4.5 Article

Research Article Molecular basis for recognition of the Group A Carbohydrate backbone by the PlyC streptococcal bacteriophage endolysin

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 478, Issue 12, Pages 2385-2397

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/BCJ20210158

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Royal Society [109357/Z/15/Z]
  2. University of Dundee Wellcome Trust Funds [105606/Z/14/Z]
  3. Tenovus Scotland Large Research Grant [T17/17]
  4. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
  5. Rockefeller University laboratory funds
  6. NIH from the NIDCR [R01 DE028916]
  7. NIAID [R01 AI143690]
  8. Wellcome
  9. Wellcome Trust [105606/Z/14/Z, 109357/Z/15/Z] Funding Source: Wellcome Trust

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Endolysins are phage proteins that interact with bacterial cell walls through enzymatically active domains and cell wall binding domains, with the ability to lyse Gram-positive bacterial cells. They offer a potential alternative to traditional antibiotics, but research on the nature of CBDs and binding epitopes is still limited.
Endolysins are peptidoglycan (PG) hydrolases that function as part of the bacteriophage (phage) lytic system to release progeny phage at the end of a replication cycle. Notably, endolysins alone can produce lysis without phage infection, which offers an attractive alternative to traditional antibiotics. Endolysins from phage that infect Gram-positive bacterial hosts contain at least one enzymatically active domain (EAD) responsible for hydrolysis of PG bonds and a cell wall binding domain (CBD) that binds a cell wall epitope, such as a surface carbohydrate, providing some degree of specificity for the endolysin. Whilst the EADs typically cluster into conserved mechanistic classes with welldefined active sites, relatively little is known about the nature of the CBDs and only a few binding epitopes for CBDs have been elucidated. The major cell wall components of many streptococci are the polysaccharides that contain the polyrhamnose (pRha) backbone modified with species-specific and serotype-specific glycosyl side chains. In this report, using molecular genetics, microscopy, flow cytometry and lytic activity assays, we demonstrate the interaction of PlyCB, the CBD subunit of the streptococcal PlyC endolysin, with the pRha backbone of the cell wall polysaccharides, Group A Carbohydrate (GAC) and serotype c-specific carbohydrate (SCC) expressed by the Group A Streptococcus and Streptococcus mutans, respectively.

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