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Evidence of two differentially regulated elongasomes in Salmonella

Sónia Castanheira, Francisco Garcı́a-del Portillo

2023Communications Biology14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Cell shape is genetically inherited by all forms of life. Some unicellular microbes increase niche adaptation altering shape whereas most show invariant morphology. A universal system of peptidoglycan synthases guided by cytoskeletal scaffolds defines bacterial shape. In rod-shaped bacteria, this system consists of two supramolecular complexes, the elongasome and divisome, which insert cell wall material along major and minor axes. Microbes with invariant shape are thought to use a single morphogenetic system irrespective of the occupied niche. Here, we provide evidence for two elongasomes that generate (rod) shape in the same bacterium. This phenomenon was unveiled in Salmonella , a pathogen that switches between extra- and intracellular lifestyles. The two elongasomes can be purified independently, respond to different environmental cues, and are directed by distinct peptidoglycan synthases: the canonical PBP2 and the pathogen-specific homologue PBP2 SAL . The PBP2-elongasome responds to neutral pH whereas that directed by PBP2 SAL assembles in acidic conditions. Moreover, the PBP2 SAL -elongasome moves at a lower speed. Besides Salmonella , other human, animal, and plant pathogens encode alternative PBPs with predicted morphogenetic functions. Therefore, contrasting the view of morphological plasticity facilitating niche adaptation, some pathogens may have acquired alternative systems to preserve their shape in the host.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyPeptidoglycanSalmonellaAdaptation (eye)NichePathogenMreBBacteriaCell biologyGeneticsMicrobiologyCytoskeletonBiochemistryCellNeuroscienceBacteriophages and microbial interactionsBacterial Genetics and BiotechnologyEscherichia coli research studies
Evidence of two differentially regulated elongasomes in Salmonella | Litcius