4.7 Article

A New Class of Cell Wall-Recycling L,D-Carboxypeptidase Determines β-Lactam Susceptibility and Morphogenesis in Acinetobacter baumannii

期刊

MBIO
卷 12, 期 6, 页码 -

出版社

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/mBio.02786-21

关键词

Acinetobacter; L,D-carboxypeptidase; antibiotic resistance; cell wall recycling; morphology; peptidoglycan

资金

  1. Northeastern University startup funds
  2. NIAID/NIH [R01AI162996]
  3. Swedish Research Council
  4. Laboratory of Molecular Infection Medicine Sweden (MIMS)
  5. Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation (KAW)
  6. Kempe Foundation
  7. Umea University

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Acinetobacter baumannii lacks canonical enzymes for envelope construction and instead contains poorly annotated proteins, including ElsL, a novel cytoplasmic L,D-carboxypeptidase critical for cell wall recycling and integrity. Absence of ElsL weakens the cell envelope and impairs various cellular processes, highlighting its pleiotropic influence on envelope physiology. This discovery reveals an unappreciated mechanism of cell wall recycling, with implications for potential treatment strategies targeting bacterial envelopes.
The hospital-acquired pathogen Acinetobacter baumannii possesses a complex cell envelope that is key to its multidrug resistance and virulence. The bacterium, however, lacks many canonical enzymes that build the envelope in model organisms. Instead, A. baumannii contains a number of poorly annotated proteins that may allow alternative mechanisms of envelope biogenesis. We demonstrated previously that one of these unusual proteins, ElsL, is required for maintaining a characteristic short rod shape and for withstanding antibiotics that attack the septal cell wall. Curiously, ElsL is composed of a leaderless YkuD-family domain usually found in secreted, cell wall-modifying L,D-transpeptidases (LDTs). Here, we show that, rather than being an LDT, ElsL is actually a new class of cytoplasmic L,D-carboxypeptidase (LDC) that provides a critical step in cell wall recycling previously thought to be missing from A. baumannii. Absence of ElsL impairs cell wall integrity, morphology, and intrinsic resistance due to buildup of murein tetrapeptide precursors, toxicity of which is bypassed by preventing muropeptide recycling. Multiple pathways in the cell become sites of vulnerability when ElsL is inactivated, including L,D-cross-link formation, cell division, and outer membrane lipid homoeostasis, reflecting its pleiotropic influence on envelope physiology. We thus reveal a novel class of cell wall-recycling LDC critical to growth and homeostasis of A. baumannii and likely many other bacteria. IMPORTANCE To grow efficiently, resist antibiotics, and control the immune response, bacteria recycle parts of their cell wall. A key step in the typical recycling pathway is the reuse of cell wall peptides by an enzyme known as an 0-carboweptidase (LDC). Acinetobacter baumannii, an urgent-threat pathogen causing drug-resistant sepsis in hospitals, was previously thought to lack this enzymatic activity due to absence of a known LDC homolog. Here, we show that A. baumannii possesses this activity in the form of an enzyme class not previously associated with cell wall recycling. Absence of this protein intoxicates and weakens the A. baumannii cell envelope in multiple ways due to the accumulation of dead-end intermediates. Several other organisms of importance to health and disease encode homologs of the A. baumannii enzyme. This work thus reveals an unappreciated mechanism of cell wall recycling, manipulation of which may contribute to enhanced treatments targeting the bacterial envelope.

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