58 research outputs found

    Discovery of chlamydial peptidoglycan reveals bacteria with murein sacculi but without FtsZ

    Get PDF
    Chlamydiae are important pathogens and symbionts with unique cell biological features. They lack the cell-division protein FtsZ, and the existence of peptidoglycan (PG) in their cell wall has been highly controversial. FtsZ and PG together function in orchestrating cell division and maintaining cell shape in almost all other bacteria. Using electron cryotomography, mass spectrometry and fluorescent labelling dyes, here we show that some environmental chlamydiae have cell wall sacculi consisting of a novel PG type. Treatment with fosfomycin (a PG synthesis inhibitor) leads to lower infection rates and aberrant cell shapes, suggesting that PG synthesis is crucial for the chlamydial life cycle. Our findings demonstrate for the first time the presence of PG in a member of the Chlamydiae. They also present a unique example of a bacterium with a PG sacculus but without FtsZ, challenging the current hypothesis that it is the absence of a cell wall that renders FtsZ non-essential

    The Pneumococcal Iron Uptake Protein a (PiuA) Specifically Recognizes Tetradentate FeIIIbis- and Mono-Catechol Complexes

    Get PDF
    Streptococcus pneumoniae (Spn) is an important Gram-positive human pathogen that causes millions of infections worldwide with an increasing occurrence of antibiotic resistance. Fe acquisition is a crucial virulence determinant in Spn; further, Spn relies on exogenous FeIII-siderophore scavenging to meet nutritional Fe needs. Recent studies suggest that the human catecholamine stress hormone, norepinephrine (NE), facilitates Fe acquisition in Spn under conditions of transferrin-mediated Fe starvation. Here we show that the solute binding lipoprotein PiuA from the piu Fe acquisition ABC transporter PiuBCDA, previously described as an Fe-hemin binding protein, binds tetradentate catechol FeIII complexes, including NE and the hydrolysis products of enterobactin. Two protein-derived ligands (H238, Y300) create a coordinately-saturated FeIII complex, which parallel recent studies in the Gram-negative intestinal pathogen Campylobacter jejuni. Our in vitro studies using NMR spectroscopy and 54Fe LC-ICP-MS confirm the FeIII can move from transferrin to apo-PiuA in a NE-dependent manner. Structural analysis of PiuA FeIII-bis-catechol and GaIII-bis-catechol and GaIII-(NE)2 complexes by NMR spectroscopy reveals only localized structural perturbations in PiuA upon ligand binding, largely consistent with recent descriptions of other solute binding proteins of type II ABC transporters. We speculate that tetradentate FeIII complexes formed by mono- and bis-catechol species are important Fe sources in Gram-positive human pathogens, since PiuA functions in the same way as SstD from Staphylococcus aureus

    A New Total Synthesis of Patellamide A

    No full text

    A Model Study for Constructing the DEF-Benzoxocin Ring System of Menogaril and Nogalamycin via a Reductive Heck Cyclization

    No full text
    A novel reductive Heck cyclization approach was developed in order to construct a model DEF-benzoxocin ring system that is present in nogalamycin, menogaril, and related anthracycline antitumor antibiotics

    Total Synthesis of Plusbacin A 3

    No full text

    Total Synthesis of Lysobactin

    No full text

    Solid-Phase Synthesis of Lysobactin (Katanosin B): Insights into Structure and Function

    No full text
    The solid phase synthesis of the cyclic depsipeptide antibiotic lysobactin is described. The natural product was synthesized via a linear approach using mostly an Fmoc-strategy solid phase peptide synthesis (SPPS) with a single purification. A lysobactin analog has also been synthesized displaying nanomolar membrane disruption activity not seen with the natural product

    Spatial and temporal localization of cell wall associated pili in Enterococcus faecalis

    No full text
    Enterococcus faecalis virulence requires cell wall-associated proteins, including the sortase-assembled endocarditis and biofilm associated pilus (Ebp), important for biofilm formation in vitro and in vivo. The current paradigm for sortase-assembled pilus biogenesis in Gram-positive bacteria is that sortases attach substrates to lipid II peptidoglycan (PG) precursors, prior to their incorporation into the growing cell wall. Contrary to prevailing dogma, by following the distribution of Ebp and PG throughout the E. faecalis cell cycle, we found that cell surface Ebp do not co-localize with newly synthesized PG. Instead, surface-exposed Ebp are localized to the older cell hemisphere and excluded from sites of new PG synthesis at the septum. Moreover, Ebp deposition on the younger hemisphere of the E. faecalis diplococcus appear as foci adjacent to the nascent septum. We propose a new model whereby sortase substrate deposition can occur on older PG rather than at sites of new cell wall synthesis. Consistent with this model, we demonstrate that sequestering lipid II to block PG synthesis via ramoplanin, does not impact new Ebp deposition at the cell surface. These data support an alternative paradigm for sortase substrate deposition in E. faecalis, in which Ebp are anchored directly onto uncrosslinked cell wall, independent of new PG synthesis.Ministry of Education (MOE)National Research Foundation (NRF)Published versionThis work was supported by National Research Foundation and Ministry of Education Singapore under its Research Centre of Excellence Programme, as well as the National Research Foundation under its Singapore NRF Fellowship programme (NRF-NRFF2011-11). This work was also supported by a Tier 1 grant sponsored by the Singapore Ministry of Education (MOE2017-T1- 001-269). Work in the VanNieuwenhze laboratory was supported by the National Institutes of Health (R35 GM136365)
    corecore