نتایج جستجو برای: peptidoglycan

تعداد نتایج: 5152  

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2010
Magda L Atilano Pedro M Pereira James Yates Patricia Reed Helena Veiga Mariana G Pinho Sérgio R Filipe

The cell wall of Staphylococcus aureus is characterized by an extremely high degree of cross-linking within its peptidoglycan (PGN). Penicillin-binding protein 4 (PBP4) is required for the synthesis of this highly cross-linked peptidoglycan. We found that wall teichoic acids, glycopolymers attached to the peptidoglycan and important for virulence in Gram-positive bacteria, act as temporal and s...

Journal: :EMBO reports 2005
Sergio R Filipe Alexander Tomasz Petros Ligoxygakis

The Drosophila immune system is able to discriminate between classes of bacteria. Detection of Gram-positive bacteria involves a complex of two pattern recognition receptors: peptidoglycan recognition protein SA (PGRP-SA) and Gram-negative binding protein 1 (GNBP1). These activate the Toll signalling pathway. To define the cell wall components sensed by the host, we used highly purified peptido...

Journal: :The Journal of biological chemistry 2011
Maria-Halima Laaberki John Pfeffer Anthony J Clarke Jonathan Dworkin

O-Acetylation of the MurNAc moiety of peptidoglycan is typically associated with bacterial resistance to lysozyme, a muramidase that serves as a central component of innate immunity. Here, we report that the peptidoglycan of Bacillus anthracis, the etiological agent of anthrax, is O-acetylated and that, unusually, this modification is produced by two unrelated families of O-acetyltransferases. ...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2002
Aya Takehana Tomonori Katsuyama Tamaki Yano Yoshiteru Oshima Haruhiko Takada Toshiro Aigaki Shoichiro Kurata

In Drosophila, microbial infection activates an antimicrobial defense system involving the activation of proteolytic cascades in the hemolymph and intracellular signaling pathways, the immune deficiency (imd) and Toll pathways, in immune-responsive tissues. The mechanisms for microbial recognition are largely unknown. We report that, in larvae, the imd-mediated antibacterial defense is activate...

2012
Teresa A. Figueiredo Rita G. Sobral Ana Madalena Ludovice João Manuel Feio de Almeida Nhat K. Bui Waldemar Vollmer Hermínia de Lencastre Alexander Tomasz

The glutamic acid residues of the peptidoglycan of Staphylococcus aureus and many other bacteria become amidated by an as yet unknown mechanism. In this communication we describe the identification, in the genome of S. aureus strain COL, of two co-transcribed genes, murT and gatD, which are responsible for peptidoglycan amidation. MurT and GatD have sequence similarity to substrate-binding doma...

Journal: :Cell 2010
Laura K. Sycuro Zachary Pincus Kimberley D. Gutierrez Jacob Biboy Chelsea A. Stern Waldemar Vollmer Nina R. Salama

The mechanisms by which bacterial cells generate helical cell shape and its functional role are poorly understood. Helical shape of the human pathogen Helicobacter pylori may facilitate penetration of the thick gastric mucus where it replicates. We identified four genes required for helical shape: three LytM peptidoglycan endopeptidase homologs (csd1-3) and a ccmA homolog. Surrounding the cytop...

Journal: :Science 2017
Alexandre W Bisson-Filho Yen-Pang Hsu Georgia R Squyres Erkin Kuru Fabai Wu Calum Jukes Yingjie Sun Cees Dekker Seamus Holden Michael S VanNieuwenhze Yves V Brun Ethan C Garner

The mechanism by which bacteria divide is not well understood. Cell division is mediated by filaments of FtsZ and FtsA (FtsAZ) that recruit septal peptidoglycan-synthesizing enzymes to the division site. To understand how these components coordinate to divide cells, we visualized their movements relative to the dynamics of cell wall synthesis during cytokinesis. We found that the division septu...

2016
Jonathan M. Fura Sean E. Pidgeon Morgan Birabaharan Marcos M. Pires

The number of antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections has increased dramatically over the past decade. To combat these pathogens, novel antimicrobial strategies must be explored and developed. We previously reported a strategy based on hapten-modified cell wall analogues to induce recruitment of endogenous antibodies to bacterial cell surfaces. Cell surface remodeling using unnatural single d...

2016
Yao Liu Eefjan Breukink

Peptidoglycan is the major component of the cell envelope of virtually all bacteria. It has structural roles and acts as a selective sieve for molecules from the outer environment. Peptidoglycan synthesis is therefore one of the most important biogenesis pathways in bacteria and has been studied extensively over the last twenty years. The pathway starts in the cytoplasm, continues in the cytopl...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 1971
J J Kowalski D T Berman

Guinea pigs sensitized with washed, Formalin-killed cells of Staphylococcus aureus, strains 263 or Copenhagen, were skin-tested with various antigens from these strains including washed viable and heat-killed whole cells, cell walls, the peptidoglycan complexes of the walls, teichoic acid, teichoic acid-peptidoglycan fragments, and peptidoglycan fragments. In nonsensitized control animals, all ...

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