Molecular mechanisms underlying the structural diversity of rhamnose-rich cell wall polysaccharides in lactococci

  • Hugo Guérin
  • , Pascal Courtin
  • , Alain Guillot
  • , Christine Péchoux
  • , Jennifer Mahony
  • , Douwe van Sinderen
  • , Saulius Kulakauskas
  • , Christian Cambillau
  • , Thierry Touzé
  • , Marie Pierre Chapot-Chartier

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

In Gram-positive bacteria, cell wall polysaccharides (CWPS) play critical roles in bacterial cell wall homeostasis and bacterial interactions with their immediate surroundings. In lactococci, CWPS consist of two components: a conserved rhamnan embedded in the peptidoglycan layer and a surface-exposed polysaccharide pellicle (PSP), which are linked together to form a large rhamnose-rich CWPS (Rha-CWPS). PSP, whose structure varies from strain to strain, is a receptor for many bacteriophages infecting lactococci. Here, we examined the first two steps of PSP biosynthesis, using in vitro enzymatic tests with lipid acceptor substrates combined with LC-MS analysis, AlfaFold2 modeling of protein 3D-structure, complementation experiments, and phage assays. We show that the PSP repeat unit is assembled on an undecaprenyl-monophosphate (C55P) lipid intermediate. Synthesis is initiated by the WpsA/WpsB complex with GlcNAc-P-C55 synthase activity and the PSP precursor GlcNAc-P-C55 is then elongated by specific glycosyltransferases that vary among lactococcal strains, resulting in PSPs with diverse structures. Also, we engineered the PSP biosynthesis pathway in lactococci to obtain a chimeric PSP structure, confirming the predicted glycosyltransferase specificities. This enabled us to highlight the importance of a single sugar residue of the PSP repeat unit in phage recognition. In conclusion, our results support a novel pathway for PSP biosynthesis on a lipid-monophosphate intermediate as an extracellular modification of rhamnan, unveiling an assembly machinery for complex Rha-CWPS with structural diversity in lactococci.

Original languageEnglish
Article number105578
JournalJournal of Biological Chemistry
Volume300
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2024

Keywords

  • bacteriophage
  • cell wall
  • glycosyltransferase
  • gram-positive bacteria
  • Lactococcus
  • polysaccharide

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