4.8 Article

The LpoA activator is required to stimulate the peptidoglycan polymerase activity of its cognate cell wall synthase PBP1a

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2108894118|1of9

Keywords

peptidoglycan; penicillin; lipoprotein; cell wall; outer membrane

Funding

  1. NIH [R01AI083365, F31AI122363]
  2. Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Bacterial cells are surrounded by cell walls made of the heteropolymer peptidoglycan (PG), with penicillin-binding proteins (aPBPs) playing key roles in building the PG network. Research has shown that the lipoprotein LpoA has a significant impact on the activity of PBP1a in cells and is crucial for glycan synthesis activity.
A cell wall made of the heteropolymer peptidoglycan (PG) surrounds most bacterial cells. This essential surface layer is required to prevent lysis from internal osmotic pressure. The class A penicillin-binding proteins (aPBPs) play key roles in building the PG network. These bifunctional enzymes possess both PG glycosyltransferase (PGT) and transpeptidase (TP) activity to polymerize the wall glycans and crosslink them, respectively. In Escherichia coli and other gram-negative bacteria, aPBP function is dependent on outer membrane lipoproteins. The lipoprotein LpoA activates PBP1a and LpoB promotes PBP1b activity. In a purified system, the major effect of LpoA on PBP1a is TP stimulation. However, the relevance of this activation to the cellular function of LpoA has remained unclear. To better understand why PBP1a requires LpoA for its activity in cells, we identified variants of PBP1a from E. coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa that function in the absence of the lipoprotein. The changes resulting in LpoA bypass map to the PGT domain and the linker region between the two catalytic domains. Purification of the E. coli variants showed that they are hyperactivated for PGT but not TP activity. Furthermore, in vivo analysis found that LpoA is necessary for the glycan synthesis activity of PBP1a in cells. Thus, our results reveal that LpoA exerts a much greater control over the cellular activity of PBP1a than previously appreciated. It not only modulates PG cross-linking but is also required for its cognate synthase to make PG glycans in the first place.

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