Evidence for involvement of penicillin-binding protein 3 in murein synthesis during septation but not during cell elongation

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Abstract

Furazlocillin (1 μg/ml) and piperacillin (5 μg/ml) bound specifically to penicillin-binding protein 3 (PBP-3) and not to the other major PBPs in intact E. coli cells. The effect of this specific binding to PBP-3 on murein synthesis of elongating and synchronously septating cells was investigated in two thermosensitive division mutants, E. coli BUG6 and E. coli JE10730, the latter possessing a thermolabile PBP-3. Synchronous cell division was induced by shifting the cultures from the nonpermissive temperature (42°C) to 30°C. Both [14C]diaminopimelic acid incorporation into murein of intact cells and [14C]N-acetylglucosamine incorporation into murein of cells permeabilized with ether was inhibited by an average of 42% in septating cells. In filaments growing at the nonpermissive temperature, we detected no inhibition and, frequently, a 10 to 15% stimulation of murein synthesis. The two drugs, at concentrations used in the above experiments, bound exclusively to PBP-3 both in elongating and septating intact cells and in ether-treated cells. These results support the hypothesis that PBP-3 activity is exclusively required for septal murein synthesis.

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Botta, G. A., & Park, J. T. (1981). Evidence for involvement of penicillin-binding protein 3 in murein synthesis during septation but not during cell elongation. Journal of Bacteriology, 145(1), 333–340. https://doi.org/10.1128/jb.145.1.333-340.1981

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