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Most bacterial secretion systems are large machines that cross the cell envelope to deliver effectors outside the cell or directly into target cells. The peptidoglycan layer can therefore represent a physical barrier for the assembly of these large machines. Secretion systems and their counterparts such as type IV pili, flagella, and conjugation machines have therefore evolved or hijacked enzymes with peptidoglycan degradation activity. These enzymes are usually glycoside hydrolases that cleave the glycan chains of the peptidoglycan. Their activities are spatially controlled to avoid cell lysis and to create local rearrangement of the cell wall. In addition, peptidoglycan hydrolases may not be only required for the proper assembly of the secretion systems but may directly participate to the release of the effectors. Finally, several antibacterial effectors possess peptidoglycan degradation activity that damage the cell wall once delivered in the target cell. Here, we describe protocols to test the peptidoglycan degradation activity of these proteins in vitro and in solution. © 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.

Citation

Yoann G Santin, Eric Cascales. Measure of Peptidoglycan Degradation Activity. Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.). 2024;2715:197-205

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PMID: 37930529

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