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1.
Cell cycle progression for the spherical microbe Staphylococcus aureus requires the coordinated synthesis and remodeling of peptidoglycan. The majority of these rearrangements takes place at the mid-cell, in a compartment designated the cross-wall. Secreted polypeptides endowed with a YSIRK-G/S signal peptide are directly delivered to the cross-wall compartment. One such YSIRK-containing protein is the murein hydrolase LytN. lytN mutations precipitate structural damage to the cross-wall and interfere with staphylococcal growth. Overexpression of lytN also affects growth and triggers rupture of the cross-wall. The lytN phenotype can be reversed by the controlled expression of lytN but not by adding purified LytN to staphylococcal cultures. LytN harbors LysM and CHAP domains, the latter of which functions as both an N-acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine amidase and D-alanyl-glycine endopeptidase. Thus, LytN secretion into the cross-wall promotes peptidoglycan separation and completion of the staphylococcal cell cycle.  相似文献   

2.
Autolysin-like enzymes appear to be responsible for cell separation in Agmenellum quadruplicatum. Mutants that are impaired in cell separation and grow as chains exhibit reduced cell lytic activity. Lysozyme, extracted autolysin, and antibiotics that affect peptidoglycan synthesis phenotypically suppress chain formation. Various aspects of the regulation of the cell separation process were also examined. Studies involving antibiotic inhibitors of macromolecular synthesis and general growth inhibitors provided no evidence for the active regulation of the cell separation process during the latter portion of the division cycle. Evidence was obtained, however, for the partial restriction of peptidogly-can hydrolysis by unknown secondary modifications. The thin electron-dense layer of peptidoglycan along the sides of cells was much more resistant to hydrolysis by egg-white lysozyme than was the septum between daughter cells. The middle portion of the septum was more sensitive than was the layer immediately adjacent to the cytoplasmic membrane. Under conditions that would not osmotically stabilize spheroplasts, lysozyme facilitates rapid cell separation in chain-forming mutants with little leakage of cellular protein or loss of viability.  相似文献   

3.
Synchronized, slowly growing (TD = 70 to 80 min) cultures were used to study several wall-associated parameters during the cell cycle: rate of peptidoglycan synthesis, septation, and cellular autolytic activity. The rate of peptidoglycan synthesis per cell declined during most of the period of chromosome replication (C), but increased during the latter part of C and into the period between chromosome termination and cell division (D). An increase in cellular septation was correlated with the increased rate of peptidoglycan synthesis. Cellular autolytic capacity increased during the early portion of C, reached a maximum late in C or early in D, and declined during D. Inhibition of DNA synthesis during C prevented the decline in autolytic capacity at the end of the cell cycle, caused a slight reduction in the rate of peptidoglycan synthesis, delayed but did not prevent septation, and prevented the impending cell division by inhibiting cell separation. Inhibition of DNA synthesis during D did not prevent the increase in autolytic capacity during the next C phase, but, once again, prevented the decline at the end of the subsequent cycle. Thus, increased autolytic capacity at the beginning of the cell cycle did not seem to be related to chromosome initiation, whereas decreased autolytic capacity at the end of the cell cycle seemed to be related to chromosome termination. The data presented are consistent with the role of autolytic enzyme activity in the previously proposed model for cell division of S. faecium (G.D. Shockman et al., Ann. N.Y Acad. Sci. 235:161-197, 1974).  相似文献   

4.
D Gally  K Bray    S Cooper 《Journal of bacteriology》1993,175(10):3121-3130
A modified procedure for determining the pattern of peptidoglycan synthesis during the division cycle has allowed the measurement of the rate of side wall synthesis during the division cycle without the contribution due to pole formation. As predicted by a model proposing that the surface growth of the cell is regulated by mass increase, we find a decrease in side wall synthesis in the latter half of the division cycle. This supports the proposal that, upon invagination, pole growth accommodates a significant proportion of the increasing cell mass and that residual side wall growth occurs in response to the residual mass increase not accommodated by pole volume. The observed side wall synthesis patterns support the proposal that mass increase is a major, and possibly sole, regulator of bacterial surface increase. Membrane synthesis during the division cycle of the gram-negative, rod-shaped bacteria Escherichia coli and Salmonella typhimurium has also been measured with similar methods. The rate of membrane synthesis--measured by incorporation of radioactive glycerol or palmitate relative to simultaneous labeling with radioactive leucine--exhibits the same pattern as peptidoglycan synthesis. The results are compatible with a model of cell surface growth containing the following elements. (i) During the period of the division cycle prior to invagination, growth of the cell occurs predominantly in the side wall and the cell grows only in length. (ii) When invagination begins, pole growth accommodates some cytoplasmic increase, leading to a concomitant decrease in side wall synthesis. (iii) Surface synthesis increases relative to mass synthesis during the last part of the division cycle because of pole formation. It is proposed here that membrane synthesis passively follows the pattern of peptidoglycan synthesis during the division cycle.  相似文献   

5.
The peptidoglycan of all four colonial types of a number of strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae constituted 1 to 2% of the dry weight of the cell. The chemical composition of cell types examined was similar with molar ratios of 1:1:2:1:1 for muramic acid, glucosamine, alanine, glutamic acid, and diaminopimelic acid, respectively. Ninety-six percent of the mass of the peptidoglycan was composed of these compounds. A lipoprotein analogous to that observed in Escherichia coli was not detected. The chain length of the glycan varied from 80 to 110 disaccharide units. The peptide contained equimolar amounts of D- and L-alanine. The rate of turnover of peptidoglycan in strain RD5 was 50% per generation. Turnover proceeded without a lag and followed first-order kinetics.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract A resistant mutant with vancomycin MIC of 100 μg/ml was isolated relatively easily through step pressure in the laboratory from a Staphylococcus aureus strain with initial MIC of 1.5 μg/ml for the antibiotic. Upon addition of vancomycin (50 μg/ml) to the growth medium mass increase of the culture and peptidoglycan synthesis continued but cell division (daughter cell separation), cell wall turnover and autolysis were inhibited, resulting in the production of multicellular clumps of bacteria. Parallel with the increase of culture density, the concentration of vancomycin measured both by biological activity and by HPLC gradually declined in the culture medium. Cell division and wall turnover of the culture resumed with the production of cells of normal morphology at the time when the concentration of the drug in the medium decreased below 0.5–1.0 μg/ml. There was no detectable change in the antibiotic concentration in the culture medium during growth of a vancomycin-resistant ( vanA -positive) strain of Enterococcus faecium and an intrinsically vancomycin-resistant strain of Leuconostoc . The vancomycin-resistant staphylococcal mutant gave no signal with the vanA or vanB DNA probes and contained no detectable d-lactate terminating cell wall precursors. The biochemical mechanism and clinical significance of such glycopeptide-resistant mutants remains to be established.  相似文献   

7.
The bacterial cell wall heteropolymer peptidoglycan is not a static structure as it is constantly being made and recycled throughout the bacterium's life cycle. This turnover of peptidoglycan is a highly coordinated event involving a complement of autolytic enzymes that include those with specificity for either the carbohydrate or the peptide linkages of peptidoglycan. One major class of these autolysins are the N-acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine amidases which cleave the amide linkage between the stem peptides and the lactyl moiety of muramoyl residues. They are required in the periplasm for cell separation during division and in both the periplasm and cytoplasm to trim soluble released PG fragments during turnover for recycling. The gene encoding N-acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine amidase B in Pseudomonas aeruginosa was cloned and over-expressed in Escherichia coli. The recombinant protein with a C-terminal His-tag was purified to apparent homogeneity by a combination of affinity and cation-exchange chromatographies using Ni(2+)NTA-agarose and Source S, respectively. Four separate assays involving zymography, light scattering, HPLC and MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry were used to confirm the activity of the protein as an N-acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine amidase.  相似文献   

8.
Bacterial cells are protected by an exoskeleton, the stabilizing and shape-maintaining cell wall, consisting of the complex macromolecule peptidoglycan. In view of its function, it could be assumed that the cell wall is a static structure. In truth, however, it is steadily broken down by peptidoglycan-cleaving enzymes during cell growth. In this process, named cell wall turnover, in one generation up to half of the preexisting peptidoglycan of a bacterial cell is released from the wall. This would result in a massive loss of cell material, if turnover products were not be taken up and recovered. Indeed, in the Gram-negative model organism Escherichia coli, peptidoglycan recovery has been recognized as a complex pathway, named cell wall recycling. It involves about a dozen dedicated recycling enzymes that convey cell wall turnover products to peptidoglycan synthesis or energy pathways. Whether Gram-positive bacteria also recover their cell wall is currently questioned. Given the much larger portion of peptidoglycan in the cell wall of Gram-positive bacteria, however, recovery of the wall material would provide an even greater benefit in these organisms compared to Gram-negatives. Consistently, in many Gram-positives, orthologs of recycling enzymes were identified, indicating that the cell wall may also be recycled in these organisms. This mini-review provides a compilation of information about cell wall turnover and recycling in Gram-positive bacteria during cell growth and division, including recent findings relating to muropeptide recovery in Bacillus subtilis and Clostridium acetobutylicum from our group. Furthermore, the impact of cell wall turnover and recycling on biotechnological processes is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
In the rod-shaped bacterium Bacillus subtilis, new polar surfaces arise at division through the centripetal synthesis of a centrally located cross-wall. Subsequently, the cross-wall, analogous to a flat annulus, is converted into two inner layers of polar wall as the daughter cells separate. The junction of polar and cylindrical wall is marked by the presence of raised tears or wall bands formed by the splitting apart of the cross-wall at its base. New polar wall formed in this manner accounts for about 15% of the total surface area. The sequence of pole formation has been simulated by means of a generalized conic section based upon the mathematical rotation of a parabola about its longitudinal axis. Four basic measurements describe the stages of pole formation with reference to polar surface area: the equatorial diameter at the wall bands (Dmax), the division furrow (Dmin), the horizontal distance (h) from the centre of the cross-wall to Dmax and the curvature of the nascent polar surfaces. These four parameters were found to yield a close fit to measurements of polar size and shape derived from electron micrographs of cell poles in sectioned organisms. Calculations of pole curvature suggest that both the initial separation of the cross-wall and separation of the daughter cells may occur very rapidly.  相似文献   

10.
The rate of turnover of peptidoglycan in exponentially growing cultures of Bacillus subtilis was observed to be sensitive to extracellular protease. In protease-deficient mutants the rates of cell wall turnover were greater than that of wild-type strain 168, whereas hyperprotease-producing strains exhibited decreased rates of peptidoglycan turnover. The rate of peptidogylcan turnover in a protease-deficient strain was decreased when the mutant was grown in the presence of a hyperprotease-producing strain. The addition of phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, a serine protease inhibitor, to cultures of hyperprotease-producing strains increased their rates of cell wall turnover. Isolated cell walls of all protease mutants contained autolysin levels equal to or greater than that of wild-type strain 168. The presence of filaments, or cells with incomplete septa, was observed in hyperprotease-producing strains or when a protease-deficient strain was grown in the presence of subtilisin. The results suggest that the turnover of cell walls in B. subtilis may be regulated by extracellular proteases.  相似文献   

11.
Escherichia coli Div 124(ts) is a conditional-lethal cell division mutant formed from a cross between a mutant that produces polar anucleated minicells and a temperature-sensitive cell division mutant affected in a stage of cross-wall synthesis. Under permissive growth temperature (30 C), Div 124(ts) grows and produces normal progeny cells and anucleated minicells from its polar ends. When transferred to nonpermissive growth temperature (42 C), growth and macromolecular synthesis continue, but cell division and minicell formation are inhibited. Growth at 42 C results in formation of filamentous cells showing some constrictions along the length of the filaments. Return of the filaments from 42 to 30 C results in cell division and minicell formation in association with the constrictions and other areas along the length of the filaments. This gives rise to a "necklace-type" array of cells and minicells. Recovery of cell division is observed after a lag and is followed by a burst in cell division and finally by a return to the normal growth characteristic of 30 C cultures. Recovery of cell division takes place in the presence of chloramphenicol or nalidixic acid when these are added at the time of shift from 42 to 30 C, and indicates that a division potential for filament fragmentation is accumulated while the cells are at 42 C. This division potential is used for the production of both minicells and cells of normal length. The conditional-lethal temperature sensitive mutation controls a step(s) in cross-wall synthesis common to cell division and minicell formation.  相似文献   

12.
The rates of synthesis of peptidoglycan and protein during the division cycle of Salmonella typhimurium have been measured by using the membrane elution technique and differentially labeled diaminopimelic acid and leucine. The cells were labeled during unperturbed exponential growth and then bound to a nitrocellulose membrane by filtration. Newborn cells were eluted from the membrane with fresh medium. The radioactivity in the newborn cells in successive fractions was determined. As the cells are eluted from the membrane as a function of their cell cycle age at the time of labeling, the rate of incorporation of the different radioactive compounds as a function of cell cycle age can be determined. During the first part of the division cycle, the ratio of the rates of protein and peptidoglycan synthesis was constant. During the latter part of the division cycle, there was an increase in the rate of peptidoglycan synthesis relative to the rate of protein synthesis. These results support a simple, bipartite model of cell surface increase in rod-shaped cells. Before the start of constriction, the cell surface increased only by cylindrical extension. After cell constriction started, the cell surface increased by both cylinder and pole growth. The increase in surface area was partitioned between the cylinder and the pole so that the volume of the cell increased exponentially. No variation in cell density occurred because the increase in surface allowed a continuous exponential increase in cell volume that accommodated the exponential increase in cell mass. Protein was synthesized exponentially during the division cycle. The rate of cell surface increase was described by a complex equation which is neither linear nor exponential.  相似文献   

13.
The rates of synthesis of peptidoglycan and protein during the division cycle of Escherichia coli were measured by the membrane elution technique using cells differentially labelled with N-acetylglucosamine and leucine. During the first part of the division cycle the ratio of the rates of protein and peptidoglycan synthesis was constant. The rate of peptidoglycan synthesis, relative to the rate of protein synthesis, increased during the latter part of the division cycle. These results support a simple, bipartite model of cell surface increase in rod-shaped cells. Prior to the start of constriction the cell surface increases only by lateral wall extension. After cell constriction starts, the cell surface increases by both lateral wall and pole growth. The increase in surface area is partitioned between the lateral wall and the pole so that the volume of the cell increases exponentially. No variation in cell density occurs, because the increase in surface allows a continuous exponential increase in cell volume that accommodates the exponential increase in cell mass. The results are consistent with the constant density of the growing cell and the surface stress model for the regulation of cell surface synthesis. In addition, the elution pattern suggests that the membrane elution method does work by having the cells effectively bound to the membrane by their poles.  相似文献   

14.
The peptidoglycan of a number of strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Escherichia coli turned over during exponential growth as monitored by the loss of radioactivity (supplied as [14C]glucosamine) from SDS-insoluble material. However, no turnover of the peptide side chains of E. coli peptidoglycan was observed (monitored by diamino[3H]pimelic acid) even though turnover of glycan material was occurring. Turnover rates of 9 to 15% per generation were recorded for all the N. gonorrhoeae strains studied except for the autolytic variant RD5 which showed a higher rate of turnover (20 to 26% per generation). In contrast to previous interpretations, these rates of turnover were not affected by benzylpenicillin, unless sufficient antibiotic was present to affect culture turbidity, when lysis occurred. Examination of the fragments (monomer, dimer and their O-acetylated counterparts, and oligomers) produced by Chalaropsis B muramidase treatment of prelabelled peptidoglycan revealed that no fraction of the peptidoglycan was immune from turnover. However, peptidoglycan pulse-labelled for only 10 min did not show immediate turnover. The lapse of time before turnover commenced was strain dependent, with a maximum value of 1.5 generations. This work confirms that the peptidoglycan of N. gonorrhoeae undergoes a period of maturation and suggests that only mature peptidoglycan turns over.  相似文献   

15.
Electron micrographs obtained after shadow-preparation of the cross-walls of cyanobacteria belonging to the genus Spirulina showed that the walls have a perfect sectorial pleat, its size in different species being related to the magnitude of their trichome pitch. Further, shadow-preparation caused a decrease in diameter of the cells of Spirulina platensis of 40%, with a 10% extra shrinkage of the diameter of the cross-wall. Both phenomena no doubt reflect certain material properties of the peptidoglycan layer which is responsible for the inherent rigidity of the cell envelope, and also constitutes the cross-wall. Probably, these material properties determine both the in vivo helical shape and the in vitro occurrence of the overlap in Spirulina cross-walls, and also allow for flexibility and variability in shape of the organism as a whole.Four hypotheses are put forward to explain the observed phenomena; on the basis of mechanical considerations it is most likely that the pleat in the cross-wall as observed in vitro must be ascribed to anisotropic shrinkage upon dehydration during shadow-preparation of the cross-walls. This anisotropy might be due to the polysaccharide chains of the peptidoglycan layer running in the circumferential direction and the peptide side-chains running in the radial direction. With this hypothesis the difference between the diameters in vitro of the cell envelope and the cross-wall can also be accounted for, within an error of 1·2%.  相似文献   

16.
Bacterial peptidoglycan (murein) hydrolases   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Most bacteria have multiple peptidoglycan hydrolases capable of cleaving covalent bonds in peptidoglycan sacculi or its fragments. An overview of the different classes of peptidoglycan hydrolases and their cleavage sites is provided. The physiological functions of these enzymes include the regulation of cell wall growth, the turnover of peptidoglycan during growth, the separation of daughter cells during cell division and autolysis. Specialized hydrolases enlarge the pores in the peptidoglycan for the assembly of large trans-envelope complexes (pili, flagella, secretion systems), or they specifically cleave peptidoglycan during sporulation or spore germination. Moreover, peptidoglycan hydrolases are involved in lysis phenomena such as fratricide or developmental lysis occurring in bacterial populations. We will also review the current view on the regulation of autolysins and on the role of cytoplasm hydrolases in peptidoglycan recycling and induction of beta-lactamase.  相似文献   

17.
Autolysin-defective pneumococci continue to synthesize both peptidoglycan and teichoic acid polymers (Fischer and Tomasz, J. Bacteriol. 157:507-513, 1984). Most of these peptidoglycan polymers are released into the surrounding medium, and a smaller portion becomes attached to the preexisting cell wall. We report here studies on the degree of cross-linking, teichoic acid substitution, and chemical composition of these peptidoglycan polymers and compare them with normal cell walls. peptidoglycan chains released from the penicillin-treated pneumococci contained no attached teichoic acids. The released peptidoglycan was hydrolyzed by M1 muramidase; over 90% of this material adsorbed to vancomycin-Sepharose and behaved like disaccharide-peptide monomers during chromatography, indicating that the released peptidoglycan contained un-cross-linked stem peptides, most of which carried the carboxy-terminal D-alanyl-D-alanine. The N-terminal residue of the released peptidoglycan was alanine, with only a minor contribution from lysine. In addition to the usual stem peptide components of pneumococcal cell walls (alanine, lysine, and glutamic acid), chemical analysis revealed the presence of significant amounts of serine, aspartate, and glycine and a high amount of alanine and glutamate as well. We suggest that these latter amino acids and the excess alanine and glutamate are present as interpeptide bridges. Heterogeneity of these was suggested by the observation that digestion of the released peptidoglycan with the pneumococcal murein hydrolase (amidase) produced peptides that were resolved by ion-exchange chromatography into two distinct peaks; the more highly mobile of these was enriched with glycine and aspartate. The peptidoglycan chains that became attached to the preexisting cell wall in the presence of penicillin contained fewer peptide cross-links and proportionally fewer attached teichoic acids than did their normal counterparts. The normal cell wall was heavily cross-linked, and the cross-linked peptides were distributed equally between the teichoic acid-linked and teichoic acid-free fragments.  相似文献   

18.
Flexibacter FS-1, a gram-negative gliding bacterium was grown in liquid culture as long (over 100-mum) filaments. The filaments possessed a triple-track wall which resembled that found in other gram-negative bacteria. Although phase-contrast microscopy indicated that the long filaments were nonseptate, electron microscopy revealed three or four septa along the length of each filament. The septa contained lysozyme-sensitive, electron-opaque material, presumed to be peptidoglycan, sandwiched between cell membranes. The outer triple track wall was not part of the septum. Mesosomes were seen in various areas of the cell and frequently were observed attached to septa in different stages of completion. Studies of the organism in slide culture revealed that individual filaments grew in an exponential fashion and divided in the middle despite the long length and multiseptate condition. When the temperature of a liquid culture growing exponentially with a generation time of 90 minutes was shifted from 30 to 35 C, the filaments fragmented into three or four shorter cells within 120 min. The short cells continued to grow exponentially at 35 C at approximately the same rate as at 30 C. When the culture was shifted back to 30 C, the cells immediately stopped dividing and began to elongate. After a period of 2 to 3 hr, cell division resumed. It is suggested that the shift-up in temperature induced the completion of the cross wall (centripetal growth of the triple-track wall) and cell separation at the sites of previously formed septa, whereas the shift-down in temperature caused a transient inhibition of cross-wall formation but not of growth. Fragmentation was inhibited by sodium azide but took place despite the inhibition of protein synthesis by chloramphenicol or the inhibition of deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis by mitomycin C.  相似文献   

19.
Vegetative cells of Myxococcus xanthus (strain FB) were induced to form myxospores by the glycerol induction technique. Several structural changes took place in the peptidoglycan during myxospore formation. The percent of the peptidoglycan comprised of monomer (disaccharide peptide) decreased from about 20% to approximately 7%. The proportion of the total diaminopimelic acid possessing a free amino group decreased about 11%. A carbohydrate containing only glucose was found to be bound, possibly covalently, to the vegetative cell and myxospore peptidoglycan. The amount of carbohydrate relative to peptidoglycan decreased by two-thirds during myxospore formation. None of the above changes in the peptidoglycan were observed in a mutant (strain GNI) of M. xanthus which was unable to convert to myxospores when incubated in the glycerol induction medium, or in the parental wild type (FB) when it was incubated in induction medium lacking the myxospore inducer, glycerol.  相似文献   

20.
Cells of eukaryotic or prokaryotic origin express proteins with LysM domains that associate with the cell wall envelope of bacteria. The molecular properties that enable LysM domains to interact with microbial cell walls are not yet established. Staphylococcus aureus, a spherical microbe, secretes two murein hydrolases with LysM domains, Sle1 and LytN. We show here that the LysM domains of Sle1 and LytN direct murein hydrolases to the staphylococcal envelope in the vicinity of the cross-wall, the mid-cell compartment for peptidoglycan synthesis. LysM domains associate with the repeating disaccharide β-N-acetylmuramic acid, (1→4)-β-N-acetylglucosamine of staphylococcal peptidoglycan. Modification of N-acetylmuramic acid with wall teichoic acid, a ribitol-phosphate polymer tethered to murein linkage units, prevents the LysM domain from binding to peptidoglycan. The localization of LytN and Sle1 to the cross-wall is abolished in staphylococcal tagO mutants, which are defective for wall teichoic acid synthesis. We propose a model whereby the LysM domain ensures septal localization of LytN and Sle1 followed by processive cleavage of peptidoglycan, thereby exposing new LysM binding sites in the cross-wall and separating bacterial cells.  相似文献   

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