A novel peptidoglycan deacetylase modulates daughter cell separation in E. coli

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Abstract

Peptidoglycan hydrolases facilitate bacterial cell wall growth by creating space for insertion of new material and allowing physical separation of daughter cells. In Escherichia coli , three peptidoglycan amidases, AmiA, AmiB and AmiC, cleave septal peptidoglycan during cell division. The LytM-domain proteins EnvC and NlpD activate these amidases either from inside the cell or the outer membrane: EnvC binds to the cytoplasmic membrane-anchored divisome components FtsEX, and NlpD and ActS are outer membrane lipoproteins. Here we report the identification of a novel periplasmic deacetylase called SddA that removes acetyl groups from denuded peptidoglycan glycan strands, the products of amidases. SddA is a substrate for the periplasmic protease Prc, suggesting regulation via protein degradation. The sddA gene is co-expressed with the gene encoding EnvC, linking SddA function to amidase activation. Consistent with this link, the deletion of sddA alleviates phenotypes associated with lack of amidase activation, while overexpression of sddA alleviates phenotypes related to a defective Tol-Pal system and causes cell chaining due to reduced septum peptidoglycan cleavage unless envC is co-expressed. We present a model according to which SddA modulates the activation of the septum-splitting amidases during cell division.

AUTHOR SUMMARY

Bacteria surround their cell membrane by the essential peptidoglycan (cell wall) layer to prevent bursting open due to their turgor. During cell division, bacteria produce a septum at midcell, which must be cleaved for daughter cells to separate. Here, we report the identification of a new enzyme, SddA, that modifies a particular type of peptidoglycan material, denuded glycan chains released during the splitting of septal peptidoglycan for daughter cell separation, in the Gram-negative Escherichia coli . We propose a model in which SddA modulates a switch in the septal peptidoglycan splitting, ensuring splitting is activated from the cell membrane in the early stages of cell division and from the outer membrane in the late stages.

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