Frontiers in Microbiology (Oct 2022)

Mirubactin C rescues the lethal effect of cell wall biosynthesis mutations in Bacillus subtilis

  • Bernhard Kepplinger,
  • Xin Wen,
  • Andrew Robert Tyler,
  • Byung-Yong Kim,
  • James Brown,
  • Peter Banks,
  • Yousef Dashti,
  • Eilidh Sohini Mackenzie,
  • Corinne Wills,
  • Yoshikazu Kawai,
  • Kevin John Waldron,
  • Nicholas Edward Ellis Allenby,
  • Ling Juan Wu,
  • Michael John Hall,
  • Jeff Errington,
  • Jeff Errington

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.1004737
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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Growth of most rod-shaped bacteria is accompanied by the insertion of new peptidoglycan into the cylindrical cell wall. This insertion, which helps maintain and determine the shape of the cell, is guided by a protein machine called the rod complex or elongasome. Although most of the proteins in this complex are essential under normal growth conditions, cell viability can be rescued, for reasons that are not understood, by the presence of a high (mM) Mg2+ concentration. We screened for natural product compounds that could rescue the growth of mutants affected in rod-complex function. By screening > 2,000 extracts from a diverse collection of actinobacteria, we identified a compound, mirubactin C, related to the known iron siderophore mirubactin A, which rescued growth in the low micromolar range, and this activity was confirmed using synthetic mirubactin C. The compound also displayed toxicity at higher concentrations, and this effect appears related to iron homeostasis. However, several lines of evidence suggest that the mirubactin C rescuing activity is not due simply to iron sequestration. The results support an emerging view that the functions of bacterial siderophores extend well beyond simply iron binding and uptake.

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