ABSTRACT
Enterococcus faecalis EnpA (EF1473) is a 1721-residue predicted protein encoded by prophage 03 that displays similarity to the staphylolytic glycyl-glycyl endopeptidases lysostaphin and LytM. We purified a catalytically active fragment of the protein, EnpA(C), comprising residues 1374-1505 and showed that the recombinant polypeptide efficiently cleaved cross-linked muropeptides generated by muramidases, but was poorly active in intact sacculi. Analysis of the products of digestion of purified dimers by mass spectrometry indicated that EnpA(C) cleaves the D-Ala-L-Ala bond formed by the D,D-transpeptidase activity of penicillin-binding proteins in the last cross-linking step of peptidoglycan synthesis. Synthetic D was identified as the minimum substrate of EnpA(C) indicating that interaction of the enzyme with the donor peptide stem of cross-linked dimers is sufficient for its activity. Peptidoglycan was purified from various bacterial species and digested with mutanolysin and EnpA(C) to assess enzyme specificity. EnpA(C) did not cleave direct cross-links, but tolerated extensive variation in cross-bridges with respect to both their length (one to five residues) and their amino acid sequence. Recognition of the donor stem of cross-linked dimers could account for the substrate specificity of EnpA(C), which is significantly broader in comparison to endopeptidases belonging to the lysostaphin family.