Metabolic flexibility and an unusual route for peptidoglycan muramic acid recycling in mycobacteria
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De novo biosynthesis of cell wall peptidoglycan is essential for bacterial viability under many growth conditions and is a well-validated antibiotic target. Although generally not essential for bacterial fitness under standard laboratory growth conditions, peptidoglycan recycling can aid bacterial survival under host or antibiotic stress. Peptidoglycan consists of alternating sugars N -acetylmuramic acid (Mur N Ac) and N -acetylglucosamine (Glc N Ac) cross-linked by peptides. Recycling of these sugars can proceed via Glc N Ac and glucosamine intermediates ( Escherichia coli -type) or, in the case of Mur N Ac, bypass these intermediates altogether ( Pseudomonas -type). We serendipitously discovered that the pathogen Mycobacterium tuberculosis and model organism M. smegmatis assimilate 2-modified Mur N Ac probes into their peptidoglycan despite lacking the Pseudomonas -type machinery that is normally required for incorporation of these molecules. Our data suggest that unmodified and 2-modified Mur N Ac incorporate into M. smegmatis peptidoglycan via multiple pathways, the former preferentially via an E. coli -type route and the latter preferentially via a non- E. coli , non- Pseudomonas -type route with Glc N Ac but not glucosamine intermediates. These findings reveal metabolic flexibility in mycobacterial cell wall recycling that encompasses a previously undescribed pathway.
Importance
Cell wall biosynthesis is critical for bacterial replication under many conditions and is a successful drug target. Recycling of cell wall components is often dispensable under laboratory conditions but can promote bacterial survival under stress. We find that mycobacterial species can recycle a cell wall sugar via a mechanism distinct from those used by other bacteria. As pathogenic mycobacteria are subject to stress from the host environment and antibiotics, this mechanism is a potential novel vulnerability for these organisms.