8i6q Citations

Mechanistic insights into the regulation of cell wall hydrolysis by FtsEX and EnvC at the bacterial division site.

OpenAccess logo Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 120 e2301897120 (2023)
Related entries: 8i6o, 8i6r, 8i6s

Cited: 6 times
EuropePMC logo PMID: 37186861

Abstract

The peptidoglycan (PG) cell wall produced by the bacterial division machinery is initially shared between the daughters and must be split to promote cell separation and complete division. In gram-negative bacteria, enzymes that cleave PG called amidases play major roles in the separation process. To prevent spurious cell wall cleavage that can lead to cell lysis, amidases like AmiB are autoinhibited by a regulatory helix. Autoinhibition is relieved at the division site by the activator EnvC, which is in turn regulated by the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter-like complex called FtsEX. EnvC is also known to be autoinhibited by a regulatory helix (RH), but how its activity is modulated by FtsEX and the mechanism by which it activates the amidases have remained unclear. Here, we investigated this regulation by determining the structure of Pseudomonas aeruginosa FtsEX alone with or without bound ATP, in complex with EnvC, and in a FtsEX-EnvC-AmiB supercomplex. In combination with biochemical studies, the structures reveal that ATP binding is likely to activate FtsEX-EnvC and promote its association with AmiB. Furthermore, the AmiB activation mechanism is shown to involve a RH rearrangement. In the activated state of the complex, the inhibitory helix of EnvC is released, freeing it to associate with the RH of AmiB, which liberates its active site for PG cleavage. These regulatory helices are found in many EnvC proteins and amidases throughout gram-negative bacteria, suggesting that the activation mechanism is broadly conserved and a potential target for lysis-inducing antibiotics that misregulate the complex.

Articles citing this publication (6)

  1. Regulation of the cell division hydrolase RipC by the FtsEX system in Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Li J, Xu X, Shi J, Hermoso JA, Sham LT, Luo M. Nat Commun 14 7999 (2023)
  2. Capture of endogenous lipids in peptidiscs and effect on protein stability and activity. Jandu RS, Yu H, Zhao Z, Le HT, Kim S, Huan T, Duong van Hoa F. iScience 27 109382 (2024)
  3. Lytic transglycosylase Slt of Pseudomonas aeruginosa as a periplasmic hub protein. Avila-Cobian LF, De Benedetti S, Hoshino H, Nguyen VT, El-Araby AM, Sader S, Hu DD, Cole SL, Kim C, Fisher JF, Champion MM, Mobashery S. Protein Sci 33 e5038 (2024)
  4. Structural basis of peptide secretion for Quorum sensing by ComA. Yu L, Xu X, Chua WZ, Feng H, Ser Z, Shao K, Shi J, Wang Y, Li Z, Sobota RM, Sham LT, Luo M. Nat Commun 14 7178 (2023)
  5. Structure and activity of the septal peptidoglycan hydrolysis machinery crucial for bacterial cell division. Chen Y, Gu J, Yang B, Yang L, Pang J, Luo Q, Li Y, Li D, Deng Z, Dong C, Dong H, Zhang Z. PLoS Biol 22 e3002628 (2024)
  6. Structure predictions and functional insights into Amidase_3 domain containing N-acetylmuramyl-L-alanine amidases from Deinococcus indicus DR1. Modi M, Thambiraja M, Cherukat A, Yennamalli RM, Priyadarshini R. BMC Microbiol 24 101 (2024)