Abstract

A particulate preparation from Micrococcus lysodeikticus was used to synthesize cell-wall mucopeptide. Radioactive iodinated vancomycin became attached to the preparation simultaneously with a complete inhibition of mucopeptide synthesis. After mucopeptide synthesis had occurred in the absence of antibiotic, the preparation took up more vancomycin, suggesting that new binding sites terminating in acyl-d-alanyl-d-alanine had been produced. The mucopeptide product was divided into a soluble and an insoluble portion, both sensitive to lysozyme. The soluble portion did not combine with vancomycin and hence had presumably lost its terminal d-alanine residues, either by transpeptidation or because of carboxy-peptidase action. The synthesis of both portions was unaffected by the presence of penicillin, but the insoluble part showed increased affinity for vancomycin, thus indicating that penicillin had caused conservation of d-alanyl-d-alanine termini.

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