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1.
The periplasmic murein (peptidoglycan) sacculus is a giant macromolecule made of glycan strands cross-linked by short peptides completely surrounding the cytoplasmic membrane to protect the cell from lysis due to its internal osmotic pressure. More than 50 different muropeptides are released from the sacculus by treatment with a muramidase. Escherichia coli has six murein synthases which enlarge the sacculus by transglycosylation and transpeptidation of lipid II precursor. A set of twelve periplasmic murein hydrolases (autolysins) release murein fragments during cell growth and division. Recent data on the in vitro murein synthesis activities of the murein synthases and on the interactions between murein synthases, hydrolases and cell cycle related proteins are being summarized. There are different models for the architecture of murein and for the incorporation of new precursor into the sacculus. We present a model in which morphogenesis of the rod-shaped E. coli is driven by cytoskeleton elements competing for the control over the murein synthesis multi-enzyme complexes.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
The composition of the murein of Escherichia coli   总被引:36,自引:0,他引:36  
Escherichia coli murein, the polymer from which the shape-maintaining structure of the cell envelope is made, shows unexpected complexity. The separation of murein building blocks with high performance liquid chromatography reveals about 80 different types of muropeptides. Their behavior in high performance liquid chromatography and their chemical structure are described. The complexity of E. coli murein is due to the free combination of seven different types of side chains (L-Ala-D-Glu-R with R = -OH, -m-A2pm, -m-A2pm-D-Ala, -m-A2 pm-Gly, -m-A2pm-D-Ala-D-Ala, -m-A2pm-D-Ala-Gly, -m-A2pm-Lys-Arg) with two types of cross-bridges (D-Ala-m-A2pm, -m-A2pm-m-A2pm). The novel type of cross-bridge, A2pm-A2pm, contains an L,D-peptide bond, as shown by Edman degradation and chemical analysis of the reaction products. The A2pm-A2pm cross-bridge is assumed to play a role in the adaptation of the cross-linkage of murein to different growth conditions of the cell. The structural data of E. coli murein agree best with a model of a thin, however multilayered, murein sacculus.  相似文献   

4.
Höltje JV  Heidrich C 《Biochimie》2001,83(1):103-108
Multiple deletions in murein hydrolases revealed that predominantly amidases are responsible for cleavage of the septum during cell division. Endopeptidases and lytic transglycosylases seem also be involved. In the absence of these enzymes E. coli grows normally but forms chains of adhering cells. Surprisingly, mutants lacking up to eight different murein hydrolases still grow with almost unaffected growth rate. Therefore it is speculated that general enlargement of the murein sacculus may differ from cell division by using transferases rather than the two sets of hydrolytic and synthetic enzymes as seems to be the case for the constriction process. A model is presented that describes growth of the murein of both Gram-positive and -negative bacteria by the activity of murein transferases. It is speculated that enzymes exist that catalyze a transpeptidation of the pre-existing murein onto murein precursors or nascent murein by using the chemical energy present in peptide cross-bridges. Such enzymes would at the same time cleave bonds in the murein net and insert new material into the growing sacculus.  相似文献   

5.
Cells of Proteus mirabilis, synchronized by sucrose density gradient centrifugation, were grown in complex medium containing radioactive N-acetylglucosamine. At various times, labelled murein sacculi were isolated and digested with endo-N,O-acetylmuramidase from Chalaropsis. The murein fragments thus obtained were separated into disaccharide peptides as the monomeric subunits and into peptide-cross-linked subunits by gel filtration. The subunits were further differentiated into O-acetylated and non-O-acetylated species, and into subunits containing anhydro-N-acetylmuramic acid which were glycan chain terminators in the native sacculi. Quantification of the subunit species gave the following results. At specific times during the cell cycle, murein subunits were lost from the polymer and a transient decrease in cross-linkage was observed. The overall degree of cross-linkage in mature murein, i.e. the ratio of peptide-cross-linked subunits versus uncross-linked subunits, was 1.15 as determined by regression analysis. Anhydro-N-acetylmuramic-acid-containing murein subunits representing glycan chain terminators were found either peptide-cross-linked or uncross-linked as monomers. Since these two subunit species were recovered in a defined ratio of 1.6, mature murein consisted of at least two different types of glycan chains. On average, each chain contained 15.4 murein subunits. About 60% of the murein subunits in mature murein were O-acetylated and showed a higher degree of cross-linkage than the non-O-acetylated portion. Finally, following the composition of the sacculus during the cell cycle revealed a complex precursor-product relationship between non-O-acetylated and O-acetylated subunits during murein maturation. The data allowed us to deduce several features of the assembly process of murein sacculi.  相似文献   

6.
The periplasmic murein (peptidoglycan) sacculus is a giant macromolecule made of glycan strands cross-linked by short peptides completely surrounding the cytoplasmic membrane to protect the cell from lysis due to its internal osmotic pressure. More than 50 different muropeptides are released from the sacculus by treatment with a muramidase. Escherichia coli has six murein synthases which enlarge the sacculus by transglycosylation and transpeptidation of lipid II precursor. A set of twelve periplasmic murein hydrolases (autolysins) release murein fragments during cell growth and division. Recent data on the in vitro murein synthesis activities of the murein synthases and on the interactions between murein synthases, hydrolases and cell cycle related proteins are being summarized. There are different models for the architecture of murein and for the incorporation of new precursor into the sacculus. We present a model in which morphogenesis of the rod-shaped E. coli is driven by cytoskeleton elements competing for the control over the murein synthesis multi-enzyme complexes.  相似文献   

7.
Turnover of murein in oligopeptide permease-negative Escherichia coli cells appeared to be minimal or nonexistent. In one strain in which it was possible to measure turnover during the first generation of chase, it was found that the rate of turnover was constant throughout a chase of three generations. This result suggests that an "inside-to-outside" mode of growth of the sacculus does not occur in E. coli. Turnover, though minimal, was significantly higher from cells labeled uniformly than from cells labeled only in the lateral wall, suggesting that a significant portion of the observed turnover is related to cell separation. Actually, turnover only appeared to be minimal in opp mutant strains. Tripeptides were being released by turnover at a rate of about 50% per generation and then were efficiently recycled. This suggests that in addition to opp, a low-affinity uptake system for tripeptide derived from the sacculus may exist.  相似文献   

8.
In vivo studies on the attachment of lipoprotein to the murein (peptidoglycan) of Escherichia coli showed that it takes several generations of growth until the amount of lipoprotein on newly made murein is equilibrated. The technique used involves degradation of the sodium dodecyl sulfate-insoluble murein-lipoprotein complex (sacculus, rigid layer) with lysozyme and separation of the labeled products on paper. No lipoprotein was found on murein subunits incorporated during a pulse of [3H]diaminopimelate for 1 min in logarithmically growing cells at 37 C. Even after one doubling of the cell mass, only 4 to 8% of the labeled murein was isolated as bound to lipoprotein. With uniformly labeled murein, 30% remains bound to lipoprotein after lysozyme treatment, corresponding to three murein subunits. Therefore it can be concluded that during pulse labeling either no lipoprotein is incorporated into the newly synthesized murein or no murein subunits are inserted into existing murein around lipoprotein attachment sites. Longer pulse and pulse-chase experiments argue for the latter interpretation. It is therefore concluded that incorporation of murein subunits into the growing murein polymer is not at all a random process. Instead, quite large areas of murein, on which lipoprotein is situated, seem to be preserved. Under the influence of penicillin FL 1060 murein synthesis is 50% inhibited. The rate of lipoprotein attachment is less affected so that increasing amounts of lipoprotein become attached during spheroplast formation. By the time the stationary growth phase has been reached, the lipoprotein content of the murein has doubled. Diaminopimelate auxotrophic mutants require, in the presence of penicillin FL 1060, more diaminopimelate for full growth than in the absence of penicillin FL 1060. This finding and the fact that murein synthesis is always inhibited by 50% over a wide range of penicillin concentration (1 to 1,000 mug/ml) point to the inhibition of an enzymatic step of murein synthesis which can be partially bypassed by a second enzyme, less efficient but resistant to penicillin FL 1060.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
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   

11.
Morphogenesis of the rod-shaped Escherichia coli is determined by controlled growth of an exoskeleton made of murein (peptidoglycan). Recent insights in the growth strategy of the stress-bearing murein sacculus has contributed to our understanding of how the required concerted action of murein polymerizing and hydrolyzing enzymes is achieved. The proteins involved are coordinated by the formation of multienzyme complexes. In this review, we summarize the recent results on murein structure and metabolism. On the basis of these findings, we present a model that explains maintenance of the specific rod shape of E. coli.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Morphogenetic Aspects of Murein Structure and Biosynthesis   总被引:9,自引:5,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
The shape of Escherichia coli is fixed by the form of the sacculus. This sacculus is a macromolecule made up from the polymer murein. In an investigation of the possible factors determining the shape of the sacculus, we attempted to resolve between two fundamental alternatives. (i) Is the shape of the sacculus automatically fixed by its chemical composition? or (ii) does a special morphogenetic system exist which determines the shape of the sacculus? An analysis of sacculi from cells grown in poor and rich media and harvested at different stages of growth was made. Significant variations in the composition of murein were found, whereas the general shape of the cells remained unchanged. This finding stands opposed to the assumption of a strict correlation between chemistry and shape of the sacculus. The second alternative was investigated by attempting to change artificially the shape of the sacculus by modifying the form of the hypothetical morphogenetic system. Rod-shaped cells were converted into spherical spheroplasts which were subsequently allowed to reform a new spherical sacculus. In chemical composition this spherical sacculus was found to be indistinguishable from the rod-shaped sacculus. This finding is taken as evidence for the existence of a distinct morphogenetic apparatus in the cell wall whose form is reflected by the shape of the sacculus.  相似文献   

14.
N-acetylmuramyl-L-alanine amidases are widely distributed among bacteria. However, in Escherichia coli, only one periplasmic amidase has been described until now, which is suggested to play a role in murein recycling. Here, we report that three amidases, named AmiA, B and C, exist in E. coli and that they are involved in splitting of the murein septum during cell division. Moreover, the amidases were shown to act as powerful autolytic enzymes in the presence of antibiotics. Deletion mutants in amiA, B and C were growing in long chains of unseparated cells and displayed a tolerant response to the normally lytic combination of aztreonam and bulgecin. Isolated murein sacculi of these chain-forming mutants showed rings of thickened murein at the site of blocked septation. In vitro, these murein ring structures were digested more slowly by muramidases than the surrounding murein. In contrast, when treated with the amidase AmiC or the endopeptidase MepA, the rings disappeared, and gaps developed at these sites in the murein sacculi. These results are taken as evidence that highly stressed murein cross-bridges are concentrated at the site of blocked cell division, which, when cleaved, result in cracking of the sacculus at this site. As amidase deletion mutants accumulate trimeric and tetrameric cross-links in their murein, it is suggested that these structures mark the division site before cleavage of the septum.  相似文献   

15.
High-resolution autoradiography of thin sections of Escherichia coli cells whose murein was pulse-labeled with [3H]diaminopimelic acid after a period of diaminopimelic acid deprivation indicated that elongation of the murein sacculus occurs by a multisite (diffuse) process. Upon chasing, radioactivity in polar murein was stable, whereas radioactivity in cylindrical murein was reduced, indicating that diffuse intercalation of new murein occurred during cell elongation. Elongation and septation were shown to be overlapping processes.  相似文献   

16.
The first gene of a family of prokaryotic proteases with a specificity for L,D-configured peptide bonds has been identified in Escherichia coli. The gene named ldcA encodes a cytoplasmic L, D-carboxypeptidase, which releases the terminal D-alanine from L-alanyl-D-glutamyl-meso-diaminopimelyl-D-alanine containing turnover products of the cell wall polymer murein. This reaction turned out to be essential for survival, since disruption of the gene results in bacteriolysis during the stationary growth phase. Owing to a defect in muropeptide recycling the unusual murein precursor uridine 5'-pyrophosphoryl N-acetylmuramyl-tetrapeptide accumulates in the mutant. The dramatic decrease observed in overall cross-linkage of the murein is explained by the increased incorporation of tetrapeptide precursors. They can only function as acceptors and not as donors in the crucial cross-linking reaction. It is concluded that murein recycling is a promising target for novel antibacterial agents.  相似文献   

17.
Murein hydrolases cleave bonds in the bacterial exoskeleton, the murein (peptidoglycan) sacculus, a covalently closed bag-shaped polymer made of glycan strands that are crosslinked by peptides. During growth and division of a bacterial cell, these enzymes are involved in the controlled metabolism of the murein sacculus. Murein hydrolases are believed to function as pacemaker enzymes for the enlargement of the murein sacculus since opening of bonds in the murein net is needed to allow the insertion of new subunits into the sacculus. Furthermore, they are responsible for splitting the septum during cell division. The murein turnover products that are released during growth are further degraded by these hydrolases to products that can be recycled by the biosynthetic enzymes. As potentially suicidal (autolytic) enzymes, murein hydrolases must be strictly controlled by the cell, Inhibition of murein synthesis, for example by penicillin, triggers an unbalanced action of murein hydrolases causing bacteriolysis. InEscherichia coli, 14 different murein hydrolases have so far been identified, includingN-acetylmuramyl-l-alanine amidases,dd-endopeptidases,dd-carboxypeptidases,ld-carboxypeptidases, andN-acetylglucosaminidases. In addition lysozyme-like enzymes, called “lytic transglycosylases,” produce (1→6)-anhydromuramic acid derivatives by an intramolecular transglycosylation reaction.  相似文献   

18.
Bacterial peptidoglycan (PG or murein) is a single, large, covalently cross‐linked macromolecule and forms a mesh‐like sacculus that completely encases the cytoplasmic membrane. Hence, growth of a bacterial cell is intimately coupled to expansion of murein sacculus and requires cleavage of pre‐existing cross‐links for incorporation of new murein material. Although, conceptualized nearly five decades ago, the mechanism of such essential murein cleavage activity has not been studied so far. Here, we identify three new murein hydrolytic enzymes in Escherichia coli, two (Spr and YdhO) belonging to the NlpC/P60 peptidase superfamily and the third (YebA) to the lysostaphin family of proteins that cleave peptide cross‐bridges between glycan chains. We show that these hydrolases are redundantly essential for bacterial growth and viability as a conditional mutant lacking all the three enzymes is unable to incorporate new murein and undergoes rapid lysis upon shift to restrictive conditions. Our results indicate the step of cross‐link cleavage as essential for enlargement of the murein sacculus, rendering it a novel target for development of antibacterial therapeutic agents.  相似文献   

19.
To withstand the high intracellular pressure, the cell wall of most bacteria is stabilized by a unique cross-linked biopolymer called murein or peptidoglycan. It is made of glycan strands [poly-(GlcNAc-MurNAc)], which are linked by short peptides to form a covalently closed net. Completely surrounding the cell, the murein represents a kind of bacterial exoskeleton known as the murein sacculus. Not only does the sacculus endow bacteria with mechanical stability, but in addition it maintains the specific shape of the cell. Enlargement and division of the murein sacculus is a prerequisite for growth of the bacterium. Two groups of enzymes, hydrolases and synthases, have to cooperate to allow the insertion of new subunits into the murein net. The action of these enzymes must be well coordinated to guarantee growth of the stress-bearing sacculus without risking bacteriolysis. Protein-protein interaction studies suggest that this is accomplished by the formation of a multienzyme complex, a murein-synthesizing machinery combining murein hydrolases and synthases. Enlargement of both the multilayered murein of gram-positive and the thin, single-layered murein of gram-negative bacteria seems to follow an inside-to-outside growth strategy. New material is hooked in a relaxed state underneath the stress-bearing sacculus before it becomes inserted upon cleavage of covalent bonds in the layer(s) under tension. A model is presented that postulates that maintenance of bacterial shape is achieved by the enzyme complex copying the preexisting murein sacculus that plays the role of a template.  相似文献   

20.
Recycling of murein by Escherichia coli.   总被引:21,自引:15,他引:6  
The tripeptide (L-Ala-D-Glu-meso-diaminopimelic acid [A2pm]), tetrapeptide (L-Ala-D-Glu-A2pm-D-Ala), and dipeptide (A2pm-D-Ala) which are shed by Escherichia coli from the murein sacculus were found to be reused by the cells to synthesize murein. The tripeptide was used directly, without degradation, to form UDP-N-acetylmuramyl-L-Ala-D-Glu-A2pm. The tetrapeptide lost its carboxy-terminal D-Ala, apparently in the periplasm, before being used. The dipeptide was degraded to D-Ala and A2pm before uptake.  相似文献   

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