Listeria monocytogenes causes relatively infrequent but often very serious food-borne infections termed listerioses, with mortality rates that can reach 25-30% [2–4]. Newborns and immunocompromised individuals are at special risk, and in these cases controlling the infection with antimicrobial agents can potentially be hindered due to the emergence of L. monocytogenes isolates with reduced susceptibility to ampicillin [5, 6]. The penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs) of L. monocytogenes were first identified by Vicente et al. [7] using radiolabeled β-lactams, and it was subsequently suggested that PBP3 is the primary lethal target of these antibiotics
[8, 9]. However, as in many other bacteria, the exact mechanism of β-lactam-induced AZD1390 clinical trial cell death remains unknown. There have been a limited number of reports dealing with the PBPs of L. monocytogenes. Earlier studies carried out in our laboratory – when only five PBPs were known – resulted in a re-estimation of the copy number of individual L. monocytogenes penicillin-binding proteins [10] and elucidation of the enzymatic properties of PBP4 (encoded by lmo2229) and PBP5 (lmo2754) [11–13].
A different selleck approach to studying the penicillin-binding proteins of L. monocytogenes was made possible by the availability of the complete genome sequence of this bacterium [14]. The insertional mutagenesis of genes encoding seven potential PBPs -two of class A, three of the Trichostatin A manufacturer high molecular mass (HMM) class B and two of the low molecular mass (LMM) type – helped to clarify their role [15]. In the present study we have positively identified eight penicillin-binding proteins in whole cell extracts of L. monocytogenes, and another LMM PBP (Lmo2812) was characterized by the Bocillin-FL (Boc-FL)-binding ability of the purified recombinant protein. Inositol oxygenase Results Detection and identification of L. monocytogenes PBPs The “”surfaceome”"
of the model L. monocytogenes strain EGDe has been annotated [14] and recently revised [16]. It includes proteins involved in the synthesis of peptidoglycan. Examination of sequence information from a database dedicated to the analysis of the genomes of L. monocytogenes (strain EGDe) and its non-pathogenic relative Listeria innocua (strain CLIP 11262) http://genolist.pasteur.fr/ListiList, as well as that from the Pfam database http://www.sanger.ac.uk/Software/Pfam and information from the NCBI Conserved Domain database http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/COG/ and the Interpro database http://www.ebi.ac.uk/interpro/, has identified 10 putative genes for PBPs, classified according to molecular class (Table 1). Table 1 The full set of predicted PBPs in L. monocytogene s PBP a PBP b gene c Class d Prototype aa MW (kDa) IP Putative domain structuree PPBA1 PBP1 lmo1892 A-3 PBP1a (Spn) 827 90.87 9.15 SP-Φ-TG-TP PBPB2 PBP2 lmo2039 B-4 PBP2x(Spn) 751 81.