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Identification of a family of peptidoglycan transpeptidases reveals that Clostridioides difficile requires noncanonical cross-links for viability.

Kevin W BollingerUte MühKarl L OciusAlexis J ApostolosMarcos M PiresRichard F HelmDavid L PophamDavid S WeissCraig D Ellermeier
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2024)
Most bacteria are surrounded by a cell wall that contains peptidoglycan (PG), a large polymer composed of glycan strands held together by short peptide cross-links. There are two major types of cross-links, termed 4-3 and 3-3 based on the amino acids involved. 4-3 cross-links are created by penicillin-binding proteins, while 3-3 cross-links are created by L,D-transpeptidases (LDTs). In most bacteria, the predominant mode of cross-linking is 4-3, and these cross-links are essential for viability, while 3-3 cross-links comprise only a minor fraction and are not essential. However, in the opportunistic intestinal pathogen Clostridioides difficile, about 70% of the cross-links are 3-3. We show here that 3-3 cross-links and LDTs are essential for viability in C. difficile . We also show that C. difficile has five LDTs, three with a YkuD catalytic domain as in all previously known LDTs and two with a VanW catalytic domain, whose function was until now unknown. The five LDTs exhibit extensive functional redundancy. VanW domain proteins are found in many gram-positive bacteria but scarce in other lineages. We tested seven non- C. difficile VanW domain proteins and confirmed LDT activity in three cases. In summary, our findings uncover a previously unrecognized family of PG cross-linking enzymes, assign a catalytic function to VanW domains, and demonstrate that 3-3 cross-linking is essential for viability in C. difficile , the first time this has been shown in any bacterial species. The essentiality of LDTs in C. difficile makes them potential targets for antibiotics that kill C. difficile selectively.
Keyphrases
  • clostridium difficile
  • cell wall