Affiliation:
1. National Institute for Medical Research, Mill Hill, London, NW7, England
Abstract
A cell wall lytic enzyme has been demonstrated to be a component of the membrane of
Bacillus licheniformis
NCTC 6346 and an
l
-form derived from it. The lytic enzyme, characterized as an
N
-acetylmuramyl-
l
-alanine amidase, is solubilized from membranes by nonionic detergents. Ionic detergents inactivate the enzyme. In the bacterium the specific activities of amidase and
d
-alanine carboxypeptidase in mesosomes are approximately 65% of those in membranes. Selective transfer of lytic enzyme from nongrowing L-forms, L-form membranes, and protoplasts to added walls occurred after mixing, and 31 to 77% of the enzyme lost from L-form membranes was recovered on the walls. Membranes isolated from L-forms growing in the presence of added walls contained as little as 13% of the amidase found in membranes of a control culture. These results have been interpreted as showing that in vivo the amidase is “bound” to the surface of the bacterial cell membrane in such a location that it can be readily accessible to the cell wall.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
47 articles.
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