Evidence for multisite growth of Escherichia coli murein involving concomitant endopeptidase and transpeptidase activities.

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RESUMO

During diaminopimelic acid starvation of Escherichia coli W7, a large fraction of the preexisting murein cross-links are opened by murein endopeptidase and the resulting uncross-linked material is degraded. This is reflected morphologically in a general loss of rigidity of the murein sacculus long before lysis occurs. In growing cells, a dynamic situation is demonstrable. When cells whose murein sacculi are uniformly labeled with [14C]diaminopimelic acid were chased with unlabeled DAP, a significant, rapid shift of [14C]diaminopimelic acid from the donor to the acceptor half of dimers was observed. The shift can be explained by the presence of about 100 separate sites where new murein strands were being inserted between old radioactive strands of murein. Thus, the gradual loss of rigidity of the murein sacculus as endopeptidase continues to function during starvation of E. coli W7 suggests an even distribution of the active endopeptidases. This is consistent with the kinetic data which suggest that endopeptidase, along with murein synthetase and transpeptidase, acts at about 100 distinct sites to elongate the murein sacculus.

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