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LytA, major autolysin of Streptococcus pneumoniae, requires access to nascent peptidoglycan.


ABSTRACT: The pneumococcal autolysin LytA is a virulence factor involved in autolysis as well as in fratricidal- and penicillin-induced lysis. In this study, we used biochemical and molecular biological approaches to elucidate which factors control the cytoplasmic translocation and lytic activation of LytA. We show that LytA is mainly localized intracellularly, as only a small fraction was found attached to the extracellular cell wall. By manipulating the extracellular concentration of LytA, we found that the cells were protected from lysis during exponential growth, but not in the stationary phase, and that a defined threshold concentration of extracellular LytA dictates the onset of autolysis. Stalling growth through nutrient depletion, or the specific arrest of cell wall synthesis, sensitized cells for LytA-mediated lysis. Inhibition of cell wall association via the choline binding domain of an exogenously added enzymatically inactive form of LytA revealed a potential substrate for the amidase domain within the cell wall where the formation of nascent peptidoglycan occurs.

SUBMITTER: Mellroth P 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3322828 | biostudies-other | 2012 Mar

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other

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LytA, major autolysin of Streptococcus pneumoniae, requires access to nascent peptidoglycan.

Mellroth Peter P   Daniels Robert R   Eberhardt Alice A   Rönnlund Daniel D   Blom Hans H   Widengren Jerker J   Normark Staffan S   Henriques-Normark Birgitta B  

The Journal of biological chemistry 20120209 14


The pneumococcal autolysin LytA is a virulence factor involved in autolysis as well as in fratricidal- and penicillin-induced lysis. In this study, we used biochemical and molecular biological approaches to elucidate which factors control the cytoplasmic translocation and lytic activation of LytA. We show that LytA is mainly localized intracellularly, as only a small fraction was found attached to the extracellular cell wall. By manipulating the extracellular concentration of LytA, we found that  ...[more]

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