scholarly journals Identification of new genes in a cell envelope-cell division gene cluster of Escherichia coli: cell envelope gene murG.

1980 ◽  
Vol 144 (1) ◽  
pp. 438-440 ◽  
Author(s):  
G P Salmond ◽  
J F Lutkenhaus ◽  
W D Donachie
2007 ◽  
Vol 189 (14) ◽  
pp. 5334-5347 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richa Priyadarshini ◽  
Miguel A. de Pedro ◽  
Kevin D. Young

ABSTRACT Escherichia coli contains multiple peptidoglycan-specific hydrolases, but their physiological purposes are poorly understood. Several mutants lacking combinations of hydrolases grow as chains of unseparated cells, indicating that these enzymes help cleave the septum to separate daughter cells after cell division. Here, we confirm previous observations that in the absence of two or more amidases, thickened and dark bands, which we term septal peptidoglycan (SP) rings, appear at division sites in isolated sacculi. The formation of SP rings depends on active cell division, and they apparently represent a cell division structure that accumulates because septal synthesis and hydrolysis are uncoupled. Even though septal constriction was incomplete, SP rings exhibited two properties of mature cell poles: they behaved as though composed of inert peptidoglycan, and they attracted the IcsA protein. Despite not being separated by a completed peptidoglycan wall, adjacent cells in these chains were often compartmentalized by the inner membrane, indicating that cytokinesis could occur in the absence of invagination of the entire cell envelope. Finally, deletion of penicillin-binding protein 5 from amidase mutants exacerbated the formation of twisted chains, producing numerous cells having septa with abnormal placements and geometries. The results suggest that the amidases are necessary for continued peptidoglycan synthesis during cell division, that their activities help create a septum having the appropriate geometry, and that they may contribute to the development of inert peptidoglycan.


1997 ◽  
Vol 179 (3) ◽  
pp. 784-793 ◽  
Author(s):  
M M Khattar ◽  
S G Addinall ◽  
K H Stedul ◽  
D S Boyle ◽  
J Lutkenhaus ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 826
Author(s):  
Federica A. Falchi ◽  
Flaviana Di Lorenzo ◽  
Roberto Pizzoccheri ◽  
Gianluca Casino ◽  
Moira Paroni ◽  
...  

LpxT is an inner membrane protein that transfers a phosphate group from the essential lipid undecaprenyl pyrophosphate (C-55PP) to the lipid A moiety of lipopolysaccharide, generating a lipid A tris-phosphorylated species. The protein is encoded by the non-essential lpxT gene, which is conserved in distantly related Gram-negative bacteria. In this work, we investigated the phenotypic effect of lpxT ectopic expression from a plasmid in Escherichia coli. We found that lpxT induction inhibited cell division and led to the formation of elongated cells, mostly with absent or altered septa. Moreover, the cells became sensitive to detergents and to hypo-osmotic shock, indicating that they had cell envelope defects. These effects were not due to lipid A hyperphosphorylation or C-55PP sequestering, but most likely to defective lipopolysaccharide transport. Indeed, lpxT overexpression in mutants lacking the L,D-transpeptidase LdtD and LdtE, which protect cells with outer membrane defects from osmotic lysis, caused cell envelope defects. Moreover, we found that pyrophosphorylated lipid A was also produced in a lpxT deletion mutant, indicating that LpxT is not the only protein able to perform such lipid A modification in E. coli.


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