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J. Bacteriol., Dec 1996, 6766-6771, Vol 178, No. 23
K Ehlert and JV Holtje
Inhibition of phospholipid synthesis in Escherichia coli by either
cerulenin treatment or glycerol starvation of a glycerol-auxotrophic mutant
resulted in a concomitant block of murein synthesis. The intracellular pool
of cytoplasmic and lipid-linked murein precursors was not affected by an
inhibition of phospholipid synthesis, nor was the activity of the
penicillin-binding proteins. In addition, a decrease in the activity of the
two lipoprotein murein hydrolases, the lytic transglycosylases A and B,
could not be demonstrated. The indirect inhibition of murein synthesis by
cerulenin resulted in a 68% decrease of trimeric muropeptide structures,
proposed to represent the attachment points of newly added murein.
Importantly, inhibition of phospholipid synthesis also inhibited O-antigen
synthesis with a sensitivity and kinetics similar to those of murein
synthesis. It is concluded that the step common for murein and O-antigen
synthesis, the translocation of the respective bactoprenolphosphate-linked
precursor molecules, is affected by an inhibition of phospholipid
synthesis. Consistent with this assumption, it was shown that murein
synthesis no longer depends on ongoing phospholipid synthesis in
ether-permeabilized cells. We propose that the assembly of a
murein-synthesizing machinery, a multienzyme complex consisting of murein
hydrolases and synthases, at specific sites of the membrane, where integral
membrane proteins such as RodA and FtsW facilitate the translocation of the
lipid-linked murein precursors to the periplasm, depends on ongoing
phospholipid synthesis. This would explain the well-known phenomenon that
both murein synthesis and antibiotic-induced autolysis depend on
phospholipid synthesis and thereby indirectly on the stringent control.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Role of precursor translocation in coordination of murein and phospholipid synthesis in Escherichia coli
Abteilung Biology, Max-Planck-Institut fur Entwicklungsbiologie, Tubingen, Germany.
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