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Probing Peptidoglycan Synthesis in the Gut Commensal Akkermansia Muciniphila with Bioorthogonal Chemical Reporters.

Tjerk J SminiaSteven AalvinkHanna de JongMarcel H TempelaarsHan ZuilhofTjakko AbeeWillem M de VosHanne L P TytgatTom Wennekes
Published in: Chembiochem : a European journal of chemical biology (2024)
Our gut microbiota directly influences human physiology in health and disease. The myriad of surface glycoconjugates in both the bacterial cell envelope and our gut cells dominate the microbiota-host interface and play a critical role in host response and microbiota homeostasis. Among these, peptidoglycan is the basic glycan polymer offering the cell rigidity and a basis on which many other glycoconjugates are anchored. To directly study peptidoglycan in gut commensals and obtain the molecular insight required to understand their functional activities we need effective techniques like chemical probes to label peptidoglycan in live bacteria. Here we report a chemically guided approach to study peptidoglycan in a key mucin-degrading gut microbiota member of the Verrucomicrobia phylum, Akkermansia muciniphila. Two novel non-toxic tetrazine click-compatible peptidoglycan probes with either a cyclopropene or isonitrile handle allowed for the detection and imaging of peptidoglycan synthesis in this intestinal species.
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