Patricia Rothe, Sabrina Wamp, Lisa Rosemeyer, Jeanine Rismondo, Joerg Doellinger, Angelika Gründling, Sven Halbedel
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Bacteria adapt the biosynthesis of their envelopes to specific growth conditions and prevailing stress factors. Peptidoglycan (PG) is the major component of the cell wall in Gram-positive bacteria, where PASTA kinases play a central role in PG biosynthesis regulation. Despite their importance for growth, cell division and antibiotic resistance, the mechanisms of PASTA kinase activation are not fully understood. ReoM, a recently discovered cytosolic phosphoprotein, is one of the main substrates of the PASTA kinase PrkA in the Gram-positive human pathogen Listeria monocytogenes. Depending on its phosphorylation, ReoM controls proteolytic stability of MurA, the first enzyme in the PG biosynthesis pathway. The late cell division protein GpsB has been implicated in PASTA kinase signalling. Consistently, we show that L. monocytogenes prkA and gpsB mutants phenocopied each other. Analysis of in vivo ReoM phosphorylation confirmed GpsB as an activator of PrkA leading to the description of structural features in GpsB that are important for kinase activation. We further show that ReoM phosphorylation is growth phase-dependent and that this kinetic is reliant on the protein phosphatase PrpC. ReoM phosphorylation was inhibited in mutants with defects in MurA degradation, leading to the discovery that MurA overexpression prevented ReoM phosphorylation. Overexpressed MurA must be able to bind its substrates and interact with ReoM to exert this effect, but the extracellular PASTA domains of PrkA or MurJ flippases were not required. Our results indicate that intracellular signals control ReoM phosphorylation and extend current models describing the mechanisms of PASTA kinase activation.
期刊介绍:
Molecular Microbiology, the leading primary journal in the microbial sciences, publishes molecular studies of Bacteria, Archaea, eukaryotic microorganisms, and their viruses.
Research papers should lead to a deeper understanding of the molecular principles underlying basic physiological processes or mechanisms. Appropriate topics include gene expression and regulation, pathogenicity and virulence, physiology and metabolism, synthesis of macromolecules (proteins, nucleic acids, lipids, polysaccharides, etc), cell biology and subcellular organization, membrane biogenesis and function, traffic and transport, cell-cell communication and signalling pathways, evolution and gene transfer. Articles focused on host responses (cellular or immunological) to pathogens or on microbial ecology should be directed to our sister journals Cellular Microbiology and Environmental Microbiology, respectively.