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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Molecular microbiology 13 (1994), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1365-2958
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Escherichia coli strains partially induced for the stringent response are resistant to mecillinam, a β-lactam antibiotic which specifically inactivates penicillin-binding protein 2, the key enzyme determining cell shape. We present evidence that mecillinam resistance occurs whenever the intracellular concentration of the nucleotide ppGpp (guanosine 3’-diphosphate 5’-diphosphate), the effector of the stringent response, exceeds a threshold level. First, the ppGpp concentration was higher in a mecillinam-resistant mutant than in closely related sensitive strains. Second, the ppGpp pool was controlled by means of a plasmid carrying a ptac-relA′ gene coding for a hyperactive (p)ppGpp synthetase, ReiA′; increasing the ppGpp pool by varying the concentration of lac operon inducer IPTG resulted in a sharp threshold ppGpp concentration, above which cells were mecillinam resistant. Third, the ppGpp pool was increased by using poor media; again, at the lowest growth rate studied, the cells were mecillinam resistant, in all experiments, cells with a ppGpp concentration above 140pmoles/A600 were mecillinam resistant whereas those with lower concentrations were sensitive. We discuss a possible role for ppGpp as transcriptional activator of cell division genes whose products seem to become limiting in the presence of mecillinam, when cells form large spheres. We confirmed the well-known inverse correlation between growth rate and ppGpp concentration but, surprisingly, for a given growth rate, the ppGpp concentration was lower in poor medium than in richer medium in which RelA is induced. We conclude that, for E. coli growing in poor media, the concentration of the nucleotide ppGpp is not the major growth rate determinant.
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford BSL : Blackwell Science Ltd, UK
    Molecular microbiology 29 (1998), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1365-2958
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Escherichia coli loses its rod shape by inactivation of PBP2 (penicillin-binding protein 2), target of the β-lactam mecillinam. Under these conditions, cell division is blocked in rich medium. Division in the absence of PBP2 activity is restored (and resistance to mecillinam is conferred) when the three cell division proteins FtsQ, FtsA and FtsZ are overproduced, but not when only one or two of them are overproduced. Division in the absence of PBP2 activity is also restored by a doubling in the ppGpp pool, as in the argS201 mutant. However, the nucleotide ppGpp, a transcriptional regulator of many operons, does not govern any of the five promoters of the ftsQAZ operon, as shown by S1 mapping of ftsQAZ mRNA 5′ ends in exponentially growing wild-type cells in the mecillinam-resistant argS201 mutant (intermediate ppGpp level) or during the stringent response elicited by isoleucine starvation (high ppGpp level). Furthermore, the concentration of FtsZ protein is not increased in exponentially growing mecillinam-resistant argS201 cells. These results show that the ftsQAZ operon is not the ppGpp target responsible for mecillinam resistance. We are currently trying to identify those targets that, at intermediate ppGpp levels, allow cells to divide as spheres in the absence of PBP2.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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