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The hydrolase LpqI primes mycobacterial peptidoglycan recycling

journal contribution
posted on 2019-05-31, 09:49 authored by P Moynihan, I Cadby, N Veerapen, M Jankute, M Crosatti, G Mukamolova, A Lovering, G Besra
Growth and division by most bacteria requires remodeling and cleavage of their cell wall. A byproduct of this process is the generation of free peptidoglycan (PG) fragments known as muropeptides, which are recycled in many model organisms. Bacteria and hosts can harness the unique nature of muropeptides as a signal for cell wall damage and infection, respecticely. Despite this critical role for muropeptides, it has long been thought that pathogenic mycobacteria such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis do not recycle their PG. Herein we show that M. tuberculosis and Mycobacterium bovis BCG are able to recycle components of their PG. We demonstrate that the core-mycobacterial gene lpqI, encodes an authentic NagZ β-N31 acetylglucosaminidase and that it is essential for PG-derived amino sugar recycling via an unusual pathway. Together these data provide a critical first step in understanding how mycobacteria recycle their peptidoglycan

Funding

P.J.M. wishes to acknowledge support in the form of a Future Leader Fellowship and a David Phillips Fellowship from the UK Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BB/N011945/1 and BB/S010122/1). G.V.M. would like to acknowledge funding from UK Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BB/P001513/1). A.L.L. acknowledges funding from UK Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BB/J015229/1). G.S.B would like to acknowledge support in the form of a Personal Research Chair from Mr James Bardrick and the UK Medical Research Council (grant MR/S000542/1).

History

Citation

Nature Communications, 2019, volume 10, Article number: 2647

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF LIFE SCIENCES/School of Medicine/Department of Infection, Immunity and Inflammation

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Nature Communications

Publisher

Nature Research (part of Springer Nature)

eissn

2041-1723

Acceptance date

2019-05-14

Copyright date

2019

Available date

2019-09-18

Publisher version

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-019-10586-2

Notes

The atomic coordinates and structure factors of LpqI are available from Protein Data Bank with accession code 6GFV. The data that support the findings of this study are available from the authors on reasonable request and all data used to generate the figures are available in the Source Data file.

Language

en

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