Abstract
This work contributes to the understanding of cell wall modifications during sporulation and germination in Streptomyces by assessing the biological function and biochemical properties of SCO4439, a D-alanyl-D-alanine carboxypeptidase (DD-CPase) constitutively expressed during development. SCO4439 harbors a DD-CPase domain and a putative transcriptional regulator domain, separated by a putative transmembrane region. The recombinant protein shows that DD-CPase activity is inhibited by penicillin G. The spores of the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant are affected in their resistance to heat and acid and showed a dramatic increase in swelling during germination. The mycelium of the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant is more sensitive to glycopeptide antibiotics (vancomycin and teicoplanin). The DD-CPase domain and the hydrophobic transmembrane region are highly conserved in Streptomyces and both are essential for complementing the wild type phenotypes in the mutant. A model for the biological mechanism behind the observed phenotypes is proposed, in which SCO4439 DD-CPase releases D-Ala from peptidoglycan (PG) precursors, thereby reducing the substrate pool for PG crosslinking (transpeptidation). PG crosslinking regulates spore physical resistance and germination and modulates mycelium resistance to glycopeptides. This study is the first demonstration of the role of a DD-CPase in the maturation of the spore cell wall.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
Streptomycetes are mycelial microorganisms characterized by their complex developmental cycles, including programmed cell death (PCD) and hyphae differentiation, which leads to aerial mycelium formation and sporulation1,2. Streptomycetes are important industrial bacteria producing approximately two-thirds of clinical antibiotics, as well as a large number of eukaryotic cell differentiation inducers and inhibitors3. Most of these bioactive compounds are specialized metabolites4, the production of which is regulated, at least in part, by hyphal differentiation5. Streptomyces development, is activated by extracellular signals, including nutritional stimuli or cell density (quorum sensing) and is regulated by complex signaling pathways that are only partially known5,6,7. The best-characterized stages of Streptomyces development are those related to aerial mycelium and sporulation. Several key regulatory networks controlling these stages have been characterised (bald, sky or white pathways, reviewed in Flärdh and Buttner1). Despite this, the regulation of aerial mycelium and sporulation remains incompletely understood and new genes and proteins regulating these important processes, are still being discovered8. Stages preceding aerial mycelium, including spore germination and differentiation in liquid non-sporulating cultures, are even less characterized and comprehended2,9.
D-alanyl-D-alanine carboxypeptidases (DD-CPases) are members of the penicillin binding proteins (PBPs), a family of proteins inhibited by Ã-lactam antibiotics involved in peptidoglycan (PG) synthesis and remodelling. The PBPs constitute a family of acyltransferases with a common evolutionary origin and a common substrate (the D-Ala-D-Ala dipeptides present in the pentapeptide stems of PG precursors), that are collectively known as DD-peptidases. DD-peptidases include transglycosylases, which catalyze the polymerization of glycan chains composed of N-acetylglucosamine (NAG) and N-acetylmuramic acid (NAM); DD-CPases, which remove the terminal D-alanine from muramyl pentapeptide; transpeptidases, which catalyze the cross-link formation between one D-Ala of one PG strand and one amino acid of the other strand; and endopeptidases, which cleave the cross-linked peptide side-chains10. The DD-peptidases are classified on the basis of their molecular mass, amino acid sequence and enzyme activity at high molecular mass (HMM) and low molecular mass (LMM)11,12,13. HMM DD-peptidases are usually bifunctional transglycosylases/transpeptidases (also classified as class A), or monofunctional transpeptidases (class B) anchored to membranes. LMM DD-peptidases are monofunctional carboxypeptidases or endopeptidases and the majority are also anchored to membranes (class C). LMM DD-peptidases are usually not essential and they are not found in most studies and reviews on PBPs13.
Most bacteria have multiple PBPs with varying degrees of redundant activity. A phylogenetic analysis revealed that Actinobacteria have an average of five HMM DD-peptidases per genome; this number doubled only in streptomycetes (13 DD-peptidases in the case of S. coelicolor)13. Many DD-peptidases belong to the SEDS (shape, elongation, division and sporulation) clusters of genes involved in PG synthesis and remodeling and are essential for growth, cell division and cellular viability. DD-peptidases that are not included in the SEDS clusters are considered dispensable for growth and viability10 and their biological function remains poorly investigated. Streptomyces coelicolor harbors four SEDS clusters14, that include four transpeptidases (SCO2090, SCO2608, SCO3847 and SCO5301).
This work contributes characterizing the biological function of the largely ignored redundant and non-essential LMM DD-peptidases by studying the activity and role of SCO4439, a gene encoding a putative DD-CPase. SCO4439 is a very unusual DD-CPase that is highly conserved in streptomycetes and is therein fused with a putative transcriptional regulator domain (see below). SCO4439 was found to be slightly over-expressed during the aerial mycelium and sporulation stages15, however, its biological role remained unclear.
Results
Mutation of SCO4439 affects spore swelling during germination, increases spore resistance to acid/heating and reduces the glycopeptide resistance
Cosmid D6.2.B06_046 harboring a copy of SCO4439 interrupted by Tn5062 was used to obtain the S. coelicolor SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant using the methodology developed by Fernández-MartÃnez et al.16. The early stages of SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant spore germination were similar to those in the S. coelicolor wild strain (Fig. 1aâh); however SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant showed a clear and distinctive phenotype at later stages, consisting of a dramatic increase in spore swelling (Fig. 1k,l) with respect to the wild-type strain (Fig. 1i,j).
The kinetics of spore germination in the S. coelicolor wild type and in the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant were studied by using time-lapse confocal microscopy (Fig. 1m,n and Supplementary Movies 1 and 2). The spores of the S. coelicolor parental strain swelled until they reached a diameter of 2.3â±â0.4âμm (5-hour culture), before the emergence of the germ tube, which coincided with a deswelling and a consequent reduction of the spore diameter (from 2.3â±â0.4âμm at 5-hours to 1.2â±â0.4âμm at 8-hours) (Fig. 1m,r). At early time points, the swelling of the spores of the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant was slower than the swelling of the spores of the wild strain (compare 5âhour-time in Fig. 1m,n), but they continued to swell after the emergence of the germ tube, reaching a diameter that was the double that of the wild type spores (3.2âμmâ±â0.4âμm) before deswelling and reducing the spore diameter (Fig. 1n,r). Another difference between the wild type and the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant was that, after germination and deswelling, the cell membrane permeability inside the spores remained intact in the wild type strain (SYTO9 staining, Fig. 1o), but not in the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant (PI staining, Fig. 1p). The increase in spore swelling affected 100% of the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant spores at 15â18âhours (average diameter of 3.1â±â0.4âμm, Fig. 1r).
Contrary to expectations16, DNA sequencing demonstrated that the insertion of Tn5062 into cosmid D6.2.B06_046 generated a deletion. Tn5062 was inserted at position 640 of SCO4439 and 669 of SCO4440, generating a loss of 1,641âbp, which affected the 5â²-terminus of SCO4439 and most of the SCO4440 open reading frame (ORF) (schematized in Fig. 2a). The deletion of the 5â²-terminus of SCO4439 may affect the expression of SCO4437 and SCO4438 (both located downstream of SCO4439), whereas the deletion of SCO4440 may affect the expression of SCO4441 and SCO4442 (Fig. 2a). To identify the gene responsible for the observed phenotype, plasmid pMS8217 was used to introduce different fragments of the SCO4437-SCO4442 chromosomal region, into the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant strain (schematized in Fig. 2b). The only DNA fragments complementing the wild-type phenotype were those including SCO4439, as was the case for plasmid pBRB3 (compare Fig. 2c with Fig. 1k,l) (Supplementary Movie 3). Similar results were obtained in the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant harboring plasmid pBRB2 but not in the mutant strain harboring plasmid pBRB1 (data not shown).
As introduced above, the SCO4439 gene was previously reported to be slightly over-expressed during aerial mycelium and sporulation in microarray-based transcriptomic analyses; however differences in expression were too low to be considered significant15 (Fig. 2e). In this work, RT-PCR analyses confirmed the expression pattern of SCO4439 (Fig. 2e).
The spore resistance profiles of the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant and the wild type strains were compared (Fig. 3). Lysozyme treatment increases germination and sonication kills 99% of the spores in the S. coelicolor wild strain. The SCO4439 mutation did not affect resistance to the lysozyme, to sonication or to freezing (Fig. 3aâc) but increased fivefold the spore resistance to acid and heating compared with the parental strain and the SCO4439::Tn5062 complemented mutant (Fig. 3d,e).
Mycelium resistance to glycopeptides (vancomycin and teicoplanin) was reduced in the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant (minimum inhibitory concentrations of 110 and 0.7âμg/ml, respectively), in respect to the S. coelicolor wild type strain (minimum inhibitory concentrations 140 and 0.9âμg/ml) (Fig. 3f).
SCO4439 harbors two protein domains separated by a putative hydrophobic transmembrane region
SCO4439 encodes a multi-domain protein harboring a DD-CPase (conserved domain database accession COG1686) and a putative transcriptional regulator (conserved domain database accession PHA03307) (Fig. 4a). According to the Phobius software prediction (http://phobius.sbc.su.se/), these two domains are separated by a putative transmembrane region (Fig. 4a). The DD-CPase domain and the putative hydrophobic transmembrane domain are highly conserved in the Streptomyces genus (70% average similarity in Streptomyces) and actinomycetes in general (data not shown). The conservation of the transcriptional regulatory domain is substantially lower (44% average similarity in Streptomyces) and this domain is not present in other actinomycetes.
Different fragments of the SCO4439 gene were introduced into the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant strain, using pMS82 as the integrative carrier vector (see Materials and Methods for details and scheme in Fig. 4a). The only fragments that complemented the wild-type phenotype were those containing both, the transmembrane and DD-CPase domains (data not shown).
Amino acid sequence alignment of the S. coelicolor DD-CPase domain (Fig. 4b) showed an overall high identity with the orthologous proteins from the six model Streptomyces strains analyzed, including the triad of âSxxKâ, âSxNâ and âKTGâ motifs that characterize the âSxxKâ superfamily of penicillin-binding DD-peptidases11. Interestingly, a replacement of Leu684 by Pro (randomly generated by PCR, see Methods) partially blocked the phenotype complementation in spore swelling in the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant (Fig. 1q). As discussed below, the maximum spore-swelling of the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant strain harboring the mutated SCO4439* gene (SCO4439::Tn5062 [pBRB3*] strain) was 3.9âμm (Fig. 1q), which is an intermediate value between the wild type (2.3âμm) and the SCO4439:Tn5062 mutant (4.5âμm) spore diameters (Fig. 1m,n,q,r; Supplementary Movie 4).
SCO4439 carboxypeptidase activity
The SCO4439 protein and its mutated version SCO4439* (mutation replacing Leu684 with Pro684, see above) were over-expressed in E. coli and purified using His-tag affinity chromatography (Fig. 5a). The identity of the overproduced proteins was confirmed via peptide mass fingerprinting (data not shown).
The enzymatic activities of the purified SCO4439 and SCO4439* were assayed on D-Ala-D-Ala dipeptide and on the tripeptide Nα,Nε-diacetyl-l-Lys-D-Ala-D-Ala, which mimics the terminal portions of the PG pentapeptide precursors17,18. SCO4439 and SCO4439* cleaved the D-Ala from the tripeptide and, to a lesser extent, from the dipeptide D-Ala-D-Ala. Thus, they showed a significantly higher DD-CPase activity than DD-dipeptidase activity (Fig. 5b). The enzyme activity of the mutated SCO4439* was half that of the non-mutated protein (Fig. 5b and discussed below). As expected, due to the presence of the canonical Ser-x-x-Lys motif present in SCO4439, the enzyme activity was inhibited by penicillin G (IC50 of 1âmM, Fig. 5c). As a control, no DD-CPase/DD-dipeptidase activity was detectable in the E.coli host transformed with the empty expression vectors (data not shown).
The DD-CPase/DD-dipeptidase activity of SCO4439 was then assayed in extracts from wild type S. coelicolor, the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant and the complemented mutant. The DD-CPase/DD-dipeptidase activity was always detectable in insoluble fractions (membranes and cell wall debris) from the S. coelicolor wild-type strain and the complemented mutant, but not in those from the S. coelicolor SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant (Fig. 5d,e). There was no detectable activity in the cytosolic fractions from any of the two strains (data not shown). Interestingly, the specific DD-CPase enzymatic activity was slightly higher at the early time points after germination (16âhours) than in the substrate (30âhours) or aerial (72âhours) mycelium stages (Fig. 5d). As expected, incubation of the insoluble fractions with penicillin G abolished the enzymeâs activity (data not shown).
The spore PG crosslinking index (ratio between cross-linked glycine and total glycine) was estimated by adapting the 1-fluoro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (FDNB) method originally described for Bacillus19 to Streptomyces (see Methods for details) (Fig. 5f). As discussed below, the spores of the S. coelicolor SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant had 20% more crosslinking than the spores of the wild type strain. Interestingly, the PG crosslinking of the SCO4439::Tn5062 harboring the mutated SCO4439* gene (SCO4439::Tn5062 [pBRB3*]) were at an intermediate level in PG crosslinking between the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant and the wild type strain (10% more crosslinking than the spores of the wild type strain; Fig. 5f).
PG synthesis during spore swelling and germination
Peptidoglycan synthesis during spore germination and swelling was analyzed using fluorescent BODIPY-vancomycin20 (Fig. 6). BODIPY-vancomycin preferentially stains nascent PG, the staining of which protrudes above the areas in which there is no PG synthesis20. No PG synthesis occurred during the spore germination and swelling early stages in the wild and complemented strains, at least in the amount detectable by BODIPY-vancomycin staining (Fig. 6). Only at the latest stages of spore swelling, some areas of PG synthesis become detectable in the swelled spores of the mutant strain (Fig. 6j).
Discussion
The aim of this work was the characterization of SCO4439, a DD-CPase constitutively expressed during development (Fig. 2e) and whose enzymatic activity is present during all developmental stages analyzed (Fig. 5d). The best characterized DD-peptidases are those belonging to the SEDS genes involved in PG synthesis/remodeling which are essential for growth, cell division and viability. However, with very few exceptions, the biological role of other redundant DD-peptidases, not included in the SEDS clusters, such as SCO4439, remains unknown19,21. SCO4439 is not essential for growth; however its mutation resulted in a dramatic increase in both spore resistance to acid/heating and swelling during germination.
DD-CPases are usually anchored to cell membranes at their N-terminus and their active sites are exposed to the periplasmic space in which they catalyze the final stages of cell wall biosynthesis11. SCO4439 is very unusual, because in addition to the DD-CPase domain, it harbors an additional putative transcriptional regulator domain. Other DD-CPases, including most HMM DD-CPases, are multi domain proteins and harbor glycosyl transferase domains involved in cell wall maturation11. However, to our knowledge, SCO4439 is the first DD-CPase that is associated with a putative transcriptional regulatory domain. SCO4439 has a high molecular mass of 84âkDa, resulting in its classification as an HMM DD-CPase. However, the DD-peptidase domain of SCO4439 is homologous to LMM DD-peptidases and exhibits the DD-CPase activity that is peculiar to LMM DD-peptidases11. The putative transmembrane domain of SCO4439 is located in the middle of the protein, separating the DD-CPase and the putative transcriptional regulator domains, which is also unusual. The (1) Phobius prediction of the protein structure, (2) the presence of DD-CPase activity only in S. coelicolor insoluble fractions (membranes and cell wall debris) (Fig. 5d) and (3) the presence of the essential nature of the transmembrane domain for biological activity (Fig. 4a) suggest that the DD-CPase domain is exposed to the periplasmic space, whereas the putative transcriptional regulatory domain is likely located on the cytosol side of the cell membrane. Further work is required to understand the biological function, if any, of the putative transcriptional regulatory domain located at the N-terminus of SCO4439. The presence of this domain in all SCO4439 orthologs suggests that it may have a relevant function (Fig. 4). In contrast, its relatively low conservation (44% average similarity), its exclusive occurrence in streptomycetes and finally, its unessential role in complementing the spore germination and resistance phenotypes in the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant may indicate that this domain has not an essential function.
Spore germination comprises a succession of distinctive steps that were organized by Hardisson et al.22 into three stages: darkening, swelling and germ tube emergence (Fig. 7). The biomolecular mechanisms controlling these stages remain poorly characterized23,24,25. There are two examples of proteins known to be involved in Streptomyces spore germination. NepA was described as a structural cell wall protein involved in the maintenance of spore dormancy in S. coelicolor26. SsgA was identified as a protein marking cell-wall sites in which germination takes place27. The phenotype of the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant observed in this work indicates the existence of a new stage that includes the deswelling of the spores once they cannot resist further swelling. The occurrence of this stage was demonstrated via time-lapse microscopy in both the wild type and the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant (Supplementary Movies 1 and 2; Fig. 1m,n). In the wild-type strain, spore deswelling coincided with germ tube emergence, whereas the spores of the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant continued to swell after the emergence of the germ tube (Fig. 7). In the partially complemented SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant (the strain complemented with the SCO4439* mutated gene), spore swelling persisted also after germ tube emergence, but the maximum swelling was lower than in the mutant (maximum spore diameter of 3.9âμm vs. the 4.6âμm reached in the mutant; Fig. 1p,q; Supplementary Movies 2 and 4).
The proposed biomolecular model to account for the observed phenotypes in the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant is schematized in Fig. 7. Accordingly, a deficiency in SCO4439 DD-CPase increments the pool of available transpeptidase substrates (PG pentapeptides), thereby enhancing the activity of these enzymes and promoting the formation of PG crosslinks. Spores with highly crosslinked PG are more resistant to heating and acid and swell more slowly at early germination time points, but they can reach greater dimensions before lysing due to osmotic shock (Fig. 7). The mutation in SCO4439 that replaces Leu684 with Pro684, halved the native DD-CPase activity and when the SCO4439* gene was introduced into the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant, the phenotype was only partially restored. This demonstrates that spore swelling during germination is proportional to SCO4439 DD-CPase activity. The model proposed in Fig. 7 would also be valid for new PG synthetized in the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant after spore germination, at the latest stages of the swelling, which will have more cross-linking than the wild strain.
Streptomyces mutants created in germination such as SCO4439::Tn5062, represent a key tool that provides insight into this process. Up to now, the osmotic mechanism controlling spore swelling is largely unknown. Germ tube emergence is marked by SsgA27 and uncharacterized lytic enzymes regulate the splitting of the spore covers at this germination point28. Spore swelling may facilitate the emergence of the germ tube22 and germ tube emergence coincides with the end of the swelling in the S. coelicolor wild type strain (Fig. 1m). The dramatic swelling of the spores in the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant after germ tube emergence suggests that the high osmotic pressure in the spore cytoplasm feeds this swelling. In the weaker spores of the wild-type strain (low PG crosslinking), spore swelling culminate with the emergence of the germ tube. However, spores of the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant have higher PG crosslinking and the swelling continues after the emergence of the germ tube. In this scenario, the cells likely still detect the high osmotic pressure that in normal conditions would indicate the absence of germination, thus they increase swelling and osmotic pressure to facilitate germination (Fig. 7). Further work is required to fully comprehend this phenomenon. Interestingly, some studies have already suggested a role for PBPs in spore germination in other sporulating bacteria such as Bacillus. Neyman and Buchanan29 and Murray et al.30 described how some DD-peptidases are expressed differentially during Bacillus sporulation and germination and Buchanan and Gustafson31 showed that dacB mutants produce spores with unusual resistance to chemicals and heating in Bacillus.
The lack of the DD-CPase activity in SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant strain increases the pool of PG pentapeptide, the terminal D-Ala-D-Ala dipeptides of which are the molecular target of glycopeptide antibiotics32. Consequently, the mycelium of the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant was more sensitive to vancomycin and teicoplanin than the mycelium of the wild-type strain (Fig. 3f). S. coelicolor resistance to vancomycin (but not to teicoplanin), was described to be due to the canonical set of vanRSHAX genes induced by vancomycin (but not by teicoplanin) that are responsible for replacing the terminal D-Ala-D-Ala dipeptides with the resistant D-Ala-D-Lac dipeptides33,34. Recent work demonstrated that other enzymes (VanY-like) contribute to glycopeptide resistance in actinomycetes by removing the last D-Ala from the PG-pentapeptide precursors34,35. Interestingly, these enzymes are membrane-associated LMW DD-CPases with a minor activity on dipeptides and are in some cases inhibited by β-lactams35,36.
The SCO4439 DD-CPase gene is constitutively expressed (Fig. 2e), whereas the specific DD-CPase enzymatic activity decreases during development (from 5âU/mg protein at 16âhours, to 3âU/mg protein at 72âhours) (Fig. 5d). This can be a consequence, that, at later time points, most of the mycelium suffers a programmed cell death1,2 disrupting cell membrane integrity and experiencing an increasing proteolytic activity. Loss of DD-CPase activity may be due to the increasing protein instability in the above conditions. Anyhow, the occurrence of other specific post-translational modifications regulating the DD-CPase activity cannot be ruled out.
Overall, this work demonstrates that the SCO4439 DD-CPase regulates the proportion of PG crosslinking in the spore cell walls, a process that is critical for the regulation of spore germination. The SCO4439 DD-CPase gene is constitutively expressed and its activity is present in the Streptomyces vegetative hyphae. However, its biological role in the mycelium (beyond the increase of resistance to glycopeptide antibiotics) remains unknown. Knowledge of the biological role of the genes involved in antimicrobial resistance is important to understand the evolution of resistance in nature.
Methods
Bacterial strains and media
Bacterial strains are listed in Table 1. Streptomyces coelicolor M145 was the reference strain and was used to generate the mutants. Petri dishes (8.5âcm) with 25âml of solid GYM medium (glucose, yeast/malt extract)37 were covered with cellophane disks, inoculated with 100âμl of a fresh spore suspension (1âÃâ107 viable spores/ml) and incubated at 30â°C. Spores were obtained from SFM solid cultures38.
Escherichia coli strains were grown at 37â°C in solid (2% agar) or liquid 2xTY medium39 supplemented with the appropriate antibiotics (Table 1).
Disruption of SCO4439
The transposon insertion single-gene knockout library created by Prof. P. Dysonâs research group16 was used for mutagenesis of SCO4439. Cosmid D6.2.B06 was used to construct the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant strain (Table 1). Gene disruption was carried out by obtaining double cross-overs via conjugation using E. coli ET12567/pUZ8002 as a donor strain and following the protocol described in Kieser et al.38. Mutant strains were confirmed using Southern blotting with chromosomal DNA digested with SalI. Southern hybridization was carried out using established procedures with the digoxigenin-labeled 3442-bp Tn5062 PvuII fragment from plasmid pQM506240 as a probe.
Complementation of SCO4439::Tn5062 mutation
The integrative plasmid pMS8241 was used to introducedifferent fragments from the SCO4437-SCO4442 chromosomal region into the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant. Fragments were amplified via PCR using Phusion High-Fidelity DNA Polymerase (Thermo) and were then cloned into pCRâ¢-Blunt II-TOPO®. The sequences were checked via DNA sequencing using the M13 universal primers prior to subcloning them into pMS82. The following plasmids were constructed (Table 1): pBRB1 containing the SCO4440-SCO4442 fragment amplified with primers BRB1F/BRB1R; pBRB2 containing the SCO4437-SCO4439 fragment amplified with primers BRB2F/BRB2R; pBRB3 containing SCO4439 amplified with primers BRB2F/BRB3R. One of the amplified SCO4439 fragments cloned in pCRâ¢-Blunt II-TOPO® had a mutation generated during the PCR that replaced Leu684 with Pro; this mutation was also cloned into pMS82 generating plasmid pBRB3*. In all cases, primers were designed to hybridize at least 250âbps before the ATG of the ORFs to encompass the promoter region.
Three additional pMS82-derived plasmids were constructed containing different parts of the multidomain SCO4439 gene: one harboring the SCO4439 N-terminus and the other two harboring two regions of the SCO4439 C-terminus. The SCO4439-N-terminus truncated gene was generated in two steps: first, the whole SCO4439 gene was amplified with primers B2F/B3R and cloned into pCRâ¢-Blunt II-TOPO®, selecting for the plasmid in which the C-terminus of the SCO4439 gene was orientated to the SpeI side of the pCRâ¢-Blunt II-TOPO® (pTOPO4439); second, the DD-CPase domain was deleted by digesting pTOPO4439 with NruI and SpeI, the SpeI cohesive end was filled with the Klenow DNA polymerase and the plasmid was religated to generate pTOPO4439-P-N. A stop codon (TAG) from the SpeI restriction site was formed in the correct ORF. Two C-terminus constructions were performed, one including the 5â² region of the gene (promoter and RBS) followed by the DD-CPase domain (SCO4439-P-C) and the second including the 5â² region followed by both the transmembrane and DD-CPase domains (SCO4439-P-T-C). SCO4439-P-C was generated by digesting pTOPO4439 with AfeI and NruI and re-ligating the plasmid. pTOPO4439-P-C, lacked the AfeI-NruI fragment (the putative transcriptional regulatory and transmembrane domains) but conserved the 5â²-region and the open reading frame. SCO4439-P-T-C was created in three steps: first the 5â² region was amplified with primers BRB2F/BRB6R and cloned into pCRâ¢-Blunt II-TOPO® (pTOPO4439-P); second, the SCO4439 C-terminus (including the transmembrane and DD-CPase domains) was amplified with BRB3R/BRB6F and cloned into pCRâ¢-Blunt II-TOPO® and the plasmid in which the NdeI (introduced in primer BRB6F) orientated to the EcoRV side of the pCRâ¢-Blunt II-TOPO® was selected, to generate pTOPO4439-T-C; and third, the promoter region was released from pTOPO4439-P with EcoRV-NdeI and cloned into pTOPO-T-C digested with the same enzymes to generate pTOPO4439-P-T-C. pTOPO4439-P-T-C conserved the open reading frame of the transmembrane and DD-CPase domains. The three truncated genes were subcloned into pMS82, generating plasmids pBRB4, pBRB5 and pBRB6 (Table 1).
The seven pMS82-derived plasmids (pBRB1-pBRB6 and pBRB3*) were independently conjugated into the SCO4439::Tn5062 strain as indicated above. The integration of these plasmids into the pMS82 integration site (gene SCO4848)41 was verified by PCR using primers SCO4848F (hybridizing with the SCO4848 gene) and pMS82R (hybridizing with pMS82). Plasmid integration was confirmed via the generation of a 617-bp amplicon.
Viability staining
Culture samples were obtained and processed for microscopy at various incubation durations, as previously described42. The cells were stained with propidium iodide and SYTO 9 (LIVE/DEAD Bac- Light Bacterial Viability Kit, Invitrogen, L-13152). The samples were observed under a Leica TCS-SP8 confocal laser-scanning microscope at wavelengths of 488ânm and 568ânm excitation and 530ânm (green) or 640ânm (red) emissions42. More than 30 images were analyzed for each developmental time point in a minimum of three independent cultures. For spore diameter quantification, the images were calibrated with Image J and the diameter of at least 100 spores was quantified for each strain and developmental time point (Supplementary Figs S1 and S2). These images included pictures from at least three biological replicates.
Time-lapsed (live) imaging
Initially spores were incubated on GYM medium; after 6âhours of incubation, the samples were cut out and inverted into uncoated m-dishes (Ibidi GmbH). The lid was turned so it was supported on the vents, allowing gas exchange and sealed off by two layers of Parafilm to prevent medium drying. The samples were incubated at 30â°C and imaged with a Leica TCS-SP8 confocal laser-scanning microscope. Images were taken using the interference contrast mode (unstained samples) every 10âminutes for 12âhours. Time-lapse images were processed with Image J. Time lapse experiments were limited to 12âhours because prolonged incubations dry the culture medium and interfere with hyphal growth.
RNA extraction and Real-Time Quantitative Reverse Transcription PCR (qRT-PCR)
Total RNA samples from three biological replicates of each developmental time point were obtained. Approximately 100âmg of mycelia (fresh weight) were scraped from the GYM-cellophane medium using a plain spatula. Five hundred microliters of RNA Protect Bacteria reagent (Qiagen) were added to the mycelia to provide immediate RNA stabilization. The extraction was carried out using the RNeasy Mini Kit (Qiagen). The lysis step was made using Fast-Prep (MP⢠Biomedicals) with two 30-s force 6.5 cycles, with 1âminute on ice between each run. A phenol acid extraction was performed immediately prior to applying the samples to the column. Treatments with DNase I (Qiagen) and TURBO DNA-freeTM kit (Ambion) were performed to eliminate possible chromosomal DNA contamination. RNA integrity was verified using a 2100 Bioanalyzer (Agilent).
Quantitative RT-PCR (qRT-PCR) was performed as previously described by Yagüe et al.15. Relative quantification of gene expression was calculated using the (REST) software tool43. Primer efficiencies were measured using different dilutions of genomic DNA as templates.
Resistance of spores to sonication, lysozyme, mild acid, heating and freezing
Freshly prepared suspensions of spores were prepared at a concentration of 108 spores/ml in sterile distilled water and subjected to different treatments as detailed below. Germination of the spores prior to and after treatment were analyzed by plating and quantifying the number of colony-forming units. All quantifications were performed in triplicate and the data correspond to the averageâ±âSD of the replicates.
For sonication, 2âml of spores were treated in an MSE Soniprep (six cycles of 15âseconds of sonication, 1âminute on ice). For lysozyme incubation, 1âml of spores was treated with a concentration of 50âμg/ml freshly prepared lysozyme (Sigma-Aldrich, L6876) and incubated at 37â°C for 30âminutes. For mild acid treatment, 0.2âml of spores were incubated with 0.1âN of HCl for 5âminutes at 25â°C; acid was neutralized via 20-fold dilution in 50âmM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 7.1). For heating, the spores were heated at 55â°C for 90âminutes. For freezing, the spores were stored at â20â°C for 24âhours.
Determination of the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC)
Minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of teicoplanin and vancomycin (Sigma-Aldrich V1130 and T0578) were determined in GYM by adding increasing concentrations of glycopeptides. The inoculum was 105 spores/plate and the plates were incubated at 30â°C until colonies appeared. The MIC was the lowest concentration of the antibiotic that inhibited the visible growth of S. coelicolor44,45. The experiments were performed in triplicate and were highly reproducible with a variation of zero.
SCO4439 and SCO4439* gene overexpression and protein purification
The SCO4439 and SCO4439* (SCO4439 mutated in Leu684) genes were amplified with primers BRB7F/BRB7R from pBRB3/pBRB3* and cloned into the expression vector pET11a (Novagen) to generate pBRB7/pBRB7*. A His6 tag was included at the 5â²-terminus of the BRB7F primer. The SCO4439/SCO4439* genes were overexpressed in E. coli JM109 (DE3) using the MagicMedia E. coli Expression Medium (Invitrogen K6803). The expression was performed at 18â°C for 36âhours following the manufacturerâs protocol. The cells were harvested via centrifugation, resuspended in buffer A (20âmM sodium phosphate, 0.5âM NaCl, 40âmM imidazole, complete EDTA-free Protease Inhibitor Cocktail Tablets from Roche, pH 7.4) and ruptured using Fast-Prep (MP⢠Biomedicals) with â¤106âμm beads (Sigma-Aldrich, G8893) and three 20-s force 6.5 cycles, with 1âminute on ice between each run. Finally, the samples were centrifuged at 7,740âÃâg for 15âminute at 4â°C. The resulting supernatant fraction was centrifuged at 100,000âÃâg for 1âhour at 4â°C and the supernatant was used for protein purification.
Recombinant His6-SCO4439/ His6-SCO4439* were purified using 1âml HisTrap HP affinity columns from GE Healthcare (reference 17-5247-01). Buffer A, described above, was used as a binding buffer; the elution buffer was similar but contained 500âmM imidazole. The protein was purified using an Amersham Pharmacia FPLC (LCC 500 plus controller and two P500 pumps). Purification was performed at 4â°C using a flow of 1âml per minute, a 20âml linear elution gradient and collecting fractions of 500âμl. Fractions were analyzed via SDS-PAGE Coomassie gels and those containing the overproduced protein were combined, quantified by Bradford46 and used for further experiments.
Mass spectrometry analysis
The identity of the overproduced protein was confirmed via peptide mass fingerprinting. The overproduced purified His6-SCO4439 protein was manually excised from a 1D Coomassie gel and the proteins were digested following the method of Havlis et al.47 and analyzed using a 4800 Proteomics Analyzer matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF/TOF) mass spectrometer (AB Sciex). Protein identification, was performed using Mascot v. 2.2.04.
Assay of DD-dipeptidase and DD-carboxypeptidase activities
Enzymatic activities were assayed as reported previously35,45 by measuring the release of D-Ala from commercially available dipeptide (D-Ala-D-Ala, 10âmM; Sigma-Aldrich, A0912) and tripeptide (Nα,Nε-diacetyl-l-Lys-D-Ala-D-Ala, 10âmM; Sigma-Aldrich, D9904) in the reaction buffer (100âmM Tris-HCl, pH 7.2), together with different amounts of the purified recombinant His6-SCO4439 or His6-SCO4439*. The release of D-Ala was followed spectrophotometrically with a D-amino acid oxidase (Sigma-Aldrich, A5222)-peroxidase (Sigma-Aldrich 77332) coupled reaction that oxidized the colorimetric substrate 4-aminoantipyrine (Sigma-Aldrich 06800) to chinonemine in the presence of phenol solution (Sigma-Aldrich P4557)35,48. One unit of enzyme activity is defined as the amount of enzyme that produced 1âμmol D-Ala per minute from the tripeptide as substrate; this value must be halved when the dipeptide is used as substrate. To measure the inhibition of DD-CPase/DD-dipeptidase activity, the protein was incubated with increasing concentrations (from 0 to 5âmM) of penicillin G (Sigma-Aldrich, P3032) for 15âminutes at 37â°C and then added to the assay mixtures. All measurements were performed in triplicate and the data correspond to the meansâ±âSD.
Cellular fractioning
S. coelicolor and the SCO4439::Tn5062 mutant were grown in solid GYM medium as described above for 16, 30 and 72âhours at 30â°C. The mycelium collected from cellophane discs were suspended in 2âml of 0.9% NaCl per gram of cells (wet weight). All of the following manipulations were carried out at 0 to 4â°C and all solutions contained proteinase inhibitors (0.19âmg/ml phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride and 0.7âg/ml pepstatin, both purchased from Sigma-Aldrich P7626 and P5318), unless otherwise stated. Mycelia were fragmented by sonication with a Sonics Vibra-Cell VCX 130. Sonication was carried out for 5âminutes on ice with cycles of 30âseconds with an amplitude of 90% (90% of 60âHz) and breaks of 10âseconds. The samples were then centrifuged at 39,000âÃâg for 15âminutes and the supernatants (cytoplasmic fractions) were collected. Alkaline extraction of the insoluble fraction (membranes and cell wall debris) was carried out by adapting a previously developed protocol for extracting membrane-bound proteins in enterococci by Kariyama et al.49 and recently adapted to Streptomyces by Binda et al.43. The sedimented pellets were resuspended in ice-cold distilled water; immediately prior to centrifugation (28,000âÃâg for 15âminutes at 4â°C), the pH was adjusted to 12 by adding an appropriate volume of 2.5 N NaOH. Immediately after centrifugation, the supernatants (resuspended insoluble fractions) were neutralized to pH 7 by adding 0.5âM sodium acetate (pH 5.4)35,36,45. Enzymatic activities in the cytosolic fractions and the re-suspended insoluble fractions were assayed as previously reported36,45.
FDNB determination of spore PG crosslinking
The protocol described by Atrih et al.50 to analyze the PG crosslinking in the spores of Bacillus was adapted to S. coelicolor. The protocol for PG extraction was modified as follows: spores were collected from solid SFM media38; the concentration of spores used for extraction was 3âmg (dry weight) per ml of extraction buffer; FDNB treatment was performed using 200âμl of the extracted spore cell walls. This protocol works for the analysis of the PG from Streptomyces spores, but not for mycelium, perhaps due to the difficulty to homogenize the dense pellets of the mycelium, making PG poorly accessible to the extraction and FDNB treatment.
Glycine and diaminopimelic acid (Dpm) were measured via high-performance liquid chromatography using pre-column derivatization with o-phthaldehyde (OPA) and UV detection (338ânm). The chromatographic equipment used included the Agilent 1100 HPLC System: a G1312A binary pump, G1329A autosampler and G1315B-Diode Array Detector. Data collection and integration were performed using Software Chem Station LC 3D. The column used was a 250âÃâ3.9âmm, 100âà , Symmetry C18 (5âμm) (WAT046980) from Waters. The binding buffer (10âmM Na2HPO4, 40âmM boric acid, pH 8.15) and the elution buffer (MeOH:ACN:H2O; 45:45:10, v/v/v) were filtered (0.45âμm) prior to use. Samples were eluted in an increasing gradient of elution buffer (20% for 1.9âminutes, 70% for 13âminutes; 100% for 2.7âminutes) with a flow of 1ml /minute. The column temperature was 40â°C, the injection volume 20âμl and the detection of the amino acids was at 338ânm. Pure glycine and Dpm (both from Sigma-Aldrich) were used as standards.
The crosslinking index defined by Atrih et al.50 is based on the difference between the Dpm measured in the FDNB-treated and untreated samples. FDNB treatment is performed prior to PG hydrolysis and blocks NH groups of the Dpm residues that have not formed crosslinks. NH groups blocked with FDNB cannot react with the derivative reagent used for HPLC UV detection. S. coelicolor differs from Bacillus and PG crosslinking is formed by Gly instead of Dpm51. Consequently, in this work, the crosslinking index was calculated as the ratio between the cross-linked Gly (Gly detected in the FDNB-treated samples) and total Gly (Gly detected in the non-treated samples). Dpm was used to normalize the glycine measurements (expressed as a ratio to Dpm).
Bioinformatic analyses
Transmembrane topology of the SCO4439 gene was analyzed using Phobius software (http://phobius.sbc.su.se/).
Orthologous sequences to SCO4439 from other streptomycetes were obtained from the databases at the National Center for Biological Information (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov). The accession numbers of the selected sequences were: WP_016326920 (S. lividans), NP_824958 (S. avermitilis), YP_006878621 (S. venezuelae), WP_013002845 (S. scabies), YP_001825771 (S. griseus) and WP_003961441 (S. clavuligerus). The DD-CPase domains of the proteins were aligned using MUSCLE software and amino acid similarities were estimated by using Lalign software (http://www.ch.embnet.org/software/LALIGN_form.html).
Fluorescent vancomycin staining
Nascent PG synthesis was stained in Streptomyces liquid cultures growing in GYM medium37, inoculated with spores at a concentration of 1âÃâ107 viable spores/ml and incubated at 30â°C and 200ârpm for 5 and 8âhours. The samples were stained as previously described20. BODIPY-vancomycin (Invitrogen V34850) was mixed with an equal amount of unlabeled vancomycin (Sigma SBR00001). The vancomycin and BODIPY-vancomycin mixtures were added to the cultures at final concentrations of 1âμg/ml and incubated for 20âminutes. Cells were fixed for 15âminutes at room temperature using PBS (0.14âM NaCl, 2.6âmM KCl, 1.8âmM KH2PO4 and 10âmM Na2HPO4) containing 2.8% paraformaldehyde and 0.0045% glutaraldehyde and observed under a Leica TCS-SP8 confocal laser scanning microscope at 505ânm excitation and 513ânm emission wavelengths.
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Rioseras, B. et al. Characterization of SCO4439, a D-alanyl-D-alanine carboxypeptidase involved in spore cell wall maturation, resistance and germination in Streptomyces coelicolor. Sci. Rep. 6, 21659; doi: 10.1038/srep21659 (2016).
References
Flärdh, K. & Buttner, M. J. Streptomyces morphogenetics: dissecting differentiation in a filamentous bacterium. Nat. Rev. Microbiol. 7, 36â49 (2009).
Yagüe, P., López-GarcÃa, M. T., Rioseras, B., Sánchez, J. & Manteca, A. Pre-sporulation stages of Streptomyces differentiation, state-of-the-art and future perspectives. FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 342, 79â88 (2013).
Hopwood, D. A. Streptomyces in nature and medicine: The antibiotic makers. Oxford University Press, New York (2007).
Davies, J. Specialized microbial metabolites: functions and origins. J. Antibiot. (Tokyo) 66, 361â364 (2014).
van Wezel, G. P. & McDowall, K. J. The regulation of the secondary metabolism of Streptomyces: new links and experimental advances. Nat. Prod. Rep. 28, 1311â1333 (2011).
Chater, K. F., Biro, S., Lee, K. J., Palmer, T. & Schrempf, H. (2010) The complex extracellular biology of Streptomyces. FEMS Microbiol. Rev. 34, 171â198.
McCormick, J. R. & Flärdh, K. Signals and regulators that govern Streptomyces development. FEMS Microbiol. Rev. 36, 206â231 (2012).
Salerno, P. et al. Identification of new developmentally regulated genes involved in Streptomyces coelicolor sporulation. BMC Microbiol. 13, 281 (2013).
van Dissel, D., Claessen, D. & van Wezel, G. P. Morphogenesis of Streptomyces in submerged cultures. Adv. Appl. Microbiol. 89, 1â45 (2014).
Ghosh, A. S., Chowdhury, C. & Nelson, D. E. Physiological functions of D-alanine carboxypeptidases in Escherichia coli. Trends Microbiol. 16, 309â317 (2008).
Goffin, C. & Ghuysen, J. M. Biochemistry and comparative genomics of SxxK superfamily acyltransferases offer a clue to the mycobacterial paradox: presence of penicillin-susceptible target proteins versus lack of efficiency of penicillin as therapeutic agent. Microbiol. Mol. Biol. Rev. 66, 702â738 (2002).
Pratt, R. F. Substrate specificity of bacterial DD-peptidases (penicillin-binding proteins). Cell Mol. Life. Sci. 65, 2138â2155 (2008).
Ogawara, H. Penicillin-binding proteins in Actinobacteria. J. Antibiot. (Tokyo). 68, 223â245 (2015).
Mistry, B. V., Del Sol, R., Wright, C., Findlay, K. & Dyson, P. FtsW is a dispensable cell division protein required for Z-ring stabilization during sporulation septation in Streptomyces coelicolor. J. Bacteriol. 190, 5555â5566 (2008).
Yagüe, P. et al. Transcriptomic analysis of Streptomyces coelicolor differentiation in solid sporulating cultures: first compartmentalized and second multinucleated mycelia have different and distinctive transcriptomes. Plos One 8, e60665 (2013b).
Fernández-MartÃnez, L. T. et al. A transposon insertion single-gene knockout library and new ordered cosmid library for the model organism Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2). Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek 99, 515â522 (2011).
Rasmussen, J. R. & Strominger, J. L. Utilization of a depsipeptide substrate for trapping acyl-enzyme intermediates of penicillin-sensitive D-alanine carboxypeptidases. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 75, 84â88 (1978).
Treviño, J. et al. New insights into glycopeptide antibiotic binding to cell wall precursors using SPR and NMR spectroscopy. Chemistry 10, 7363â7372 (2014).
Sanders, A. N. & Pavelka, M. S. Phenotypic analysis of Escherichia coli mutants lacking L,D-transpeptidases. Microbiology 159, 1842â1852 (2013).
Daniel, R. A. & Errington, J. Control of cell morphogenesis in bacteria: two distinct ways to make a rod-shaped cell. Cell. 113, 767â776 (2003).
Schoonmaker, M. K., Bishai, W. R. & Lamichhane, G. Nonclassical transpeptidases of Mycobacterium tuberculosis alter cell size, morphology, the cytosolic matrix, protein localization, virulence and resistance to β-lactams. J. Bacteriol. 196, 1394â1402 (2014).
Hardisson, C., Manzanal, M. B., Salas, J. A. & Suárez, J. E. Fine structure, physiology and biochemistry of arthrospore germination in Streptomyces antibioticus. J. Gen Microbiol. 105, 203â214 (1978).
Bobek, J., Strakova, E., Zikova, A. & Vohradsky, J. Changes in activity of metabolic and regulatory pathways during germination of S. coelicolor. BMC Genomics. 15, 1173 (2014).
Strakova, E. et al. Systems insight into the spore germination of Streptomyces coelicolor. J. Proteome Res. 4, 525â536 (2013).
Bobek, J., Strakova, E., Zikova, A. & Vohradsky, J. Changes in activity of metabolic and regulatory pathways during germination of S. coelicolor. BMC Genomics. 15, 1173 (2014).
de Jong, W. et al. NepA is a structural cell wall protein involved in maintenance of spore dormancy in Streptomyces coelicolor. Mol. Microbiol. 71, 1591â1603 (2009).
Noens, E.E. et al., Loss of the controlled localization of growth stage-specific cell-wall synthesis pleiotropically affects developmental gene expression in an ssgA mutant of Streptomyces coelicolor. Mol. Microbiol. 64, 1244â1259 (2007).
Haiser, H. J., Yousef, M. R. & Elliot, M. A. Cell wall hydrolases affect germination, vegetative growth and sporulation in Streptomyces coelicolor. J. Bacteriol. 191, 6501â6512 (2009).
Neyman, S. L. & Buchanan, C. E. Restoration of vegetative penicillin-binding proteins during germination and outgrowth of Bacillus subtilis spores: relationship of individual proteins to specific cell cycle events. J. Bacteriol. 161, 164â168 (1985).
Murray, T., Popham, D. L. & Setlow, P. Identification and characterization of pbpC, the gene encoding Bacillus subtilis penicillin-binding protein 3. J. Bacteriol. 178, 6001â6005 (1996).
Buchanan, C. E. & Gustafson, A. Mutagenesis and mapping of the gene for a sporulation-specific penicillin-binding protein in Bacillus subtilis. J. Bacteriol. 174, 5430â5435 (1992).
Cooper, M. A. & Williams, D. H. Binding of glycopeptide antibiotics to a model of a vancomycin-resistant bacterium. Chem. Biol. 6, 891â899 (1999).
Hong, H. J. et al. Characterisation of an inducible vancomycin resistance system in Streptomyces coelicolor reveals a novel gene (vanK) required for drug resistance. Mol. Microbiol. 52, 1107â1121 (2004).
Schäberle, T. F. et al. Self-resistance and cell wall composition in the glycopeptide producer Amycolatopsis balhimycina. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 55, 4283â4289 (2011).
Binda, E., Marcone, G. L., Pollegioni, L. & Marinelli, F. Characterization of VanY(n), a novel d,d-peptidase/d,d-carboxypeptidase involved in glycopeptide antibiotic resistance in Nonomuraea sp. ATCC 39727. FEBS J. 279, 3203â3213 (2012).
Marcone, G. L., Binda, E., Carrano, L., Bibb, M. & Marinelli, F. The relationship between glycopeptide production and resistance in the actinomycete Nonomuraea sp. ATCC 39727. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 58, 5191â5201 (2014).
Novella, I. S., Barbes, C. & Sánchez, J. Sporulation of Streptomyces antibioticus ETHZ 7451 in liquid culture. Can J Microbiol 38, 769â773 (1992).
Kieser, T., Bibb, M. J., Buttner, M. J., Chater, K. F. & Hopwood, D. A. Growth and Preservation of Streptomyces. In Practical Streptomyces Genetics, Chapter 2, pp. 43â61. Norwich, UK: The John Innes Foundation (2000).
Hong, H. J., Hutchings, M. I., Hill, L. M. & Buttner, M. J. The role of the novel Fem protein VanK in vancomycin resistance in Streptomyces coelicolor. J. Biol. Chem. 280, 13055â13061 (2005).
Bishop, A., Fielding, S., Dyson, P. & Herron, P. Systematic insertional mutagenesis of a streptomycete genome: a link between osmoadaptation and antibiotic production. Genome Res. 14, 893â900 (2004).
Gregory, M. A., Till, R. & Smith, M. C. Integration site for Streptomyces phage phiBT1 and development of site-specific integrating vectors. J. Bacteriol. 185, 5320â5323 (2003).
Manteca, A., Alvarez, R., Salazar, N., Yague, P. & Sanchez, J. Mycelium differentiation and antibiotic production in liquid cultures of Streptomyces coelicolor. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 74, 3877â3886 (2008).
Pfaffl, M. W., Horgan, G. W. & Dempfle, L. Relative expression software tool (REST) for group-wise comparison and statistical analysis of relative expression results in real-time PCR. Nucleic. Acids Res. 30, e36 (2002).
Andrews, J. M. Determination of minimum inhibitory concentrations. J. Antimicrob. Chemother. 48, 5â16 (2001).
Binda, E., Marcone, G. L., Berini, F., Pollegioni, L. & Marinelli, F. Streptomyces spp. as efficient expression system for a d,d-peptidase/d,d-carboxypeptidase involved in glycopeptide antibiotic resistance. BMC Biotechnol 13, 24 (2013).
Bradford, M. M. A rapid and sensitive for the quantitation of microgram quantitites of protein utilizing the principle of proteindye binding. Anal Biochem 72, 248â254 (1976).
Havlis, J., Thomas, H., Sebela, M. & Shevchenko, A. Fast-response proteomics by accelerated in-gel digestion of proteins. Anal. Chem. 75, 1300â1306 (2003).
Granier, B. et al. Serine-type D-Ala-D-Ala peptidases and penicillin-binding proteins. Methods Enzymol. 244, 249â266 (1994).
Kariyama, R., Massidda, O., Daneo-Moore, L. & Shockman, G. D. Properties of cell wall-associated DD-carboxypeptidase of Enterococcus hirae (Streptococcus faecium) ATCC 9790 extracted with alkali. J. Bacteriol. 172, 3718â3724 (1990).
Atrih, A., Zöllner, P., Allmaier, G. & Foster, S. J. Structural analysis of Bacillus subtilis 168 endospore peptidoglycan and its role during differentiation. J. Bacteriol. 178, 6173â6183 (1996).
Hugonnet, J. E. et al. Peptidoglycan crosslinking in glycopeptide-resistant Actinomycetales. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 58, 1749â1756 (2014).
MacNeil, D. J. et al. Analysis of Streptomyces avermitilis genes required for avermectin biosynthesis utilizing a novel integration vector. Gene 111, 61â68 (1992).
Flett, F., Mersinias, V. & Smith, C. P. High efficiency intergeneric conjugal transfer of plasmid DNA from Escherichia coli to methyl DNA-restricting streptomycetes. FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 155, 223â229 (1997).
Acknowledgements
This research was funded by an ERC Starting Grant (Strp-differentiation 280304). Our thanks to Beatriz Gutiérrez Magán (Universidad de Oviedo, Dpto. BiologÃa Funcional, Ãrea de MicrobiologÃa) for laboratory assistance, Paul Dyson and Meirwyn Evans (Swansea University) for providing the disrupted cosmids, Carlos Barreiro and Mar Calonge (INBIOTEC, Leon) for the mass spectrometry and amino acid analyses, Maggie Smith (University of York) for providing the pMS82 plasmid and Nature Publishing Group Language Editing service for proof-reading the text.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
B.R., P.Y., M.T.L.G., N.G.Q. and E.B. performed the experiments; B.R., P.Y., E.B., F.M. and A.M. assisted with data analysis; all authors contributed to the critical discussion of the manuscript; B.R., F.M. and A.M. conceived, designed the work and wrote the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Electronic supplementary material
Rights and permissions
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the articleâs Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
About this article
Cite this article
Rioseras, B., Yagüe, P., López-GarcÃa, M. et al. Characterization of SCO4439, a D-alanyl-D-alanine carboxypeptidase involved in spore cell wall maturation, resistance and germination in Streptomyces coelicolor. Sci Rep 6, 21659 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1038/srep21659
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/srep21659
This article is cited by
-
FtsZ phosphorylation pleiotropically affects Z-ladder formation, antibiotic production, and morphogenesis in Streptomyces coelicolor
Antonie van Leeuwenhoek (2023)
-
Proposed Mechanism of Antibacterial Activity of Glutathione by Inhibition of the d-Alanyl-d-alanine Carboxypeptidase Enzyme
International Journal of Peptide Research and Therapeutics (2021)
-
Cytosolic copper is a major modulator of germination, development and secondary metabolism in Streptomyces coelicolor
Scientific Reports (2019)