Substrate specificity of the AmpG permease required for recycling of cell wall anhydro-muropeptides

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Abstract

AmpG was originally identified as a gene required for induction of β-lactamase. Subsequently, we found AmpG to be a permease required for recycling of murein tripeptide and uptake of anhydro-muropeptides. We have now studied the specificity of the AmpG permease. The principal requirement is for the presence of the disaccharide, N-acetylglucosaminyl-β-1,4-anhydro-N-acetylmuramic acid (GlcNAc-anhMurNAc). These unique substrates for AmpG, which contain murein peptides linked to GlcNAc-anhMurNAc, are produced by turnover of the cell wall during logarithmic growth. AmpG permease is sensitive to carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone, demonstrating that AmpG permease is a single-component permease and that transport is dependent on the proton motive force.

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Cheng, Q., & Park, J. T. (2002). Substrate specificity of the AmpG permease required for recycling of cell wall anhydro-muropeptides. Journal of Bacteriology, 184(23), 6434–6436. https://doi.org/10.1128/JB.184.23.6434-6436.2002

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