Affiliation:
1. Department of Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology, Institute of Biotechnology
2. Department of Biochemistry, Protein and Nucleic Acid Chemistry Facility, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 1QT, United Kingdom
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Molecular-genetic and muropeptide analysis techniques have been applied to examine the function
in vivo
of the
Bacillus megaterium
QM B1551 SleB and SleL proteins. In common with
Bacillus subtilis
and
Bacillus anthracis
, the presence of anhydromuropeptides in
B. megaterium
germination exudates, which is indicative of lytic transglycosylase activity, is associated with an intact
sleB
structural gene.
B. megaterium sleB cwlJ
double mutant strains complemented with engineered SleB variants in which the predicted N- or C-terminal domain has been deleted (SleB-ΔN or SleB-ΔC) efficiently initiate and hydrolyze the cortex, generating anhydromuropeptides in the process. Additionally,
sleB cwlJ
strains complemented with SleB-ΔN or SleB-ΔC, in which glutamate and aspartate residues have individually been changed to alanine, all retain the ability to hydrolyze the cortex to various degrees during germination, with concomitant release of anhydromuropeptides to the surrounding medium. These data indicate that while the presence of either the N- or C-terminal domain of
B. megaterium
SleB is sufficient for initiation of cortex hydrolysis and the generation of anhydromuropeptides, the perceived lytic transglycosylase activity may be derived from an enzyme(s), perhaps exclusively or in addition to SleB, which has yet to be identified.
B. megaterium
SleL appears to be associated with the epimerase-type activity observed previously in
B. subtilis
, differing from the glucosaminidase function that is apparent in
B. cereus
/
B. anthracis
.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
21 articles.
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