Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2189111 Journal of Molecular Biology 2007 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

Escherichia coli phage N4 infection leads to delayed host cell lysis, 3000 particles per infected bacterium and a small plaque phenotype. We show that bacteriophage N4 encodes a murein hydrolase (gp61) that is essential for N4 plaque-forming ability. gp61 has a high level of sequence similarity to hypothetical proteobacterial proteins, and Vibrio harveyi phage VHML ORF 19. Nano-electrospray ionization (nESI) quadrupole ion trap (QIT) mass spectrometry (MS) analysis of muropeptides from purified gp61 digestion of E. coli peptidoglycan indicates that gp61 is an N-acetylmuramidase. The EGGY motif present near the N terminus of gp61 and its homologs contains the glutamic acid residue essential for enzymatic activity. These results provide evidence that N4 gp61 and its homologs define a new family of N-acetylmuramidases (pfam05838.4, DUF847, COG3926). In contrast to its homologs, gp61 contains an N-terminal signal sequence. When expressed at levels present during phage infection, gp61 localizes primarily to the cell inner membrane; in contrast, over-expression of recombinant N4 gp61 is sufficient for rapid cell lysis. Overproduction of the recombinant Salmonella typhimurium (STM0016) homolog is sufficient for cell lysis only when fused to the gp61 N-terminal signal sequence. The results of subcellular localization and of mutagenesis of the gp61 N-terminal signal sequence indicate that gp61 must be released from the inner membrane to be catalytically active.

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