Genome-wide peptidoglycan profiling of Vibrio cholerae
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Abstract
SUMMARY Most bacteria cells are protected by a peptidoglycan cell wall. Defining the chemical structure of the peptidoglycan has been instrumental to characterize cell wall associated proteins and to illuminate the mode of action of cell wall-acting antibiotics. However, a major roadblock for a comprehensive understanding of peptidoglycan homeostasis has been the lack of methods to conduct large-scale, systematic studies. Here we have developed and applied an innovative high throughput peptidoglycan analytical pipeline to analyze the entire non-essential, arrayed mutant library of Vibrio cholerae . The unprecedented breadth of these analyses revealed that peptidoglycan homeostasis is preserved by a large percentage of the genome organized in complex networks that functionally link peptidoglycan features with genetic determinants. As an example, we discovered a novel bifunctional penicillin-binding protein in V. cholerae . Collectively, genome-wide peptidoglycan profiling provides a fast, easy, and unbiased method for systematic identification of the genetic determinants of peptidoglycan synthesis and remodeling.
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- last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00