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1.
J Biol Chem ; 299(9): 105076, 2023 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37481208

ABSTRACT

The bacterial cell wall consists of a three-dimensional peptidoglycan layer, composed of peptides linked to the sugars N-acetylmuramic acid (MurNAc) and GlcNAc. Unlike other bacteria, the pathogenic Tannerella forsythia, a member of the red complex group of bacteria associated with the late stages of periodontitis, lacks biosynthetic pathways for MurNAc production and therefore obtains MurNAc from the environment. Sugar kinases play a crucial role in the MurNAc recycling process, activating the sugar molecules by phosphorylation. In this study, we present the first crystal structures of a MurNAc kinase, called murein sugar kinase (MurK), in its unbound state as well as in complexes with the ATP analog ß-γ-methylene adenosine triphosphate (AMP-PCP) and with MurNAc. We also determined the crystal structures of K1058, a paralogous MurNAc kinase of T. forsythia, in its unbound state and in complex with MurNAc. We identified the active site and residues crucial for MurNAc specificity as the less bulky side chains of S133, P134, and L135, which enlarge the binding cavity for the lactyl ether group, unlike the glutamate or histidine residues present in structural homologs. In establishing the apparent kinetic parameters for both enzymes, we showed a comparable affinity for MurNAc (Km 180 µM and 30 µM for MurK and K1058, respectively), with MurK being over two hundred times faster than K1058 (Vmax 80 and 0.34 µmol min-1 mg-1, respectively). These data might support a structure-guided approach to development of inhibitory MurNAc analogs for pathogen MurK enzymes.


Subject(s)
Models, Molecular , Muramic Acids , Phosphotransferases , Tannerella forsythia , Muramic Acids/metabolism , Peptidoglycan/metabolism , Tannerella forsythia/enzymology , Phosphotransferases/chemistry , Phosphotransferases/metabolism , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Crystallography, X-Ray , Catalytic Domain , Enzyme Activation
2.
Poult Sci ; 102(6): 102619, 2023 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37068354

ABSTRACT

The objective of these studies was to evaluate the impact of dietary muramidase (MUR) on endogenous amino acids (AA) losses and digestibility of nutrients in wheat and corn-based broiler diets. In experiment 1, the effect of dietary MUR on the flow of endogenous AA (EAA) at the jejunum and terminal ileum of broilers were assessed using either the nitrogen (N) free diet method (NFD) or the highly digestible protein diet method (HDP; 100 g casein/kg diet). Sialic acid and muramic acid concentrations were measured in the jejunal content. In experiment 2, a 2x2x2 factorial arrangement of treatments with 2 base grains (wheat or corn), with low or high metabolizable energy (ME) levels, and without or with MUR supplementation was implemented. All diets contained phytase, xylanase, and cellulase. Apparent ileal digestibility (AID) of dry matter (DM), protein (CP), amino acids (AA), crude fat, and energy, as well as the apparent total tract metabolizability (ATTM) of DM, CP, and gross energy (GE) were determined. The standardized ileal digestibility (SID) of AA was obtained by correcting AID values for basal ileal EAA obtained from chicks fed with NFD or HDP in experiment 1, jejunal EAA flow of all AA was higher (P < 0.001) compared to the ileum, but this effect was method dependent. Jejunal, but not ileal, EAA flow measured with HDP was higher compared to NFD, as well as sialic acid (P < 0.001) and muramic acid (P < 0.004) concentrations. Muramidase inclusion had no effect on basal EAA flow, independently of the segment and the method used. In experiment 2, dietary MUR supplementation increased the AID of CP (P < 0.05), all AA, and tended (P = 0.07) to increase the AID of GE, independently of the cereal type used. However, ATTM of DM and GE, but not CP, increased with MUR inclusion compared with the control treatments, especially in wheat and low ME diets (P < 0.05). In conclusion, MUR supplementation improved AID of CP and AA without affecting EAA losses and increases energy utilization.


Subject(s)
Triticum , Zea mays , Animals , Triticum/chemistry , Zea mays/chemistry , Muramidase/metabolism , Chickens/metabolism , Amino Acids/metabolism , Muramic Acids/metabolism , Muramic Acids/pharmacology , Digestion , Diet/veterinary , Ileum/metabolism , Animal Feed/analysis , Sialic Acids/metabolism , Sialic Acids/pharmacology , Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena
3.
Biochemistry ; 62(8): 1337-1341, 2023 04 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36971350

ABSTRACT

Characterization of the turnover mechanism of bisubstrate enzymes is a tedious task. Molecular tools for studying the enzymatic mechanism are not readily available for all enzymes (e.g., radioactive substrates, substrate-competitive inhibitors, etc.). Wang and Mittermaier recently introduced two-dimensional isothermal titration calorimetry (2D-ITC) for determining the bisubstrate mechanism at high resolution while simultaneously quantifying the kinetic parameters for substrate turnover in a single reporter-free experiment. We demonstrate the utility of 2D-ITC in studying N-acetylmuramic acid/N-acetylglucosamine kinase (AmgK) from Pseudomonas aeruginosa. This enzyme is involved in cytoplasmic cell-wall-recycling events as a step in the peptidoglycan salvage pathway. Furthermore, AmgK phosphorylates N-acetylglucosamine and N-acetylmuramic acid, linking the recycling events to de novo cell-wall synthesis. We document in a 2D-ITC experiment that AmgK follows an ordered-sequential mechanism, where ATP binds first and ADP is released last. We also show that classical enzyme kinetic methods support the results of 2D-ITC and that 2D-ITC could overcome the shortcomings of these classical methodologies. We provide evidence for inhibition of AmgK by the catalytic product ADP, but not by the phosphorylated sugar product. These results provide a full kinetic characterization of the bacterial kinase AmgK. This work highlights 2D-ITC as a versatile tool for the mechanistic evaluation of bisubstrate enzymes, as an alternative for classical methods.


Subject(s)
Phosphotransferases (Alcohol Group Acceptor) , Pseudomonas aeruginosa , Phosphotransferases (Alcohol Group Acceptor)/metabolism , Muramic Acids/metabolism , Acetylglucosamine/metabolism , Kinetics
4.
Chemistry ; 28(43): e202200788, 2022 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35560956

ABSTRACT

The biosynthesis, breakdown, and modification of peptidoglycan (PG) play vital roles in both bacterial viability and in the response of human physiology to bacterial infection. Studies on PG biochemistry are hampered by the fact that PG is an inhomogeneous insoluble macromolecule. Chemical synthesis is therefore an important means to obtain PG fragments that may serve as enzyme substrates and elicitors of the human immune response. This review outlines the recent advances in the synthesis and biochemical studies of PG fragments, PG biosynthetic intermediates (such as Park's nucleotides and PG lipids), and PG breakdown products (such as muramyl dipeptides and anhydro-muramic acid-containing fragments). A rich variety of synthetic approaches has been applied to preparing such compounds since carbohydrate, peptide, and phospholipid chemical methodologies must all be applied.


Subject(s)
Muramic Acids , Peptidoglycan , Cell Wall/metabolism , Humans , Macromolecular Substances , Muramic Acids/chemistry , Muramic Acids/metabolism , Peptidoglycan/metabolism
5.
Curr Med Chem ; 29(7): 1293-1312, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34525907

ABSTRACT

The bacterial cell wall peptidoglycan (PG) is a dynamic structure that is constantly synthesized, re-modeled and degraded during bacterial division and growth. Postsynthetic modifications modulate the action of endogenous autolysis during PG lysis and remodeling for growth and sporulation, but also they are a mechanism used by pathogenic bacteria to evade the host innate immune system. Modifications of the glycan backbone are limited to the C-2 amine and C-6 hydroxyl moieties of either GlcNAc or MurNAc residues. This paper reviews the functional roles and properties of peptidoglycan de-Nacetylases (distinct PG GlcNAc and MurNAc deacetylases) and recent progress through genetic studies and biochemical characterization to elucidate their mechanism of action, 3D structures, substrate specificities and biological functions. Since they are virulence factors in pathogenic bacteria, peptidoglycan deacetylases are potential targets for the design of novel antimicrobial agents.


Subject(s)
Anti-Infective Agents , Peptidoglycan , Anti-Infective Agents/metabolism , Bacteria/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Cell Wall/chemistry , Muramic Acids/analysis , Muramic Acids/chemistry , Muramic Acids/metabolism , Peptidoglycan/metabolism
6.
Biochim Biophys Acta Proteins Proteom ; 1870(2): 140745, 2022 02 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34906734

ABSTRACT

Bacteriophage endolysins are crucial for progeny release at the end of the lytic cycle. Mycobacteriophage's genomes carry a lysin A essential gene, whose product cleaves the peptidoglycan (PG) layer and a lysin B, coding for an esterase, that cleaves the linkage between the mycolic acids and the arabinogalactan-PG complex. Lysin A mycobacteriophage proteins are highly modular and in gp29 (LysA) of phage TM4 three distinctive domains were identified. By bioinformatics analysis the central module was previously found to be similar to an amidase-2 domain family with an N-acetylmuramoyl -L-alanine amidase activity. We demonstrated experimentally that purified LysA is able to lyse a suspension of Micrococcus lysodeikticus and can promote cell lysis when expressed in E. coli and Mycobacterium smegmatis. After incubation of LysA with MDP (Muramyl dipeptide, N-acetyl-muramyl-L-alanyl-D-isoglutamine) we detected the presence of N-acetylmuramic acid (NAcMur) and L-Ala- D- isoGlutamine (L-Ala-D-isoGln) corroborating the proposed muramidase activity of this enzyme. This protein was stabilized at acidic pH in the presence of Zn consistent with the increase of the enzymatic activity under these conditions. By homology modeling, we predicted that the Zn ion is coordinated by His 226, His 335, and Asp 347 and we also identified the amino acid Glu 290 as the catalytic residue. LysA activity was completely abolished in derived mutants on these key residues, suggesting that the PG hydrolysis solely relies on the central domain of the protein.


Subject(s)
Endopeptidases/metabolism , Mycobacteriophages/metabolism , N-Acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine Amidase/metabolism , Peptidoglycan/metabolism , Viral Proteins/metabolism , Computational Biology/methods , Endopeptidases/chemistry , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Galactans , Hydrolysis , Mass Spectrometry/methods , Micrococcus/metabolism , Muramic Acids/metabolism , Mycobacterium smegmatis/metabolism , Viral Proteins/chemistry
7.
Nat Microbiol ; 6(12): 1583-1592, 2021 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34819646

ABSTRACT

Peptidoglycan-a mesh sac of glycans that are linked by peptides-is the main component of bacterial cell walls. Peptidoglycan provides structural strength, protects cells from osmotic pressure and contributes to shape. All bacterial glycans are repeating disaccharides of N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) ß-(1-4)-linked to N-acetylmuramic acid (MurNAc). Borrelia burgdorferi, the tick-borne Lyme disease pathogen, produces glycan chains in which MurNAc is occasionally replaced with an unknown sugar. Nuclear magnetic resonance, liquid chromatography-mass spectroscopy and genetic analyses show that B. burgdorferi produces glycans that contain GlcNAc-GlcNAc. This unusual disaccharide is chitobiose, a component of its chitinous tick vector. Mutant bacteria that are auxotrophic for chitobiose have altered morphology, reduced motility and cell envelope defects that probably result from producing peptidoglycan that is stiffer than that in wild-type bacteria. We propose that the peptidoglycan of B. burgdorferi probably evolved by adaptation to obligate parasitization of a tick vector, resulting in a biophysical cell-wall alteration to withstand the atypical torque associated with twisting motility.


Subject(s)
Borrelia burgdorferi/metabolism , Cell Wall/metabolism , Sugars/metabolism , Ticks/microbiology , Animals , Borrelia burgdorferi/genetics , Cell Wall/chemistry , Cell Wall/genetics , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Muramic Acids/metabolism , Peptidoglycan/metabolism , Sugars/chemistry , Ticks/metabolism
8.
PLoS Genet ; 17(9): e1009791, 2021 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34570752

ABSTRACT

Spore-forming pathogens like Clostridioides difficile depend on germination to initiate infection. During gemination, spores must degrade their cortex layer, which is a thick, protective layer of modified peptidoglycan. Cortex degradation depends on the presence of the spore-specific peptidoglycan modification, muramic-∂-lactam (MAL), which is specifically recognized by cortex lytic enzymes. In C. difficile, MAL production depends on the CwlD amidase and its binding partner, the GerS lipoprotein. To gain insight into how GerS regulates CwlD activity, we solved the crystal structure of the CwlD:GerS complex. In this structure, a GerS homodimer is bound to two CwlD monomers such that the CwlD active sites are exposed. Although CwlD structurally resembles amidase_3 family members, we found that CwlD does not bind Zn2+ stably on its own, unlike previously characterized amidase_3 enzymes. Instead, GerS binding to CwlD promotes CwlD binding to Zn2+, which is required for its catalytic mechanism. Thus, in determining the first structure of an amidase bound to its regulator, we reveal stabilization of Zn2+ co-factor binding as a novel mechanism for regulating bacterial amidase activity. Our results further suggest that allosteric regulation by binding partners may be a more widespread mode for regulating bacterial amidase activity than previously thought.


Subject(s)
Amidohydrolases/metabolism , Clostridioides difficile/physiology , Lipoproteins/metabolism , Spores, Bacterial/growth & development , Allosteric Regulation , Amidohydrolases/chemistry , Catalysis , Catalytic Domain , Chromatography, Gel , Clostridioides difficile/enzymology , Crystallography, X-Ray , Lactams/metabolism , Molecular Structure , Muramic Acids/metabolism , Protein Binding
9.
ACS Chem Biol ; 16(10): 1908-1916, 2021 10 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34506714

ABSTRACT

Metabolic glycan probes have emerged as an excellent tool to investigate vital questions in biology. Recently, methodology to incorporate metabolic bacterial glycan probes into the cell wall of a variety of bacterial species has been developed. In order to improve this method, a scalable synthesis of the peptidoglycan precursors is developed here, allowing for access to essential peptidoglycan immunological fragments and cell wall building blocks. The question was asked if masking polar groups of the glycan probe would increase overall incorporation, a common strategy exploited in mammalian glycobiology. Here, we show, through cellular assays, that E. coli do not utilize peracetylated peptidoglycan substrates but do employ methyl esters. The 10-fold improvement of probe utilization indicates that (i) masking the carboxylic acid is favorable for transport and (ii) bacterial esterases are capable of removing the methyl ester for use in peptidoglycan biosynthesis. This investigation advances bacterial cell wall biology, offering a prescription on how to best deliver and utilize bacterial metabolic glycan probes.


Subject(s)
Molecular Probes/metabolism , Muramic Acids/metabolism , Peptidoglycan/metabolism , Polysaccharides/metabolism , Cell Wall/metabolism , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Molecular Probes/chemical synthesis , Muramic Acids/chemical synthesis , Polysaccharides/chemical synthesis
10.
J Biol Chem ; 296: 100519, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33684445

ABSTRACT

Endo-ß-N-acetylmuramidases, commonly known as lysozymes, are well-characterized antimicrobial enzymes that catalyze an endo-lytic cleavage of peptidoglycan; i.e., they hydrolyze the ß-1,4-glycosidic bonds connecting N-acetylmuramic acid (MurNAc) and N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc). In contrast, little is known about exo-ß-N-acetylmuramidases, which catalyze an exo-lytic cleavage of ß-1,4-MurNAc entities from the non-reducing ends of peptidoglycan chains. Such an enzyme was identified earlier in the bacterium Bacillus subtilis, but the corresponding gene has remained unknown so far. We now report that ybbC of B. subtilis, renamed namZ, encodes the reported exo-ß-N-acetylmuramidase. A ΔnamZ mutant accumulated specific cell wall fragments and showed growth defects under starvation conditions, indicating a role of NamZ in cell wall turnover and recycling. Recombinant NamZ protein specifically hydrolyzed the artificial substrate para-nitrophenyl ß-MurNAc and the peptidoglycan-derived disaccharide MurNAc-ß-1,4-GlcNAc. Together with the exo-ß-N-acetylglucosaminidase NagZ and the exo-muramoyl-l-alanine amidase AmiE, NamZ degraded intact peptidoglycan by sequential hydrolysis from the non-reducing ends. A structure model of NamZ, built on the basis of two crystal structures of putative orthologs from Bacteroides fragilis, revealed a two-domain structure including a Rossmann-fold-like domain that constitutes a unique glycosidase fold. Thus, NamZ, a member of the DUF1343 protein family of unknown function, is now classified as the founding member of a new family of glycosidases (CAZy GH171; www.cazy.org/GH171.html). NamZ-like peptidoglycan hexosaminidases are mainly present in the phylum Bacteroidetes and less frequently found in individual genomes within Firmicutes (Bacilli, Clostridia), Actinobacteria, and γ-proteobacteria.


Subject(s)
Acetylglucosamine/metabolism , Bacillus subtilis/enzymology , Glycoside Hydrolases/metabolism , Muramic Acids/metabolism , Peptidoglycan/metabolism , Crystallography, X-Ray , Glycoside Hydrolases/chemistry , Hydrolysis , Protein Conformation
11.
BMC Microbiol ; 20(1): 352, 2020 11 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33203363

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The Gram-negative oral pathogen Tannerella forsythia strictly depends on the external supply of the essential bacterial cell wall sugar N-acetylmuramic acid (MurNAc) for survival because of the lack of the common MurNAc biosynthesis enzymes MurA/MurB. The bacterium thrives in a polymicrobial biofilm consortium and, thus, it is plausible that it procures MurNAc from MurNAc-containing peptidoglycan (PGN) fragments (muropeptides) released from cohabiting bacteria during natural PGN turnover or cell death. There is indirect evidence that in T. forsythia, an AmpG-like permease (Tanf_08365) is involved in cytoplasmic muropeptide uptake. In E. coli, AmpG is specific for the import of N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc)-anhydroMurNAc(-peptides) which are common PGN turnover products, with the disaccharide portion as a minimal requirement. Currently, it is unclear which natural, complex MurNAc sources T. forsythia can utilize and which role AmpG plays therein. RESULTS: We performed a screen of various putative MurNAc sources for T. forsythia mimicking the situation in the natural habitat and compared bacterial growth and cell morphology of the wild-type and a mutant lacking AmpG (T. forsythia ΔampG). We showed that supernatants of the oral biofilm bacteria Porphyromonas gingivalis and Fusobacterium nucleatum, and of E. coli ΔampG, as well as isolated PGN and defined PGN fragments obtained after enzymatic digestion, namely GlcNAc-anhydroMurNAc(-peptides) and GlcNAc-MurNAc(-peptides), could sustain growth of T. forsythia wild-type, while T. forsythia ΔampG suffered from growth inhibition. In supernatants of T. forsythia ΔampG, the presence of GlcNAc-anhMurNAc and, unexpectedly, also GlcNAc-MurNAc was revealed by tandem mass spectrometry analysis, indicating that both disaccharides are substrates of AmpG. The importance of AmpG in the utilization of PGN fragments as MurNAc source was substantiated by a significant ampG upregulation in T. forsythia cells cultivated with PGN, as determined by quantitative real-time PCR. Further, our results indicate that PGN-degrading amidase, lytic transglycosylase and muramidase activities in a T. forsythia cell extract are involved in PGN scavenging. CONCLUSION: T. forsythia metabolizes intact PGN as well as muropeptides released from various bacteria and the bacterium's inner membrane transporter AmpG is essential for growth on these MurNAc sources, and, contrary to the situation in E. coli, imports both, GlcNAc-anhMurNAc and GlcNAc-MurNAc fragments.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Membrane Transport Proteins/metabolism , Muramic Acids/metabolism , Tannerella forsythia/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Biofilms , Cell Wall/chemistry , Cell Wall/metabolism , Gene Expression , Membrane Transport Proteins/genetics , Mouth/microbiology , Muramic Acids/chemistry , Peptidoglycan/chemistry , Peptidoglycan/metabolism , Substrate Specificity , Tannerella forsythia/genetics , Tannerella forsythia/growth & development , Tannerella forsythia/ultrastructure
12.
ACS Chem Biol ; 15(5): 1242-1251, 2020 05 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32155044

ABSTRACT

Selective chemical probes enable individual investigation of penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs) and provide critical information about their enzymatic activity with spatial and temporal resolution. To identify scaffolds for novel probes to study peptidoglycan biosynthesis in Bacillus subtilis, we evaluated the PBP inhibition profiles of 21 ß-lactam antibiotics from different structural subclasses using a fluorescence-based assay. Most compounds readily labeled PBP1, PBP2a, PBP2b, or PBP4. Almost all penicillin scaffolds were coselective for all or combinations of PBP2a, 2b, and 4. Cephalosporins, on the other hand, possessed the lowest IC50 values for PBP1 alone or along with PBP4 (ceftriaxone, cefoxitin) and 2b (cefotaxime) or 2a, 2b, and 4 (cephalothin). Overall, five selective inhibitors for PBP1 (aztreonam, faropenem, piperacillin, cefuroxime, and cefsulodin), one selective inhibitor for PBP5 (6-aminopenicillanic acid), and various coselective inhibitors for other PBPs in B. subtilis were discovered. Surprisingly, carbapenems strongly inhibited PBP3, formerly shown to have low affinity for ß-lactams and speculated to be involved in ß-lactam resistance in B. subtilis. To investigate the specific roles of PBP3, we developed activity-based probes based on the meropenem core and utilized them to monitor the activity of PBP3 in living cells. We showed that PBP3 activity localizes as patches in single cells and concentrates as a ring at the septum and the division site during the cell growth cycle. Our activity-based approach enabled spatial resolution of the transpeptidation activity of individual PBPs in this model microorganism, which was not possible with previous chemical and biological approaches.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/chemistry , Bacillus subtilis/enzymology , Enzyme Inhibitors/chemistry , Penicillin-Binding Proteins/antagonists & inhibitors , beta-Lactams/chemistry , Acetylglucosamine/metabolism , Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Bacillus subtilis/metabolism , Cell Division/drug effects , Cell Proliferation/drug effects , Drug Evaluation, Preclinical , Enzyme Activation , Enzyme Inhibitors/pharmacology , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Glycosylation , Humans , Lighting , Muramic Acids/metabolism , Optical Imaging , Structure-Activity Relationship , beta-Lactams/pharmacology
13.
Elife ; 92020 01 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31916938

ABSTRACT

Helical cell shape is necessary for efficient stomach colonization by Helicobacter pylori, but the molecular mechanisms for generating helical shape remain unclear. The helical centerline pitch and radius of wild-type H. pylori cells dictate surface curvatures of considerably higher positive and negative Gaussian curvatures than those present in straight- or curved-rod H. pylori. Quantitative 3D microscopy analysis of short pulses with either N-acetylmuramic acid or D-alanine metabolic probes showed that cell wall growth is enhanced at both sidewall curvature extremes. Immunofluorescence revealed MreB is most abundant at negative Gaussian curvature, while the bactofilin CcmA is most abundant at positive Gaussian curvature. Strains expressing CcmA variants with altered polymerization properties lose helical shape and associated positive Gaussian curvatures. We thus propose a model where CcmA and MreB promote PG synthesis at positive and negative Gaussian curvatures, respectively, and that this patterning is one mechanism necessary for maintaining helical shape.


Round spheres, straight rods, and twisting corkscrews, bacteria come in many different shapes. The shape of bacteria is dictated by their cell wall, the strong outer barrier of the cell. As bacteria grow and multiply, they must add to their cell wall while keeping the same basic shape. The cells walls are made from long chain-like molecules via processes that are guided by protein scaffolds within the cell. Many common antibiotics, including penicillin, stop bacterial infections by interrupting the growth of cell walls. Helicobacter pylori is a common bacterium that lives in the gut and, after many years, can cause stomach ulcers and stomach cancer. H. pylori are shaped in a twisting helix, much like a corkscrew. This shape helps H. pylori to take hold and colonize the stomach. It remains unclear how H. pylori creates and maintains its helical shape. The helix is much more curved than other bacteria, and H. pylori does not have the same helpful proteins that other curved bacteria do. If H. pylori grows asymmetrically, adding more material to the cell wall on its long outer side to create a twisting helix, what controls the process? To find out, Taylor et al. grew H. pylori cells and watched how the cell walls took shape. First, a fluorescent dye was attached to the building blocks of the cell wall or to underlying proteins that were thought to help direct its growth. The cells were then imaged in 3D, and images from hundreds of cells were reconstructed to analyze the growth patterns of the bacteria's cell wall. A protein called CcmA was found most often on the long side of the twisting H. pylori. When the CcmA protein was isolated in a dish, it spontaneously formed sheets and helical bundles, confirming its role as a structural scaffold for the cell wall. When CcmA was absent from the cell of H. pylori, Taylor et al. observed that the pattern of cell growth changed substantially. This work identifies a key component directing the growth of the cell wall of H. pylori and therefore, a new target for antibiotics. Its helical shape is essential for H. pylori to infect the gut, so blocking the action of the CcmA protein may interrupt cell wall growth and prevent stomach infections.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Cell Wall/metabolism , Cytoskeletal Proteins/metabolism , Helicobacter pylori/metabolism , Alanine/metabolism , Helicobacter pylori/cytology , Muramic Acids/metabolism , Peptidoglycan/biosynthesis
14.
J Biol Chem ; 294(50): 19066-19080, 2019 12 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31690626

ABSTRACT

Bacillus subtilis PdaC (BsPdaC) is a membrane-bound, multidomain peptidoglycan N-deacetylase acting on N-acetylmuramic acid (MurNAc) residues and conferring lysozyme resistance to modified cell wall peptidoglycans. BsPdaC contains a C-terminal family 4 carbohydrate esterase (CE4) catalytic domain, but unlike other MurNAc deacetylases, BsPdaC also has GlcNAc deacetylase activity on chitooligosaccharides (COSs), characteristic of chitin deacetylases. To uncover the molecular basis of this dual activity, here we determined the X-ray structure of the BsPdaC CE4 domain at 1.54 Å resolution and analyzed its mode of action on COS substrates. We found that the minimal substrate is GlcNAc3 and that activity increases with the degree of glycan polymerization. COS deacetylation kinetics revealed that BsPdaC operates by a multiple-chain mechanism starting at the internal GlcNAc units and leading to deacetylation of all but the reducing-end GlcNAc residues. Interestingly, BsPdaC shares higher sequence similarity with the peptidoglycan GlcNAc deacetylase SpPgdaA than with other MurNAc deacetylases. Therefore, we used ligand-docking simulations to analyze the dual GlcNAc- and MurNAc-binding specificities of BsPdaC and compared them with those of SpPgdA and BsPdaA, representing peptidoglycan deacetylases highly specific for GlcNAc or MurNAc residues, respectively. BsPdaC retains the conserved Asp-His-His metal-binding triad characteristic of CE4 enzymes acting on GlcNAc residues, differing from MurNAc deacetylases that lack the metal-coordinating Asp residue. BsPdaC contains short loops similar to those in SpPgdA, resulting in an open binding cleft that can accommodate polymeric substrates. We propose that PdaC is the first member of a new subclass of peptidoglycan MurNAc deacetylases.


Subject(s)
Acetylglucosamine/metabolism , Amidohydrolases/metabolism , Bacillus subtilis/enzymology , Chitin/metabolism , Muramic Acids/metabolism , Acetylglucosamine/chemistry , Amidohydrolases/chemistry , Chitin/analogs & derivatives , Chitin/chemistry , Crystallography, X-Ray , Models, Molecular , Muramic Acids/chemistry , Phylogeny , Structure-Activity Relationship , Substrate Specificity
15.
Curr Protoc Chem Biol ; 11(4): e74, 2019 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31763799

ABSTRACT

Bacterial cells utilize small carbohydrate building blocks to construct peptidoglycan (PG), a highly conserved mesh-like polymer that serves as a protective coat for the cell. PG production has long been a target for antibiotics, and its breakdown is a source for human immune recognition. A key component of bacterial PG, N-acetyl muramic acid (NAM), is a vital element in many synthetically derived immunostimulatory compounds. However, the exact molecular details of these structures and how they are generated remain unknown due to a lack of chemical probes surrounding the NAM core. A robust synthetic strategy to generate bioorthogonally tagged NAM carbohydrate units is implemented. These molecules serve as precursors for PG biosynthesis and recycling. Escherichia coli cells are metabolically engineered to incorporate the bioorthogonal NAM probes into their PG network. The probes are subsequently modified using copper-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition to install fluorophores directly into the bacterial PG, as confirmed by super-resolution microscopy and high-resolution mass spectrometry. Here, synthetic notes for key elements of this process to generate the sugar probes as well as streamlined user-friendly metabolic labeling strategies for both microbiology and immunological applications are described. © 2019 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Basic Protocol 1: Synthesis of peracetylated 2-azido glucosamine Basic Protocol 2: Synthesis of 2-azido and 2-alkyne NAM Basic Protocol 3: Synthesis of 3-azido NAM methyl ester Basic Protocol 4: Incorporation of NAM probes into bacterial peptidoglycan Basic Protocol 5: Confirmation of bacterial cell wall remodeling by mass spectrometry.


Subject(s)
Escherichia coli/metabolism , Muramic Acids/metabolism , Peptidoglycan/metabolism , Alkynes/chemistry , Alkynes/metabolism , Azides/chemistry , Azides/metabolism , Catalysis , Click Chemistry , Cycloaddition Reaction , Escherichia coli/chemistry , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Fluorescent Dyes/metabolism , Metabolic Engineering/methods , Muramic Acids/chemistry , Peptidoglycan/chemistry
16.
BMC Microbiol ; 19(1): 200, 2019 09 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31477019

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Tannerella forsythia is a Gram-negative oral pathogen. Together with Porphyromonas gingivalis and Treponema denticola it constitutes the "red complex" of bacteria, which is crucially associated with periodontitis, an inflammatory disease of the tooth supporting tissues that poses a health burden worldwide. Due to the absence of common peptidoglycan biosynthesis genes, the unique bacterial cell wall sugar N-acetylmuramic acid (MurNAc) is an essential growth factor of T. forsythia to build up its peptidoglycan cell wall. Peptidoglycan is typically composed of a glycan backbone of alternating N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) and MurNAc residues that terminates with anhydroMurNAc (anhMurNAc), and short peptides via which the sugar backbones are cross-linked to build up a bag-shaped network. RESULTS: We investigated T. forsythia's peptidoglycan structure, which is an essential step towards anti-infective strategies against this pathogen. A new sensitive radioassay was developed which verified the presence of MurNAc and anhMurNAc in the cell wall of the bacterium. Upon digest of isolated peptidoglycan with endo-N-acetylmuramidase, exo-N-acetylglucosaminidase and muramyl-L-alanine amidase, respectively, peptidoglycan fragments were obtained. HPLC and mass spectrometry (MS) analyses revealed the presence of GlcNAc-MurNAc-peptides and the cross-linked dimer with retention-times and masses, respectively, equalling those of control digests of Escherichia coli and P. gingivalis peptidoglycan. Data were confirmed by tandem mass spectrometry (MS2) analysis, revealing the GlcNAc-MurNAc-tetra-tetra-MurNAc-GlcNAc dimer to contain the sequence of the amino acids alanine, glutamic acid, diaminopimelic acid (DAP) and alanine, as well as a direct cross-link between DAP on the third and alanine on the fourth position of the two opposite stem peptides. The stereochemistry of DAP was determined by reversed-phase HPLC after dabsylation of hydrolysed peptidoglycan to be of the meso-type. CONCLUSION: T. forsythia peptidoglycan is of the A1γ-type like that of E. coli. Additionally, the classification of P. gingivalis peptidoglycan as A3γ needs to be revised to A1γ, due to the presence of meso-DAP instead of LL-DAP, as reported previously.


Subject(s)
Muramic Acids/analysis , Peptidoglycan/chemistry , Peptidoglycan/metabolism , Periodontitis/microbiology , Porphyromonas gingivalis/metabolism , Tannerella forsythia/metabolism , Autotrophic Processes , Cell Wall/chemistry , Cell Wall/genetics , Cell Wall/metabolism , Humans , Mass Spectrometry , Mouth/microbiology , Muramic Acids/metabolism , Porphyromonas gingivalis/chemistry , Porphyromonas gingivalis/genetics , Tannerella forsythia/chemistry , Tannerella forsythia/genetics
17.
Int J Med Microbiol ; 309(7): 151326, 2019 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31296364

ABSTRACT

The ability to recover components of their own cell wall is a common feature of bacteria. This was initially recognized in the Gram-negative bacterium Escherichia coli, which recycles about half of the peptidoglycan of its cell wall during one cell doubling. Moreover, E. coli was shown to grow on peptidoglycan components provided as nutrients. A distinguished recycling enzyme of E. coli required for both, recovery of the cell wall sugar N-acetylmuramic acid (MurNAc) of the own cell wall and for growth on external MurNAc, is the MurNAc 6-phosphate (MurNAc 6P) lactyl ether hydrolase MurQ. We revealed however, that most Gram-negative bacteria lack a murQ ortholog and instead harbor a pathway, absent in E. coli, that channels MurNAc directly to peptidoglycan biosynthesis. This "anabolic recycling pathway" bypasses the initial steps of peptidoglycan de novo synthesis, including the target of the antibiotic fosfomycin, thus providing intrinsic resistance to the antibiotic. The Gram-negative oral pathogen Tannerella forsythia is auxotrophic for MurNAc and apparently depends on the anabolic recycling pathway to synthesize its own cell wall by scavenging cell wall debris of other bacteria. In contrast, Gram-positive bacteria lack the anabolic recycling genes, but mostly contain one or two murQ orthologs. Quantification of MurNAc 6P accumulation in murQ mutant cells by mass spectrometry allowed us to demonstrate for the first time that Gram-positive bacteria do recycle their own peptidoglycan. This had been questioned earlier, since peptidoglycan turnover products accumulate in the spent media of Gram-positives. We showed, that these fragments are recovered during nutrient limitation, which prolongs starvation survival of Bacillus subtilis and Staphylococcus aureus. Peptidoglycan recycling in these bacteria however differs, as the cell wall is either cleaved exhaustively and monosaccharide building blocks are taken up (B. subtilis) or disaccharides are released and recycled involving a novel phosphomuramidase (MupG; S.aureus). In B. subtilis also the teichoic acids, covalently bound to the peptidoglycan (wall teichoic acids; WTAs), are recycled. During phosphate limitation, the sn-glycerol-3-phosphate phosphodiesterase GlpQ specifically degrades WTAs of B. subtilis. In S. aureus, in contrast, GlpQ is used to scavenge external teichoic acid sources. Thus, although bacteria generally recover their own cell wall, they apparently apply distinct strategies for breakdown and reutilization of cell wall fragments. This review summarizes our work on this topic funded between 2011 and 2019 by the DFG within the collaborative research center SFB766.


Subject(s)
Bacteria/metabolism , Cell Wall/metabolism , Metabolic Networks and Pathways , Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Bacteria/classification , Bacteria/drug effects , Bacteria/enzymology , Cell Wall/chemistry , Cell Wall/drug effects , Cell Wall/enzymology , Glycoside Hydrolases/metabolism , Metabolic Networks and Pathways/drug effects , Muramic Acids/chemistry , Muramic Acids/metabolism , Peptidoglycan/chemistry , Peptidoglycan/metabolism , Phosphoric Diester Hydrolases/metabolism , Species Specificity , Teichoic Acids/metabolism
18.
Cells ; 8(6)2019 06 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31216697

ABSTRACT

In preparation for division, bacteria replicate their DNA and segregate the newly formed chromosomes. A division septum then assembles between the chromosomes, and the mother cell splits into two identical daughters due to septum degradation. A major constituent of bacterial septa and of the whole cell wall is peptidoglycan (PGN), an essential cell wall polymer, formed by glycan chains of ß-(1-4)-linked-N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) and N-acetylmuramic acid (MurNAc), cross-linked by short peptide stems. Depending on the amino acid located at the third position of the peptide stem, PGN is classified as either Lys-type or meso-diaminopimelic acid (DAP)-type. Hydrolytic enzymes play a crucial role in the degradation of bacterial septa to split the cell wall material shared by adjacent daughter cells to promote their separation. In mycobacteria, a key PGN hydrolase, belonging to the NlpC/P60 endopeptidase family and denoted as RipA, is responsible for the degradation of septa, as the deletion of the gene encoding for this enzyme generates abnormal bacteria with multiple septa. This review provides an update of structural and functional data highlighting the central role of RipA in mycobacterial cytokinesis and the fine regulation of its catalytic activity, which involves multiple molecular partners.


Subject(s)
Cytokinesis/physiology , Endopeptidases/metabolism , Mycobacterium/metabolism , Acetylglucosamine/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/physiology , Cell Division , Cell Wall/metabolism , Crystallography, X-Ray , Hydrolysis , Lipoproteins/metabolism , Lipoproteins/physiology , Models, Molecular , Muramic Acids/metabolism , Mycobacterium/enzymology , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/enzymology , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/metabolism , N-Acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine Amidase/chemistry , Peptidoglycan/genetics , Protein Conformation
19.
Nat Commun ; 10(1): 2647, 2019 06 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31201321

ABSTRACT

Growth and division by most bacteria requires remodelling and cleavage of their cell wall. A byproduct of this process is the generation of free peptidoglycan (PG) fragments known as muropeptides, which are recycled in many model organisms. Bacteria and hosts can harness the unique nature of muropeptides as a signal for cell wall damage and infection, respectively. Despite this critical role for muropeptides, it has long been thought that pathogenic mycobacteria such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis do not recycle their PG. Herein we show that M. tuberculosis and Mycobacterium bovis BCG are able to recycle components of their PG. We demonstrate that the core mycobacterial gene lpqI, encodes an authentic NagZ ß-N-acetylglucosaminidase and that it is essential for PG-derived amino sugar recycling via an unusual pathway. Together these data provide a critical first step in understanding how mycobacteria recycle their peptidoglycan.


Subject(s)
Acetylglucosaminidase/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Mycobacterium bovis/metabolism , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/metabolism , Peptidoglycan/metabolism , Antibiotics, Antitubercular/pharmacology , Cell Wall/chemistry , Cell Wall/metabolism , Drug Resistance, Bacterial , Microbial Sensitivity Tests , Muramic Acids/metabolism , Muramidase/pharmacology , Mycobacterium bovis/chemistry , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/chemistry , Peptidoglycan/chemistry
20.
J Biol Chem ; 293(47): 18040-18054, 2018 11 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30266804

ABSTRACT

Spores are produced by many organisms as a survival mechanism activated in response to several environmental stresses. Bacterial spores are multilayered structures, one of which is a peptidoglycan layer called the cortex, containing muramic-δ-lactams that are synthesized by at least two bacterial enzymes, the muramoyl-l-alanine amidase CwlD and the N-deacetylase PdaA. This study focused on the spore cortex of Clostridium difficile, a Gram-positive, toxin-producing anaerobic bacterial pathogen that can colonize the human intestinal tract and is a leading cause of antibiotic-associated diarrhea. Using ultra-HPLC coupled with high-resolution MS, here we found that the spore cortex of the C. difficile 630Δerm strain differs from that of Bacillus subtilis Among these differences, the muramic-δ-lactams represented only 24% in C. difficile, compared with 50% in B. subtilis CD630_14300 and CD630_27190 were identified as genes encoding the C. difficile N-deacetylases PdaA1 and PdaA2, required for muramic-δ-lactam synthesis. In a pdaA1 mutant, only 0.4% of all muropeptides carried a muramic-δ-lactam modification, and muramic-δ-lactams were absent in the cortex of a pdaA1-pdaA2 double mutant. Of note, the pdaA1 mutant exhibited decreased sporulation, altered germination, decreased heat resistance, and delayed virulence in a hamster infection model. These results suggest a much greater role for muramic-δ-lactams in C. difficile than in other bacteria, including B. subtilis In summary, the spore cortex of C. difficile contains lower levels of muramic-δ-lactams than that of B. subtilis, and PdaA1 is the major N-deacetylase for muramic-δ-lactam biosynthesis in C. difficile, contributing to sporulation, heat resistance, and virulence.


Subject(s)
Amidohydrolases/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Clostridioides difficile/enzymology , Lactams/metabolism , Muramic Acids/metabolism , Spores, Bacterial/growth & development , Amidohydrolases/genetics , Animals , Bacillus subtilis/enzymology , Bacillus subtilis/genetics , Bacillus subtilis/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Clostridioides difficile/chemistry , Clostridioides difficile/genetics , Clostridioides difficile/growth & development , Clostridium Infections/microbiology , Cricetinae , Female , Hot Temperature , Humans , Mesocricetus , Spores, Bacterial/chemistry , Spores, Bacterial/enzymology
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