Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume 284, Issue 33, 14 August 2009, Pages 21856-21862
Journal home page for Journal of Biological Chemistry

Glycobiology and Extracellular Matrices
The Elucidation of the Structure of Thermotoga maritima Peptidoglycan Reveals Two Novel Types of Cross-link*

https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M109.034363Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Thermotoga maritima is a Gram-negative, hyperthermophilic bacterium whose peptidoglycan contains comparable amounts of l- and d-lysine. We have determined the fine structure of this cell-wall polymer. The muropeptides resulting from the digestion of peptidoglycan by mutanolysin were separated by high-performance liquid chromatography and identified by amino acid analysis after acid hydrolysis, dinitrophenylation, enzymatic determination of the configuration of the chiral amino acids, and mass spectrometry. The high-performance liquid chromatography profile contained four main peaks, two monomers, and two dimers, plus a few minor peaks corresponding to anhydro forms. The first monomer was the d-lysine-containing disaccharide-tripeptide in which the d-Glu-d-Lys bond had the unusual γ→ϵ arrangement (GlcNAc-MurNAc-l-Ala-γ-d-Glu-ϵ-d-Lys). The second monomer was the conventional disaccharide-tetrapeptide (GlcNAc-MurNAc-l-Ala-γ-d-Glu-l-Lys-d-Ala). The first dimer contained a disaccharide-l-Ala as the acyl donor cross-linked to the α-amine of d-Lys in a tripeptide acceptor stem with the sequence of the first monomer. In the second dimer, donor and acceptor stems with the sequences of the second and first monomers, respectively, were connected by a d-Ala4-α-d-Lys3 cross-link. The cross-linking index was 10 with an average chain length of 30 disaccharide units. The structure of the peptidoglycan of T. maritima revealed for the first time the key role of d-Lys in peptidoglycan synthesis, both as a surrogate of l-Lys or meso-diaminopimelic acid at the third position of peptide stems and in the formation of novel cross-links of the l-Ala1(α→α)d-Lys3 and d-Ala4(α→α)d-Lys3 types.

Cited by (0)

*

This work was supported by grants from the CNRS (UMR 8619), the Délégation Générale pour l舗Armement (Contrats Jeune Chercheur 036000104 and 056000030 to A. B.) and the European Union EUR-INTAFAR Project (LSHM-CT-2004-512138).

The on-line version of this article (available at http://www.jbc.org) contains supplemental Fig. S1.