steps of the amino-sugar-recycling pathway. The cytoplasmic de-N-acetylase Lmo0956 of L. monocytogenes is required for cell wall peptidoglycan and teichoic acid biosynthesis and is also essential for bacterial cell growth, cell division, and sensitivity to cell wall hydrolases and peptide antibiotics.  相似文献   

17.
The dgkB gene is essential for the growth of Bacillus subtilis. It encodes a diacylglycerol (DG) kinase that converts DG to phosphatidic acid to reintroduce it into the phospholipid synthesis pathway. Repression of the dgkB gene placed under a regulatable promoter causes accumulation of DG and leads to lethality. DG is formed as a byproduct of the synthesis of lipoteichoic acid (LTA), a polyanionic component of the cell envelope. B. subtilis synthesizes LTA by polymerizing the glycerophosphate moiety of phosphatidylglycerol (PG) onto a glucolipid membrane anchor, and releasing the DG moiety of PG. B. subtilis has four genes homologous to Staphylococcus aureus ltaS, which encodes LTA synthase. Disruption of either or both of two genes, yflE and yfnI, whose products show higher homology with S. aureus LtaS among the four homologues, suppressed the lethality caused by dgkB repression. In cells with dgkB repression, DG was accumulated to 43 ± 3% of total lipids, about three times the content of wild type cells (13 ± 1%). Disruption of yfnI in the dgkB-repressed cells reduced the DG content to 15 ± 2%, but yflE-disruption did not (42 ± 1%); this was probably due to efficient LTA synthesis by YfnI in the yflE-disrupted cells. Further introduction of a disrupted allele of ugtP, encoding glucolipid synthase that consumes DG as a substrate, partially lowered the colony forming capacity in strains with yflE-disruption. A disrupted dgkB allele was successfully introduced into strains disrupted for either or both of yflE and yfnI, indicating that the essential gene dgkB is dispensable in mutants defective in LTA synthesis.  相似文献   

18.
Pathogenic bacteria have to cope with defence mechanisms mediated by adaptive and innate immunity of the host cells. Cationic antimicrobial peptides (CAMPs) represent one of the most effective components of the host innate immune response. Here we establish the function of Lmo1695, a member of the VirR-dependent virulence regulon, recently identified in Listeria monocytogenes. Lmo1695 encodes a membrane protein of 98 kDa with strong homology to the multiple peptide resistance factor (MprF) of Staphylococcus aureus. Like staphylococcal MprF, we found that Lmo1695 is involved in the synthesis of the membrane phospholipid lysylphosphatidylglycerol (L-PG). In addition, Lmo1695 is also essential for lysinylation of diphosphatidylglycerol (DPG), another phospholipid widely distributed in bacterial membranes. A Deltalmo1695 mutant lacking the lysinylated phospholipids was particularly susceptible to CAMPs of human and bacterial origin. The mutant strain infected both epithelial cells and macrophages only poorly and was attenuated for virulence when tested in a mouse model of infection. Lmo1695 is a member of a growing list of survival factors which enable growth of L. monocytogenes in different environments.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Lmo2 is a LIM-only protein involved in hematopoiesis and the development of T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. Here we report backbone and side chain NMR assignments for an engineered intramolecular complex of the C-terminal LIM domain from Lmo2 tethered to the LIM interaction domain (LID) from LIM domain binding protein 1 (Ldb1).  相似文献   

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