Cell wall attachment of a widely distributed peptidoglycan binding domain is hindered by cell wall constituents

被引:192
作者
Steen, A
Buist, G
Leenhouts, KJ
El Khattabi, M
Grijpstra, F
Zomer, AL
Venema, G
Kuipers, OP
Kok, J
机构
[1] Univ Groningen, Dept Genet, Groningen Biomol Sci & Biotechnol Inst, NL-9751 NN Haren, Netherlands
[2] BioMaDe Technol Fdn, NL-9747 AG Groningen, Netherlands
关键词
D O I
10.1074/jbc.M211055200
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
The C-terminal region (cA) of the major autolysin AcmA of Lactococcus lactis contains three highly similar repeated regions of 45 amino acid residues (LysM domains), which are separated by nonhomologous sequences. The cA domain could be deleted without destroying the cell wall-hydrolyzing activity of the enzyme in vitro. This AcmA derivative was capable neither of binding to lactococcal cells nor of lysing these cells while separation of the producer cells was incomplete. The cA domain and a chimeric protein consisting of cA fused to the C terminus of MSA2, a malaria parasite surface antigen, bound to lactococcal cells specifically via cA. The fusion protein also bound to many other Gram-positive bacteria. By chemical treatment of purified cell walls of L. lactis and Bacillus subtilis, peptidoglycan was identified as the cell wall component interacting with cA. Immunofluorescence studies showed that binding is on specific locations on the surface of L. lactis, Enterococcus faecalis, Streptococcus thermophilus, B. subtilis, Lactobacillus sake, and Lactobacillus casei cells. Based on these studies, we propose that LysM-type repeats bind to peptidoglycan and that binding is hindered by other cell wall constituents, resulting in localized binding of AcmA. Lipoteichoic acid is a candidate hindering component. For L. lactis SK110, it is shown that lipoteichoic acids are not uniformly distributed over the cell surface and are mainly present at sites where no MSA2cA binding is observed.
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页码:23874 / 23881
页数:8
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