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INTRODUCTION |
Penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs)
are a set of cytoplasmic membrane enzymes involved in the last steps of
peptidoglycan biosynthesis (17, 26). These proteins are
inactivated by
-lactam antibiotics which irreversibly bind the
transpeptidase domain. In Escherichia coli nine PBPs have
been identified which can be divided into two groups depending on their
molecular weight (13, 25). The low-molecular-weight PBPs
(PBP4, -5, -6, -6b, and -7) are involved in regulating the number of
peptide cross-links and are probably not essential for bacterial growth
(7), whereas the high-molecular-weight PBPs are bimodular
enzymes and possess either transpeptidase activity (PBP2 and -3) or
both transglycosylase and transpeptidases activities (PBP1a and -1b)
(17, 18, 26, 29). PBP2 and PBP3 (also known as FtsI) are
involved in maintaining the rod shape and in cell division,
respectively (1, 2). Indeed, specific inhibition of PBP2
results in the formation of spherical cells and impairment of PBP3 by
using specific antibiotics or by growing temperature-sensitive mutants
at a nonpermissive temperature causes cells to grow as elongated
filaments. Two recent studies have confirmed by immunofluorescence microscopy that PBP3 is recruited to the divisome site during the later
stages of cell growth and throughout septation (34, 36).
PBP1a and PBP1b represent the major murein polymerizing enzymes. At
least one of either PBP1a or PBP1b is essential for growth, since a
deletion of both genes is lethal (20, 28, 31, 39). PBP1b
is usually present in the cell membrane in three molecular forms termed
,
, and
which differ in size but are all encoded by a single
gene, ponB. PBP1b
consists of 844 amino acids and is
anchored to the inner membrane, the first 64 residues being cytoplasmic. The
form lacks the first 24 N-terminal residues and
was shown to be a degradation product of the
component (14, 30). PBP1b
arises from the use of an alternative translation start site at codon corresponding to residue M46 of the
PBP1b
sequence (4, 19). Each form has been shown to
catalyze both transglycosylation and transpeptidation, and production
of a single component corresponding to
was sufficient to correct
the defects caused by the mutational loss of PBP1b (19).
PBPs work in close association with other enzymes, including hydrolases
and synthetases, in the control of bacterial morphology, elongation,
and cell division. It has therefore been proposed that some of these
proteins may interact as members of multienzyme complexes, allowing a
better coordination of their enzymatic activities (15,
16). The existence of these complexes is supported by numerous
studies, including protein-protein interaction studies based on
affinity chromatography, studies based on the use of specific
inhibitors of high-molecular-weight PBPs, and genetic studies
(17, 33). In particular, several lines of evidence indicate that PBP1b belongs to the divisome, a multimeric structure implicated in cell division, and takes part in the septum formation in
conjunction with PBP3 in E. coli (3, 17). This
idea is supported by analysis of the behavior of strains deficient
either in PBP1a or in PBP1b grown in the presence of
-lactams which specifically inhibit PBP1 or PBP3 (10, 11, 12, 37).
Earlier studies have shown that PBP1b is able to form dimers (6,
33, 40, 41) and that only homodimers,
-
,
-
, or
-
, occur (40; X. Charpentier, unpublished
data), suggesting an involvement of the cytoplasmic tail of PBP1b in
the dimerization process. We thus expressed the different forms of
PBP1b in an E. coli strain deleted for the ponB
gene. When bacteria expressing the PBP1b of different lengths were
assayed for growth in the presence of various
-lactams, we observed
different antibiotic susceptibilities, suggesting that these forms
might differ in their functionality. Further experiments performed with
mutants of PBP1b
harboring sequential amino acid substitutions
showed that some residues within the N-terminal region play specific roles.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Media and growth conditions.
Cultures were routinely grown
in Luria-Bertani (LB) broth (1% tryptone [Difco Laboratories,
Detroit, Mich.], 0.5% yeast extract [Difco], 1% NaCl) at 37°C
under vigorous agitation. Strains harboring resistance determinants
were grown in the presence of tetracycline (12.5 µg/ml; Boehringer
Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany) or spectinomycin (100 µg/ml; Sigma, St.
Louis, Mo.).
Bacterial strains and plasmids.
E. coli K-12 strains
used were MC6-RP1 (F
thrA leuA proA lysA dra
drm) and QCB1 (F
thrA leuA proA lysA dra drm
ponB::Spcr). Cloning steps were performed
with MC1061 [F
araD139
(ara-leu)7636 galE15 galK16
(lac)X74 rpsL mcrA mcrB1 hsdR2(rK
mK+)].
pPONB is a low-copy-number Tetr plasmid that expresses
PBP1b fused to a tag peptide (YPYDVPDYA) from the hemagglutinin HA1
epitope of influenza virus (38) at its C-terminal end
(24).
Construction of the pPONB derivative plasmids.
Plasmids used
in this study were constructed by double-strand site-directed
mutagenesis with the inverse-PCR technique (35) and
checked by DNA sequencing at Genome Express (Grenoble, France). Oligonucleotides were synthetized by Isoprim (Toulouse, France). The
resulting constructs and the corresponding PBP1b mutants are listed in
Fig. 1.

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FIG. 1.
Amino-terminal sequences of the PBP1b mutants. Amino
acid sequence of the cytoplasmic domain of PBP1b coded by plasmid
pPONB is shown (residues 1 to 64). The beginning of the sequences of
the and components are indicated by arrows. Amino acid
sequences corresponding to the cytoplasmic domains of the PBP1b mutants
(indicated on the right in parentheses) expressed by plasmids used in
this study are aligned with the amino-terminal sequence of PBP1b .
Except for methionine, identical amino acids are shown by dashed lines
and changed residues are indicated by their corresponding letters.
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Plasmids pM46L, pR26
Nt, pM46
Nt, and pR63
Nt are derivatives of
pPONB. pM46L was made by replacement of the M46 codon by a
leucine codon in the ponB gene. pR26
Nt, pM46
Nt, and
pR63
Nt carry deletions of the ponB sequence corresponding
to the cytoplasmic region of PBP1b. They were made by fusing the ATG
start (M1) codon to the R26 codon for
pR26
Nt, to the P47 codon for pM46
Nt, and to the
R63 codon for pR63
Nt.
pL46ASS1, pL46ASS2, pL46ASS3, and pL46ASS4 originate from pM46L. They
produce PBP1b
* mutants in which residues A2 to
E7 for pL46ASS1, P8 to G13 for
pL46ASS2, K14 to V19 for pL46ASS3, and K20 to R25 for pL46ASS4 have been substituted
by a six-alanine stretch. To construct pL46ASS5, the
PstI-MluI fragment of pL46ASS2, which encodes
amino acids A11 to T16, was removed by cutting
pL46ASS2 with PstI and MluI. A 19-bp
PstI-MluI oligonucleotides linker was then cloned
into the digested plasmid. The resulting construct produces a PBP1b
*
mutant protein where residues P8 to G10 have been substituted by three alanines (Fig. 1).
Preparation of membrane fractions and labeling of the PBPs with
fluorescent penicillin.
Membrane fractions from E. coli
strain QCB1 expressing wild-type PBP1b or any of its variants were
prepared as described by Lefèvre et al. (24).
Fluorescent 6-amino-penicilloic acid (6-APA-FLU) was synthesized as
described by Galleni et al. (9) and Lakaye et al.
(22). For the penicillin-binding assay, 2 µl of
6-APA-FLU at 147 µg/ml was mixed with membrane fractions in a final
volume of 20 µl. Incubation was at 30°C for 30 min. The membrane
proteins were then subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide
gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), and PBPs were detected by
immunoblotting assay with an antifluorescein
isothiocyanate-horseradish peroxidase conjugate antibody (Amersham) as
described below.
SDS-PAGE and immunodetection.
Membrane proteins prepared
from strain QCB1 carrying pPONB or any of its derivatives were
incubated with sample buffer at 95°C for 10 min and subjected to
SDS-PAGE on a 7% polyacrylamide gel according to the method of Laemmli
et al. (21). After SDS-PAGE, proteins were
electrophoretically transferred to nitrocellulose sheets (Gelman) and
analyzed by Western blotting performed with an enhanced
chemiluminescence detection system (Amersham). Membranes were either
incubated with an antifluorescein isothiocyanate-horseradish peroxidase
conjugate (1/1,000) when PBPs had previously been labeled with
6-APA-FLU or with antibody 12CA5 (1/50,000) raised against the HA1
peptide tag from the hemagglutinin of influenza virus (a generous gift
from J. Grassi, Commissariat à l'Énergie Atomique, Saclay, France) and with an anti-mouse peroxidase conjugate (1/10,000; Sigma) and exposed to Fuji X-ray films.
Treatment of exponentially growing cells with aztreonam and
cephaloridine.
One bacterial colony of QCB1 freshly transformed
with pPONB or any of its derivatives was inoculated in 2 ml of LB
medium with tetracycline (12.5 µg/ml) and incubated overnight at
37°C. A portion (200 µl) of the preculture was then diluted into
100 ml of LB medium with tetracycline (12.5 µg/ml). For strain QCB1 harboring no plasmid and strain MC6-RP1, experiments were carried out
without tetracycline in the medium.
When the optical density at 550 nm (OD550) reached 0.1, the
culture was divided into four portions of 25 ml each. No additional antibiotic was added in the first portion, whereas the second, third,
and fourth portions were treated with aztreonam (0.5 µg/ml; a
generous gift from Bristol Mayer Squibb), cephaloridine (0.3 µg/ml;
Glaxo Laboratories), and aztreonam plus cephaloridine, respectively.
Growth was monitored by measuring the OD550 of the cultures
at different times (0, 30, 60, 90, 120, and 180 min).
 |
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION |
Expression and activities of the
,
, and
forms of
PBP1b.
In previous studies, PBP1b was produced in strain QCB1,
which was transformed with vector pPONB (6, 24). QCB1 is
an E. coli strain with a deletion in ponB, which
codes for PBP1b (11). The three molecular forms of PBP1b
(PBP1b
, -
, and -
) can be visualized by Western blotting,
performed on E. coli membrane preparations, with monoclonal
antibody 12CA5 raised against the tag peptide.
In order to produce each form of PBP1b separately, we constructed
plasmids pM46L, pR26
Nt, and pM46
Nt. QCB1 harboring pM46L produces
PBP1b
*, in which residue M46 was substituted by a
leucine (Fig. 1). This mutation should abolish the production of the
component of PBP1b. Western blot analysis with 12CA5 revealed two
bands corresponding to PBP1b
* and its degradation product PBP1b
*
and confirmed that the
form of PBP1b was absent (Fig. 2A, lane 3). Moreover, it showed that
PBP1b
* was produced at the same level as wild-type PBP1b
expressed from pPONB in QCB1 (Fig. 2A, lane 2). The PBP1b
* mutant
bound fluorescent penicillin as efficiently as the wild type,
indicating a proper folding and a functional transpeptidase activity
(Fig. 2B, lane 3).

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FIG. 2.
*, *, , and forms of PBP1b. (A) Production
of the *, *, , and forms of PBP1b. Membrane fractions from
QCB1 (15 µg, lane 1) or QCB1 transformed with pPONB (10 µg, lane
2), pM46L (10 µg, lane 3), pR26 Nt (15 µg, lane 4), pM46 Nt (15 µg, lane 5), or pR63 Nt (15 µg, lane 6) were analyzed by Western
blotting using the antitag 12CA5 antibody. (B) Binding of 6-APA-FLU by
the *, *, , and forms of PBP1b. Membrane fractions (100 µg) from QCB1 (lane 1) or QCB1 transformed with pPONB (lane 2), pM46L
(lane 3), pR26 Nt (lane 4), pM46 Nt (lane 5), or pR63 Nt (lane 6)
and from MC6-RP1 (lane 7) were incubated with 6-APA-FLU and analyzed by
Western blotting with an antifluorescein antibody. 1a, PBP1a mutant;
1b, PBP1b mutant.
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In plasmid pR26
Nt, deletion of the ponB sequence
corresponding to residues A2 to R25 was made in
addition to the M46L mutation. This plasmid avoids
expression of PBP1b
and allows expression of a mutated
component
of PBP1b, namely, PBP1b
* (Fig. 1). pM46
Nt, which carries a
deletion of the ponB sequence corresponding to the first 45 residues, was expected to yield solely PBP1b
(Fig. 1). Western blot
analysis indicated that both mutant proteins were produced at a level
corresponding to one-third of that obtained with mutant PBP1b
* (Fig.
2A, lanes 4 and 5) but were able to bind efficiently fluorescent
penicillin (Fig. 2B, lanes 4 and 5).
An additional mutant lacking the entire cytoplasmic domain, PBP1b
,
was produced by plasmid pR63
Nt (Fig. 1). This mutant was produced at
the same level as PBP1b
* and PBP1b
in strain QCB1 and was still
able to bind fluorescent penicillin (Fig. 2A and B, lanes 6),
indicating that it is translocated across the membrane and correctly folded.
The cytoplasmic domain is not required for the dimerization of
PBP1b.
It has been shown that PBP1b is able to form fairly stable
dimers which can be detected by SDS-PAGE at a position corresponding to
a molecular mass ranging from 140 to 150 kDa. To detect whether the
cytoplasmic region is necessary for the formation of the dimer, the
*,
*, and
forms, as well as PBP1b
, were tested for their ability to dimerize.
The membrane fraction from strain QCB1 harboring pM46L,
pR26
Nt, pM46
Nt, or pR63
Nt was incubated in sample buffer
containing 5%
-mercaptoethanol at room temperature for 10 min
and subjected to SDS-PAGE for Western blot analysis as previously
described (6). Under these conditions, major bands were
detected at positions corresponding to the different molecular forms of
PBP1b (PBP1b
*, -
*, -
, and -
), and additional bands reacted
with the antitag antibody at positions corresponding to the dimeric
form of each component (Fig. 3). These
dimers remained stable after incubation for 10 min at 60°C with
sample buffer but were almost totally dissociated at 80°C (data not
shown), indicating strong interactions between the monomers. This
finding clearly demonstrates that the cytoplasmic domain is not
required for the dimerization of PBP1b thus suggesting another role, if
any, for this domain.

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FIG. 3.
Stability of PBP1b dimers. Membrane fractions prepared
from strain QCB1 (50 µg, lane 1) or QCB1 transformed with pPONB (25 µg, lane 2), pM46L (25 µg, lane 3), pR26 Nt (50 µg, lane 4),
pM46 Nt (50 µg, lane 5), or pR63 Nt (50 µg, lane 6) were
incubated for 10 min in sample buffer with 5% -mercaptoethanol at
room temperature. Samples were subjected to SDS-PAGE and Western
blotting with the anti-tag 12CA5 antibody. M, monomeric forms of PBP1b
mutants; D, dimeric forms of PBP1b mutants.
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Effects of antibiotics on the growth of strains producing the
*,
*, or
form of PBP1b.
García del Portillo et al.
(11, 12) have shown that blocking PBP3 with a specific
antibiotic was lytic for an E. coli mutant defective in
PBP1b, suggesting an involvement of PBP1b in peptidoglycan synthesis at
the level of septation probably in conjunction with PBP3. Since
expression of the
* or the
mutant in QCB1 results in a moderate
increase in antibiotic susceptibility compared to cells expressing
PBP1b
* (not shown), this led us to investigate whether the increased
antibiotic susceptibility of the mutants could reflect differential
interactions between each of the PBP1b forms and PBP3 or any protein
involved in septation. We thus studied the effects of aztreonam, alone
or in combination with cephaloridine, on the growth of QCB1 expressing
the different forms of PBP1b (Fig. 4). At
concentrations used throughout this study, cephaloridine (0.3 µg/ml)
and aztreonam (0.5 µg/ml) have been shown by competition to
specifically inhibit PBP1a and PBP3, respectively (5, 39).

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FIG. 4.
Effects of cephaloridine and aztreonam on the growth of
strains expressing the *, *, and forms of PBP1b. When the
OD550 reached 0.1 (t = 0), cultures of
E. coli MC6-RP1, QCB1 or QCB1 harboring pPONB, pM46L,
pR26 Nt, or pM46 Nt growing exponentially at 37°C were divided
into four subcultures, and antibiotics were added as described in
Materials and Methods. Growth was monitored by measuring the
OD550 at 0, 30, 60, 90, 120, and 180 min. , Untreated
control; , cephaloridine (0.3 µg/ml); , aztreonam (0.5 µg/ml); ×, cephaloridine and aztreonam.
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As expected, QCB1 lysed promply after the addition of either
cephaloridine or aztreonam (11, 24). On the contrary,
QCB1(pPONB) cells grew normally in the presence of cephaloridine and
grew as filaments when aztreonam, alone or in combination with
cephaloridine, was added to the medium. QCB1(pM46L) showed patterns of
growth that were indistinguishable from those of QCB1(pPONB) according to OD550 measurements (Fig. 4) and microscopic observations
(not shown).
For both QCB1(pR26
Nt) and QCB1(pM46
Nt) strains, expressing
PBP1b
* or PBP1b
, respectively, the rates of growth were similar with or without cephaloridine (Fig. 4), confirming that the two forms
are able to fully complement the deletion of the ponB gene in strain QCB1. When cultivated with aztreonam in the medium, cells
grew as filaments without noticeable cell lysis (not shown), but both
strains stopped to grow when the OD550 reached 0.5, whereas cells expressing PBP1b
* grew to an OD550 of 0.8 and
further elongated at a reduced rate. The most unexpected result was the
lytic effect of aztreonam in combination with cephaloridine on cells
expressing PBP1b
* or PBP1b
only (Fig. 4). Cell lysis (confirmed
by microscopic observations) took place 30 min after the addition of
antibiotics to the medium.
Thus, after simultaneous inactivation of PBP1a and PBP3 with both
cephaloridine and aztreonam, cells expressing PBP1b
* still grew as
filaments, whereas cells expressing either PBP1b
* or PBP1b
lysed.
Although the
* and
mutant proteins were expressed at levels
significantly lower than the wild-type protein from the pPONB plasmid,
they were produced at higher levels than the wild-type PBP1b in the
MC6-RP1 strain (Fig. 2B, lane 7). Since this strain exhibits growth
curves which are essentially identical to the ones obtained with
QCB1(pPONB), the differences between the wild-type and the
* and
mutant proteins are not due to a difference in the level of expression.
Moreover, since the mutants can sustain normal growth in the absence of
antibiotics and since all of the mutant proteins can bind fluorescent
penicillin, it can be assumed that the mutations have no significant
impact on the folding and enzymatic activity of the periplasmic domain. Our data thus hint at a specific interaction of PBP1b with PBP3 in
murein synthesis which requires a full-length cytoplasmic domain of
PBP1b and for which PBP1b cannot be replaced by PBP1a. PBP1b could, for
example, be recruited to the septation complex via its cytoplasmic
domain, while this would not be the case for the elongation complex.
Alanine stretch scanning of the first 25 residues of PBP1b
yields mutant proteins with different in vivo activities.
To
further explore the putative role played by residues M1 to
R25 in the effects described above, we have used the
alanine-stretch-scanning (ASS) method (23). Four plasmids
(pL46ASS1 to -4) have been constructed from plasmid pM46L and
transformed in strain QCB1. Each construct expressed an ASS mutant
harboring sequential substitutions of six successive residues by
alanines (Fig. 1).
Western blot analysis revealed that mutants ASS3 and ASS4 were produced
at the same level as the wild-type protein in bacterial cells and
efficiently bound fluorescent penicillin, indicating a proper folding
and a functional transpeptidase activity (Fig. 5, lanes 5 and 6). Mutant ASS1 was
expressed in QCB1 at approximately half the level of the wild-type
*
and still bound fluorescent penicillin (Fig. 5, lanes 3). Mutant ASS2
was expressed at the lowest level and had a weak but detectable
penicillin-binding activity (Fig. 5, lanes 4).

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FIG. 5.
ASS mutants of PBP1b . (A) Production of the ASS
mutants of PBP1b . Membrane fractions from QCB1 (10 µg, lane 1) or
QCB1 transformed with pM46L (10 µg, lane 2), pL46ASS1 (20 µg, lane
3), pL46ASS2 (20 µg, lane 4), pL46ASS3 (10 µg, lane 5), pL46ASS4
(10 µg, lane 6), or pL46ASS5 (10 µg, lane 7) were analyzed by
Western blotting using the anti-tag 12CA5 antibody. (B) Binding of
6-APA-FLU by the ASS mutants. Membrane fractions (100 µg) from QCB1
(lane 1) or QCB1 transformed with pM46L (lane2), pL46ASS1 (lane 3),
PL46SS2 (lane 4), pL46ASS3 (lane 5), pL46ASS4 (lane 6), or pL46ASS5
(lane 7) and from MC6-RP1 (lane 8) were incubated with 6-APA-FLU and
analyzed by Western blotting with an antifluorescein antibody. 1a,
PBP1a mutant; 1b, PBP1b mutant.
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We then studied the effect of aztreonam and cephaloridine on the
morphology and growth of QCB1 expressing the different ASS mutants
(Fig. 6). For QCB1 cells expressing
either ASS3 or ASS4, results were identical to those obtained with
cells expressing PBP1b
*. Basically, they grew normally with
cephaloridine and filamented when aztreonam, alone or in combination
with cephaloridine, was added to the medium (Fig. 6). The similar
phenotype of cells expressing mutants ASS3, ASS4, and PBP1b
*
suggests that residues K14 to R25 are not
responsible for the differences observed between strains expressing the
*,
*, and
forms of PBP1b.

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FIG. 6.
Effects of cephaloridine and aztreonam on the growth of
strains expressing the ASS mutants of PBP1b . When OD550
reached 0.1 (t = 0), cultures of E. coli
QCB1 harboring pM46L, pL46ASS1, pL46ASS2, pL46ASS3, pL46ASS4, or
pL46ASS5 growing exponentially at 37°C were divided into four
subcultures, and antibiotics were added as described in Materials and
Methods. Growth was monitored by measuring the OD550 at 0, 30, 60, 90, 120, and 180 min. , Untreated control; ,
cephaloridine (0.3 µg/ml); , aztreonam (0.5 µg/ml); ×,
cephaloridine and aztreonam.
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In contrast, substitution of residues A2 to E7
in mutant ASS1 resulted in a phenotype identical to the one obtained
with QCB1 expressing PBP1b
* or PBP1b
mutants. While adding
cephaloridine to the culture did not affect cell growth, the addition
of aztreonam alone led to filamentation and had a lytic effect when
combined with cephaloridine (Fig. 6). Although mutant ASS1 was produced at a lower level in bacteria than wild-type PBP1b from pPONB, it was
still produced at a higher level than the wild-type protein in strain
MC6-RP1 (Fig. 5B, lane 8). Thus, as for PBP1b
* and PBP1b
, this
result cannot solely be explained by a lower production of the mutant.
This pinpoints residues A2 to E7 as being
required for a fully functional multienzyme complex for peptidoglycan synthesis.
Substitution of amino acids P8 to G13 had a
drastic impact on the behavior of cells. Indeed, the addition of
aztreonam was always lytic for strain QCB1 expressing mutant ASS2.
Furthermore, the presence of cephaloridine in the culture had a
significant impact on the growth curve, indicating that ASS2 only
weakly complements the deletion of ponB (Fig. 6). However,
microscopic observations performed 180 min after the addition of the
antibiotic showed that cells continued to grow normally, although at a
lower rate, without lysis or filamentation. Assuming that the
cytoplasmic domain does not influence the folding of the periplasmic
domain once it has been translocated to the periplasm, the low level of
activity of this mutant is likely to be caused by an improper membrane localization and degradation.
To further characterize the amino acids responsible for the ASS2
phenotype, we made a partial revertant, ASS5, wherein residues A8 to A13 of ASS2 were replaced by the
A8AARKG13 sequence (Fig. 1). This mutant was
well produced in cells and bound fluorescent penicillin as efficiently
as the wild type (Fig. 5, lanes 7). When the strain harboring mutant
ASS5 was assayed for growth with cephaloridine and aztreonam, the cells
exhibited the same response as those expressing PBP1b
* (Fig. 6),
indicating that this mutant was fully active in vivo and complemented
both the ponB deletion and the PBP1a inhibition in strain QCB1.
Residues R10K11G13 are therefore
major determinants for the translocation of full-length PBP1b either
through intramolecular or intermolecular interactions, since their
mutation leads to a folding "dead end," but are not required per se
for membrane anchoring of the protein since PBP1b
, which is deleted
for the whole cytoplasmic domain, folds correctly and is functional
both in vitro and in vivo. A simple hypothesis to explain this apparent contradiction could be that the deletion mutant, PBP1b
, is
translocated across the membrane by a process different from the one
used by the full-length protein, as has been shown for other proteins (8, 27).
Implication for the multienzyme complex hypothesis.
It is
speculated that synthesis and insertion of new peptidoglycan strands
into the older murein sacculus are carried out by multienzyme complexes
during cell elongation and the formation of the septum. Furthermore,
earlier studies reported that PBP1b is able to dimerize, in agreement
with the multienzyme hypothesis which predicts that PBP1b acts as a
dimer within these complexes. It has also been shown that only
homodimers,
-
,
-
, or
-
, occur (40),
raising the question of a putative role for the cytoplasmic domain of PBP1b.
Cell filamentation triggered by aztreonam has been shown to result from
inactivation of the PBP3 transpeptidase activity which is necessary for
the septum formation. According to the multienzymatic complex
hypothesis, one of the two bifunctional PBPs (PBP1a or PBP1b)
cooperates with PBP3 during septum formation, with the former, being a
bifunctional enzyme, involved in both transglycosylation and
transpeptidation and the latter only involved in transpeptidation. In a
situation where transglycosylation occurs while PBP3 is inactivated, one can imagine that incorporation of newly synthesized glycan chains
which are unlinked or badly linked to old glycan strands would result
in lysis. The idea that the transglycosylase activity of PBP1b could be
coupled with the transpeptidase activity of PBP3 has been developed in
previous studies (32). Moreover, this hypothesis is
consistent with our microscopic observations showing that before lysis
most of the cells present bulges around their midpoints, suggesting
that lysis occurs at the division site.
In this study, we established that the different forms of PBP1b,
including the
component, were able to preserve cell integrity in
PBP1a-deficient cells. We also found that the expression of the
or
the
form alone is unable to prevent cell lysis after impairment of
both PBP3 and PBP1a in strain QCB1, whereas expression of PBP1b
does
prevent lysis. Cell lysis clearly requires the presence of impaired
PBP3 in the multienzyme complex since a QCB1 strain harboring a
thermosensitive PBP3 mutant protein elongates at a nonpermissive
temperature instead of lysing (11).
Thus, the fact that synthesis of an osmotically stable
peptidoglycan after inactivation of PBP3 requires the presence in
cells of either the full-length PBP1b or a deleted form of PBP1b (
or
) plus PBP1a hints at different interactions between the
various PBP1 components and PBP3 or another protein involved in the
septation multienzyme complex. Whatever the precise nature of these
interactions, ASS mutagenesis shows that they involve the six
N-terminal residues of PBP1b. This is quite surprising since this is
the part of the cytoplasmic domain which has the lowest number of
charged residues. Nonetheless, we now have both sequence information
and a phenotype that will allow us to search for the putative partners
of PBP1b at the molecular level. These findings also underline the
intricate relationship between the various PBPs within the murein
synthesis complexes.
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