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Since the peptidoglycan isolated from Mycobacterium spp. is refractory to commercially available murolytic enzymes, possibly due to the presence of various modifications found on this peptidoglycan, the utility of a mycobacteriophage-derived murolytic enzyme was assessed for an analysis of peptidoglycan from mycobacteria. We cloned, expressed, and purified the lysA gene product, a protein with homology to known peptidoglycan-degrading amidases, from bacteriophage Ms6. The recombinant protein was shown to cleave the bond between l-Ala and d-muramic acid of muramyl pentapeptide and to release up to 70% of the diaminopimelic acid present in the isolated mycobacterial cell wall. In contrast to lysozyme, which, in culture, inhibits the growth of both Mycobacterium smegmatis and Mycobacterium tuberculosis, LysA had no effect on the growth of either species. However, the enzyme is useful for solubilizing the peptide chains of isolated mycobacterial peptidoglycan for analysis. The data indicate that the stem peptides from M. smegmatis are heavily amidated, containing few free carboxylic acids, regardless of the cross-linking status.

Citation

Sebabrata Mahapatra, Charles Piechota, Filipa Gil, Yufang Ma, Hairong Huang, Michael S Scherman, Victoria Jones, Martin S Pavelka, Jose Moniz-Pereira, Madalena Pimentel, Michael R McNeil, Dean C Crick. Mycobacteriophage Ms6 LysA: a peptidoglycan amidase and a useful analytical tool. Applied and environmental microbiology. 2013 Feb;79(3):768-73

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PMID: 23160121

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