Penicillin-binding proteins exhibit catalytic redundancy during asymmetric cell division in Clostridioides difficile
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Peptidoglycan synthesis is an essential driver of bacterial growth and division. The final steps of this crucial process involve the activity of SEDS family glycosyltransferases that polymerize glycan strands and class B penicillin-binding protein (bPBP) transpeptidases that cross-link them. While most bacteria encode multiple bPBPs that perform specialized roles during specific cellular processes, some bPBPs can play redundant roles that are important for resistance against certain cell wall stresses. Our understanding of these compensatory mechanisms, however, remains incomplete. Endospore-forming bacteria typically encode multiple bPBPs that drive morphological changes required for sporulation. The sporulation-specific bPBP, SpoVD, is important for synthesizing the asymmetric division septum and spore cortex peptidoglycan during sporulation in the pathogen Clostridioides difficile . Although SpoVD catalytic activity is essential for cortex synthesis, we show that it is unexpectedly dispensable for SpoVD to mediate asymmetric division. The dispensability of SpoVD’s catalytic activity requires the presence of its SEDS partner, SpoVE, and is facilitated by the catalytic activity of another sporulation-specific bPBP, PBP3. Our data further suggest that PBP3 interacts with components of the asymmetric division machinery, including SpoVD. These findings suggest a possible mechanism by which bPBPs can be functionally redundant in diverse bacteria and facilitate antibiotic resistance.