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Polysaccharide length affects mycobacterial cell shape and antibiotic susceptibility

Authors :
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemistry
Justen, Alexander M
Hodges, Heather L
Kim, Lili M
Sadecki, Patric W
Porfirio, Sara
Ultee, Eveline
Black, Ian
Chung, Grace S
Briegel, Ariane
Azadi, Parastoo
Kiessling, Laura L
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemistry
Justen, Alexander M
Hodges, Heather L
Kim, Lili M
Sadecki, Patric W
Porfirio, Sara
Ultee, Eveline
Black, Ian
Chung, Grace S
Briegel, Ariane
Azadi, Parastoo
Kiessling, Laura L
Source :
Science Advances
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Copyright © 2020 The Authors, some rights reserved. Bacteria control the length of their polysaccharides, which can control cell viability, physiology, virulence, and immune evasion. Polysaccharide chain length affects immunomodulation, but its impact on bacterial physiology and antibiotic susceptibility was unclear. We probed the consequences of truncating the mycobacterial galactan, an essential linear polysaccharide of about 30 residues. Galactan covalently bridges cell envelope layers, with the outermost cell wall linkage point occurring at residue 12. Reducing galactan chain length by approximately half compromises fitness, alters cell morphology, and increases the potency of hydrophobic antibiotics. Systematic variation of the galactan chain length revealed that it determines periplasm size. Thus, glycan chain length can directly affect cellular physiology and antibiotic activity, and mycobacterial glycans, not proteins, regulate periplasm size.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Science Advances
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1342474560
Document Type :
Electronic Resource