Abstract

The peptidoglycan (PG) sacculus is composed of long glycan strands cross-linked together by short peptides forming a covalently closed meshwork that protects the bacterial cell from osmotic lysis and specifies its shape. PG hydrolases play essential roles in remodeling this three-dimensional network during growth and division but how these autolytic enzymes are regulated remains poorly understood. The FtsEX ABC transporter-like complex has emerged as a broadly conserved regulatory module in controlling cell wall hydrolases in diverse bacterial species. In most characterized examples, this complex regulates distinct PG hydrolases involved in cell division and is intimately associated with the cytokinetic machinery called the divisome. However, in the gram-positive bacterium Bacillus subtilis the FtsEX complex is required for cell wall elongation where it regulates the PG hydrolase CwlO that acts along the lateral cell wall. To investigate whether additional factors are required for FtsEX function outside the divisome, we performed a synthetic lethal screen taking advantage of the conditional essentiality of CwlO. This screen identified two uncharacterized factors (SweD and SweC) that are required for CwlO activity. We demonstrate that these proteins reside in a membrane complex with FtsX and that amino acid substitutions in residues adjacent to the ATPase domain of FtsE partially bypass the requirement for them. Collectively our data indicate that SweD and SweC function as essential co-factors of FtsEX in controlling CwlO during cell wall elongation. We propose that factors analogous to SweDC function to support FtsEX activity outside the divisome in other bacteria.

Highlights

  • Most bacteria are encased within a cell wall exoskeleton composed of the heteropolymer peptidoglycan (PG)

  • FtsEX is integrated into the division machinery where it controls cell wall cleavage during cytokinesis

  • Using transposon-sequencing (Tn-Seq) [37] we screened for genes that could tolerate transposon insertions in wild-type (LytE+) B. subtilis but not in cells lacking lytE

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Summary

Introduction

Most bacteria are encased within a cell wall exoskeleton composed of the heteropolymer peptidoglycan (PG). This macromolecule is assembled from long glycan strands cross-linked together by attached peptides, generating a continuous three-dimensional meshwork that encapsulates the cytoplasmic membrane, specifies cell shape, and protects the cell from its internal turgor pressure [1, 2]. Bacterial growth and division are intimately linked to hydrolysis of this covalently closed exoskeleton To enlarge this meshwork during growth, bonds connecting the glycan strands must be broken to allow expansion of the meshwork and/or to incorporate new strands between the existing ones [3,4,5]. A deeper understanding of these regulatory systems has the potential to reveal new ways to subvert PG biogenesis for therapeutic intervention [4, 21]

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