Abstract

ABSTRACTBacterial cell division has been studied extensively under laboratory conditions. Despite being a key event in the bacterial cell cycle, cell division has not been explored in vivo in bacterial pathogens interacting with their hosts. We discovered in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium a gene absent in nonpathogenic bacteria and encoding a peptidoglycan synthase with 63% identity to penicillin-binding protein 3 (PBP3). PBP3 is an essential cell division-specific peptidoglycan synthase that builds the septum required to separate daughter cells. Since S. Typhimurium carries genes that encode a PBP3 paralog—which we named PBP3SAL—and PBP3, we hypothesized that there are different cell division events in host and nonhost environments. To test this, we generated S. Typhimurium isogenic mutants lacking PBP3SAL or the hitherto considered essential PBP3. While PBP3 alone promotes cell division under all conditions tested, the mutant producing only PBP3SAL proliferates under acidic conditions (pH ≤ 5.8) but does not divide at neutral pH. PBP3SAL production is tightly regulated with increased levels as bacteria grow in media acidified up to pH 4.0 and in intracellular bacteria infecting eukaryotic cells. PBP3SAL activity is also strictly dependent on acidic pH, as shown by beta-lactam antibiotic binding assays. Live-cell imaging microscopy revealed that PBP3SAL alone is sufficient for S. Typhimurium to divide within phagosomes of the eukaryotic cell. Additionally, we detected much larger amounts of PBP3SAL than those of PBP3 in vivo in bacteria colonizing mouse target organs. Therefore, PBP3SAL evolved in S. Typhimurium as a specialized peptidoglycan synthase promoting cell division in the acidic intraphagosomal environment.

Highlights

  • Bacterial cell division has been studied extensively under laboratory conditions

  • This study provides the first evidence of two peptidoglycan (PG) synthases capable of building independently the division septum in a nonsporulating bacterium

  • Typhimurium contrast with the redundancy in cell division recently claimed for two PG synthases of B. subtilis [24]

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Summary

Introduction

Bacterial cell division has been studied extensively under laboratory conditions. Despite being a key event in the bacterial cell cycle, cell division has not been explored in vivo in bacterial pathogens interacting with their hosts. PBP3 is an essential cell division-specific peptidoglycan synthase that builds the septum required to separate daughter cells. We discovered that Salmonella enterica has two peptidoglycan synthases capable of synthesizing the division septum One of these enzymes, PBP3SAL, is present only in bacterial pathogens and evolved in Salmonella to function exclusively in acidic environments. The most accepted model of cell division involves the assembly of a ring in which division-specific PG synthases are activated to build the septum [4]. Despite this detailed knowledge, how pathogens divide in the host has not yet been explored. Other examples are the polarized growth and FtsZ-independent division of the intracellular bacterial pathogen Chlamydia trachomatis [9] and the polarized growth of the Borrelia burgdorferi peptidoglycan that marks new cell division sites [10]

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