Enterococcus faecalis autolysin, EpaU, binds the enterococcal polysaccharide antigen via its teichoic acid-like repeats and modulates c-di-AMP signaling

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Abstract

The cell wall of the Gram-positive bacterium Enterococcus faecalis is decorated with the enterococcal polysaccharide antigen (EPA), consisting of a core rhamnan backbone linked covalently with a strain-variable teichoic acid-like (TA) polymer. Current models propose that the TA decoration is a repeating polymer composed of two alternating subunits, designated TAI and TAII, which are attached to the rhamnan core via a mild-acid labile phosphodiester bond from the initiating TAI subunit. In this study, we characterize the EpaU autolysin encoded within the EPA biosynthetic gene cluster. We demonstrate that the cell wall-binding domain of EpaU associates with the intact TA domains of EPA synthesized with the aid of the glycosyltransferases EpaR and EpaX. We further show that EpaU is a potent autolysin that binds generally over the E. faecalis cell surface, suggesting that it functions as a remodeling peptidoglycan hydrolase. The absence of EpaU leads to increased ampicillin resistance and elevated intracellular levels of the second messenger c-di-AMP. These data suggest that E. faecalis possesses a mechanism that senses the integrity of the peptidoglycan meshwork and employs c-di-AMP to regulate cell turgor, potentially altering the antibiotic resistance.

Importance

Enterococcus faecalis is an important opportunistic pathogen that can cause severe nosocomial infections. Knowledge of how bacteria remodel the cell wall is key to understanding many important cellular processes, such as antibiotic resistance, cell division, biofilm formation, and stress resistance. In this study, we shed new light on the structural details of the main cell wall polysaccharide, Enterococcal Polysaccharide Antigen (EPA), and its interaction with EpaU, an autolysin that cleaves peptidoglycan during cell wall remodeling. We also report a link between EpaU and the regulation of turgor pressure via cyclic dinucleotide signaling. This work contributes to a more complete picture of E. faecalis cell wall and may provide insight into the development of antimicrobial agents based on autolysins.

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