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Effect of peptidoglycan amidase MSMEG_6281 on fatty acid metabolism in Mycobacterium smegmatis

Authors :
Jiatong Miao
Tao Jiang
Jiajia He
Hanrui Liu
Shijia Zhao
Shixing Chen
Shizhu Zang
Yushan Qu
Weizhe Fu
Kangwei Qi
Source :
Microbial pathogenesis. 140
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Mycobacterium smegmatis MSMEG_6281, a peptidoglycan (PG) amidase, is essential in maintaining cell wall integrity. To address the potential roles during the MSMEG_6281-mediated biological process, we compared proteomes from wild-type M.smegmatis and MSMEG_6281 gene knockout strain (M.sm-ΔM_6281) using LC-MS/MS analysis. Peptide analysis revealed that 851 proteins were differentially produced with at least 1.2-fold changes, including some proteins involved in fatty acid metabolism such as acyl-CoA synthase, acyl-CoA dehydrogenase, MCE-family proteins, ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters, and MmpL4. Some proteins related to fatty acid degradation were enriched through protein-protein interaction analysis. Therefore, proteomic data showed that a lack of MSMEG_6281 affected fatty acid metabolism. Mycobacteria can produce diverse lipid molecules ranging from single fatty acids to highly complex mycolic acids, and mycobacterial surface-exposed lipids may impact biofilm formation. In this study, we also assessed the effects of MSMEG_6281 on biofilm phenotype using semi-quantitative and morphology analysis methods. These results found that M.sm-ΔM_6281 exhibited a delayed biofilm phenotype compared to that of the wild-type M.smegmatis, and the changes were recovered when PG amidase was rescued in a ΔM_6281::Rv3717 strain. Our results demonstrated that MSMEG_6281 impacts fatty acid metabolism and further interferes with biofilm formation. These results provide a clue to study the effects of PG amidase on mycobacterial pathogenicity.

Details

ISSN :
10961208
Volume :
140
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Microbial pathogenesis
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0e24928cd7e9792c0b0a2851375f42fe