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The mecillinam resistome reveals a role for peptidoglycan endopeptidases in stimulating cell wall synthesis in Escherichia coli

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2017

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Public Library of Science
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Lai, Ghee Chuan, Hongbaek Cho, and Thomas G. Bernhardt. 2017. “The mecillinam resistome reveals a role for peptidoglycan endopeptidases in stimulating cell wall synthesis in Escherichia coli.” PLoS Genetics 13 (7): e1006934. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1006934. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1006934.

Abstract

Bacterial cells are typically surrounded by an net-like macromolecule called the cell wall constructed from the heteropolymer peptidoglycan (PG). Biogenesis of this matrix is the target of penicillin and related beta-lactams. These drugs inhibit the transpeptidase activity of PG synthases called penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs), preventing the crosslinking of nascent wall material into the existing network. The beta-lactam mecillinam specifically targets the PBP2 enzyme in the cell elongation machinery of Escherichia coli. Low-throughput selections for mecillinam resistance have historically been useful in defining mechanisms involved in cell wall biogenesis and the killing activity of beta-lactam antibiotics. Here, we used transposon-sequencing (Tn-Seq) as a high-throughput method to identify nearly all mecillinam resistance loci in the E. coli genome, providing a comprehensive resource for uncovering new mechanisms underlying PG assembly and drug resistance. Induction of the stringent response or the Rcs envelope stress response has been previously implicated in mecillinam resistance. We therefore also performed the Tn-Seq analysis in mutants defective for these responses in addition to wild-type cells. Thus, the utility of the dataset was greatly enhanced by determining the stress response dependence of each resistance locus in the resistome. Reasoning that stress response-independent resistance loci are those most likely to identify direct modulators of cell wall biogenesis, we focused our downstream analysis on this subset of the resistome. Characterization of one of these alleles led to the surprising discovery that the overproduction of endopeptidase enzymes that cleave crosslinks in the cell wall promotes mecillinam resistance by stimulating PG synthesis by a subset of PBPs. Our analysis of this activation mechanism suggests that, contrary to the prevailing view in the field, PG synthases and PG cleaving enzymes need not function in multi-enzyme complexes to expand the cell wall matrix.

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Biology and Life Sciences, Cell Biology, Cellular Structures and Organelles, Cell Walls, Biochemistry, Biosynthesis, Cell Processes, Cellular Stress Responses, Genetics, Genetic Loci, Genetic Elements, Mobile Genetic Elements, Transposable Elements, Genomics, Medicine and Health Sciences, Pharmacology, Drugs, Antimicrobials, Antibiotics, Microbiology, Microbial Control, Cell Cycle and Cell Division, Biology and life sciences, Nucleic acids, RNA, Non-coding RNA, Transfer RNA

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