4.8 Article

Biochemical reconstitution defines new functions for membrane-bound glycosidases in assembly of the bacterial cell wall

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2103740118

Keywords

peptidoglycan; glycosidase; muramidase; lytic transglycosylase

Funding

  1. Taplin Funds for Discovery Program
  2. NIH [R01 AI139011, R01 AI148752, T32 GM007753, F30 AI156972, R35 GM131767]
  3. Funai Overseas Scholarship

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The peptidoglycan cell wall is essential for the survival of bacteria. Membranebound proteins MpgA and MpgB in Streptococcus pneumoniae are important in maintaining cell wall integrity. Both MpgA and MpgB are muramidases, cutting nascent peptidoglycan at different positions along the sugar backbone.
The peptidoglycan cell wall is a macromolecular structure that encases bacteria and is essential for their survival. Proper assembly of the cell wall requires peptidoglycan synthases as well as membranebound cleavage enzymes that control where new peptidoglycan is made and inserted. Previous studies have shown that two membranebound proteins in Streptococcus pneumoniae, here named MpgA and MpgB, are important in maintaining cell wall integrity. MpgA was predicted to be a lytic transglycosylase based on its homology to Escherichia coli MltG, while the enzymatic activity of MpgB was unclear. Using nascent peptidoglycan substrates synthesized in vitro from the peptidoglycan precursor Lipid II, we report that both MpgA and MpgB are muramidases. We show that replacing a single amino acid in E. coli MltG with the corresponding amino acid from MpgA results in muramidase activity, allowing us to predict from the presence of this amino acid that other putative lytic transglycosylases actually function as muramidases. Strikingly, we report that MpgA and MpgB cut nascent peptidoglycan at different positions along the sugar backbone relative to the reducing end, with MpgA producing much longer peptidoglycan oligomers. We show that the cleavage site selectivity of MpgA is controlled by the LysM-like subdomain, which is required for its full functionality in cells. We propose that MltG's ability to complement the loss of MpgA in S. pneumoniae despite performing different cleavage chemistry is because it can cleave nascent peptidoglycan at the same distance from the lipid anchor.

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