The bacteriophage EL is a virus that specifically attacks the human pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa. This phage carries a large genome that encodes for its own chaperonin which presumably facilitates the proper folding of phage proteins independently of the host chaperonin system. EL also encodes a lysin enzyme, a critical component of the lytic cycle that is responsible for digesting the peptidoglycan layer of the host cell wall. Previously, this lysin was believed to be a substrate of the chaperonin encoded by phage EL. In order to characterize the activity of the EL lysin, and to determine whether lysin activity is contingent on chaperonin-mediated folding, a series of peptidoglycan hydrolysis activity assays were performed. Results indicate that the EL-encoded lysin has similar enzymatic activity to that of the Gallus gallus lysozyme and that the EL lysin folds into a functional enzyme in the absence of phage chaperonin and should not be considered a substrate.
CITATION STYLE
Tafoya, D. A., Hildenbrand, Z. L., Herrera, N., Molugu, S. K., Mesyanzhinov, V. V., Miroshnikov, K. A., & Bernal, R. A. (2013). Enzymatic characterization of a lysin encoded by bacteriophage EL. Bacteriophage, 3(2), e25449. https://doi.org/10.4161/bact.25449
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