Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
51
result(s) for
"Envelope Biogenesis"
Sort by:
YhdP, TamB, and YdbH Are Redundant but Essential for Growth and Lipid Homeostasis of the Gram-Negative Outer Membrane
by
Ruiz, Natividad
,
Kumar, Sujeet
,
Davis, Rebecca M.
in
Antibiotics
,
Antimicrobial agents
,
AsmA-like proteins
2021
Gram-negative bacteria like Escherichia coli are characterized by having two membranes. Systems required for the biogenesis of the Gram-negative outer membrane have been identified except for that required for the transport of newly synthesized phospholipids from the inner to the outer membrane. The bacterial cell envelope is the first line of defense and point of contact with the environment and other organisms. Envelope biogenesis is therefore crucial for the survival and physiology of bacteria and is often targeted by antimicrobials. Gram-negative bacteria have a multilayered envelope delimited by an inner and outer membrane (IM and OM, respectively). The OM is a barrier against many antimicrobials because of its asymmetric lipid structure, with phospholipids composing the inner leaflet and lipopolysaccharides (LPS) the outer leaflet. Since lipid synthesis occurs at the IM, phospholipids and LPS are transported across the cell envelope and asymmetrically assembled at the OM during growth. How phospholipids are transported to the OM remains unknown. Recently, the Escherichia coli protein YhdP has been proposed to participate in this process through an unknown mechanism. YhdP belongs to the AsmA-like clan and contains domains homologous to those found in lipid transporters. Here, we used genetics to investigate the six members of the AsmA-like clan of proteins in E. coli . Our data show that YhdP and its paralogs TamB and YdbH are redundant, but not equivalent, in performing an essential function in the cell envelope. Among the AsmA-like paralogs, only the combined loss of YhdP, TamB, and YdbH is lethal, and any of these three proteins is sufficient for growth. We also show that these proteins are required for OM lipid homeostasis and propose that they are the long-sought-after phospholipid transporters that are required for OM biogenesis. IMPORTANCE Gram-negative bacteria like Escherichia coli are characterized by having two membranes. Systems required for the biogenesis of the Gram-negative outer membrane have been identified except for that required for the transport of newly synthesized phospholipids from the inner to the outer membrane. The YhdP protein was previously implicated in this process. Here, we show that YhdP and its homologs TamB and YdbH are redundant in performing an essential function for growth and maintaining lipid homeostasis in the outer membrane. These proteins share a predicted structure with known eukaryotic lipid transporters. Based on our data and previous findings, we propose YhdP, TamB, and YdbH are the missing proteins that transport phospholipids to the outer membrane that have escaped identification because of redundancy.
Journal Article
Impaired envelope integrity in the absence of SanA is linked to increased lipid II availability and an imbalance of septal peptidoglycan synthesis
by
Carr, Joseph F.
,
Warzecha, Daniel J.
,
Wei, Robert
in
Bacterial Cell Envelope
,
Bacteriology
,
cell division
2026
The gram-negative cell envelope is a barrier that protects the cell from environmental stress. Therefore, the synthesis of each layer of this envelope needs to be closely coordinated throughout growth and division. Here, we investigated SanA, a protein in Escherichia coli K-12 that affects envelope permeability under cellular stress, including nutrient limitation and high temperature. We found that SanA plays a key role in maintaining the permeability barrier when precursor levels for peptidoglycan (PG) synthesis are elevated, linking envelope integrity to balanced septal PG production during cell division. Our results suggest that SanA modulates substrate availability to preserve envelope function, and that in its absence, imbalanced substrate flux to septal PG synthesis disrupts septum formation and compromises barrier integrity.
Journal Article
Compartmentalized cell envelope biosynthesis in Mycobacterium tuberculosis
by
Li, Xuni
,
Morita, Yasu S.
,
Brenner, James R.
in
Arabinogalactan
,
Bacterial Cell Envelope
,
Bacterial Physiology
2026
M. tuberculosis remains an important public health threat, with more than one million deaths every year. The pathogen’s ability to survive in the human host for decades highlights the importance of understanding how this bacterium regulates and coordinates its metabolism, cell envelope elongation, and growth. The IMD is a membrane structure that associates with the subpolar growth zone of actively growing mycobacterial cell, but its existence is only known in a non-pathogenic model, M. smegmatis . Here, we demonstrated the presence of the IMD in M. tuberculosis , making the IMD an evolutionarily conserved plasma membrane compartment in mycobacteria. Furthermore, our study revealed that the IMD may function as the factory for synthesizing phenolic glycolipids, virulence factors produced by slow-growing pathogenic species.
Journal Article
High-throughput suppressor screen demonstrates that RcsF monitors outer membrane integrity and not Bam complex function
by
Konovalova, Anna
,
Tata, Muralidhar
,
Saha, Shreya
in
Assembly
,
Bacterial Capsules - metabolism
,
Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins - chemistry
2021
The regulator of capsule synthesis (Rcs) is a complex signaling cascade that monitors gram-negative cell envelope integrity. The outer membrane (OM) lipoprotein RcsF is the sensory component, but how RcsF functions remains elusive. RcsF interacts with the β-barrel assembly machinery (Bam) complex, which assembles RcsF in complex with OM proteins (OMPs), resulting in RcsF’s partial cell surface exposure. Elucidating whether RcsF/Bam or RcsF/OMP interactions are important for its sensing function is challenging because the Bam complex is essential, and partial loss-of-function mutations broadly compromise the OM biogenesis. Our recent discovery that, in the absence of nonessential component BamE, RcsF inhibits function of the central component BamA provided a genetic tool to select mutations that specifically prevent RcsF/BamA interactions. We employed a high-throughput suppressor screen to isolate a collection of such rcsF and bamA mutants and characterized their impact on RcsF/OMP assembly and Rcs signaling. Using these mutants and BamA inhibitors MRL-494L and darobactin, we provide multiple lines of evidence against the model in which RcsF senses Bam complex function. We show that Rcs activation in bam mutants results from secondary OM and lipopolysaccharide defects and that RcsF/OMP assembly is required for this activation, supporting an active role of RcsF/OMP complexes in sensing OM stress.
Journal Article
Modulation of bacterial cell size and growth rate via activation of a cell envelope stress response
by
Verheul, Jolanda
,
Miguel, Amanda
,
Huang, Kerwyn Casey
in
Bacteria
,
Bacterial Cell Envelope
,
Bacterial Cell Size and Volume
2025
Bacteria must coordinate their growth rate, shape, and division to survive and flourish, yet how these cellular properties are maintained in the face of environmental stresses is poorly understood. Working with Escherichia coli , we show that activating the Rcs phosphorelay, an envelope stress-signaling system, in the absence of external stresses slows growth, shortens cells, and increases the concentration of the key division protein FtsZ, leading to more closely spaced division sites. Depleting the levels of IgaA, a regulator of the Rcs pathway, yielded similar phenotypes. However, activating Rcs via drug-induced cell-wall disruption did not affect growth rate, indicating that the physiological impact of this pathway depends on the context of activation. Our findings reveal links among cell growth, shape homeostasis, and cell envelope stress. Understanding this coupling further will provide new avenues to predict and modulate bacterial growth and physiology during stress.
Journal Article
Peptidoglycan DD-peptidases have distinct activities that impact fitness of Acinetobacter baumannii
by
Vollmer, Waldemar
,
Furlan, Berenice
,
Biboy, Jacob
in
Acinetobacter baumannii - enzymology
,
Acinetobacter baumannii - genetics
,
Acinetobacter baumannii - growth & development
2026
DD-peptidases, including carboxypeptidases and endopeptidases, are crucial for maintaining cell envelope homeostasis, with distinct roles for each enzyme in cell wall biogenesis and structural integrity. The enzymatic characterization presented in this study not only advances our understanding of fundamental Acinetobacter baumannii biology but also highlights these enzymatic activities as targets for the development of innovative therapeutic strategies to combat infections caused by this multidrug-resistant microbe.
Journal Article
A new role for lipoproteins LpqZ and FecB in orchestrating mycobacterial cell envelope biogenesis
2026
Tuberculosis, caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), remains the world’s deadliest bacterial infection, in part because the bacterium’s unique cell envelope makes it highly resistant to antibiotics. Understanding how this protective barrier is built is essential for developing better treatments. In this study, we discovered that two previously uncharacterized lipoproteins help maintain the integrity of the mycobacterial cell envelope and contribute to drug resistance. Surprisingly, instead of acting as transport proteins as expected by structural similarity, these molecules regulate enzymes that assemble the bacterial envelope. This discovery highlights a previously unrecognized layer of control in envelope construction and opens new directions for targeting Mtb’s defenses with future therapies.
Journal Article
Lipopolysaccharide transport to the cell surface: periplasmic transport and assembly into the outer membrane
by
Ruiz, Natividad
,
Simpson, Brent W.
,
Kahne, Daniel
in
Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins - chemistry
,
Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins - metabolism
,
Bacterial Proteins - chemistry
2015
Gram-negative bacteria possess an outer membrane (OM) containing lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Proper assembly of the OM not only prevents certain antibiotics from entering the cell, but also allows others to be pumped out. To assemble this barrier, the seven-protein lipopolysaccharide transport (Lpt) system extracts LPS from the outer leaflet of the inner membrane (IM), transports it across the periplasm and inserts it selectively into the outer leaflet of the OM. As LPS is important, if not essential, in most Gram-negative bacteria, the LPS biosynthesis and biogenesis pathways are attractive targets in the development of new classes of antibiotics. The accompanying paper (Simpson BW, May JM, Sherman DJ, Kahne D, Ruiz N. 2015 Phil. Trans. R. Soc. B 370, 20150029. (doi:10.1098/rstb.2015.0029)) reviewed the biosynthesis of LPS and its extraction from the IM. This paper will trace its journey across the periplasm and insertion into the OM.
Journal Article
Improper Coordination of BamA and BamD Results in Bam Complex Jamming by a Lipoprotein Substrate
by
Konovalova, Anna
,
Tata, Muralidhar
in
Aldehydes
,
Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins - genetics
,
Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins - metabolism
2019
The β-barrel assembly machinery, the Bam complex, consists of five components, BamA to -E, among which BamA and BamD are highly conserved and essential. The nonessential components are believed to play redundant roles simply by improving the rate of β-barrel folding. Here we show that BamE contributes a specific and nonoverlapping function to the Bam complex. BamE coordinates BamA and BamD to form a complex between the lipoprotein RcsF and its partner outer membrane β-barrel protein, allowing RcsF to reach the cell surface. In the absence of BamE, RcsF accumulates on BamA, thus blocking the activity of the Bam complex. As the Bam complex is a major antibiotic target in Gram-negative bacteria, the discovery that a lipoprotein can act as a jamming substrate may open the door for development of novel Bam complex inhibitors. The β-barrel assembly machinery, the Bam complex, is central to the biogenesis of integral outer membrane proteins (OMPs) as well as OMP-dependent surface-exposed lipoproteins, such as regulator of capsule synthesis protein F (RcsF). Previous genetic analysis established the model that nonessential components BamE and BamB have overlapping, redundant functions to enhance the kinetics of the highly conserved BamA/BamD core. Here we report that BamE plays a specialized nonredundant role in the Bam complex required for surface exposure of RcsF. We show that the lack of bamE , but not bamB , completely abolishes assembly of RcsF/OMP complexes and establish that the inability to assemble RcsF/OMP complexes is a molecular reason underlying all synthetic lethal interactions of ΔbamE . Our genetic analysis and biochemical cross-linking suggest that RcsF accumulates on BamA when BamA cannot engage with BamD because of its limited availability or the incompatible conformation. The role of BamE is to promote proper coordination of RcsF-bound BamA with BamD to complete OMP assembly around RcsF. We show that in the absence of BamE, RcsF is stalled on BamA, thus blocking its function, and we identify the lipoprotein RcsF as a bona fide jamming substrate of the Bam complex. IMPORTANCE The β-barrel assembly machinery, the Bam complex, consists of five components, BamA to -E, among which BamA and BamD are highly conserved and essential. The nonessential components are believed to play redundant roles simply by improving the rate of β-barrel folding. Here we show that BamE contributes a specific and nonoverlapping function to the Bam complex. BamE coordinates BamA and BamD to form a complex between the lipoprotein RcsF and its partner outer membrane β-barrel protein, allowing RcsF to reach the cell surface. In the absence of BamE, RcsF accumulates on BamA, thus blocking the activity of the Bam complex. As the Bam complex is a major antibiotic target in Gram-negative bacteria, the discovery that a lipoprotein can act as a jamming substrate may open the door for development of novel Bam complex inhibitors.
Journal Article
conserved phosphatase cascade that regulates nuclear membrane biogenesis
by
Kim, Youngjun
,
Gentry, Matthew S
,
Harris, Thurl E
in
acid phosphatase
,
Active sites
,
Amino Acid Sequence
2007
A newly emerging family of phosphatases that are members of the haloacid dehalogenase superfamily contains the catalytic motif DXDX(T/V). A member of this DXDX(T/V) phosphatase family known as Dullard was recently shown to be a potential regulator of neural tube development in Xenopus [Satow R, Chan TC, Asashima M (2002) Biochem Biophys Res Commun 295:85-91]. Herein, we demonstrate that human Dullard and the yeast protein Nem1p perform similar functions in mammalian cells and yeast cells, respectively. In addition to similarity in primary sequence, Dullard and Nem1p possess similar domains and show similar substrate preferences, and both localize to the nuclear envelope. Additionally, we show that human Dullard can rescue the aberrant nuclear envelope morphology of nem1Δ yeast cells, functionally replacing Nem1p. Finally, Nem1p, has been shown to deposphorylate the yeast phosphatidic acid phosphatase Smp2p [Santos-Rosa H, Leung J, Grimsey N, Peak-Chew S, Siniossoglou S (2005) EMBO J 24:1931-1941], and we show that Dullard dephosphorylates the mammalian phospatidic acid phosphatase, lipin. Therefore, we propose that Dullard participates in a unique phosphatase cascade regulating nuclear membrane biogenesis, and that this cascade is conserved from yeast to mammals.
Journal Article