PBP2b Mutations Improve the Growth of Phage-Resistant Lactococcus cremoris Lacking Polysaccharide Pellicle

Archive ouverte

Guérin, Hugo | Quénée, Pascal | Palussière, Simon | Courtin, Pascal | André-Leroux, Gwenaëlle | Péchoux, Christine | Costache, Vlad | Mahony, Jennifer | van Sinderen, Douwe | Kulakauskas, Saulius | Chapot-Chartier, Marie-Pierre

Edité par CCSD ; American Society for Microbiology -

International audience. Lactococcus lactis and Lactococcus cremoris are Gram-positive lactic acid bacteria widely used as starter in milk fermentations. Lactococcal cells are covered with a polysaccharide pellicle (PSP) that was previously shown to act as the receptor for numerous bacteriophages of the Caudoviricetes class. Thus, mutant strains lacking PSP are phage resistant. However, because PSP is a key cell wall component, PSP-negative mutants exhibit dramatic alterations of cell shape and severe growth defects, which limit their technological value. In the present study, we isolated spontaneous mutants with improved growth, from L. cremoris PSP-negative mutants. These mutants grow at rates similar to the wild-type strain, and based on transmission electron microscopy analysis, they exhibit improved cell morphology compared to their parental PSP-negative mutants. In addition, the selected mutants maintain their phage resistance. Whole-genome sequencing of several such mutants showed that they carried a mutation in pbp2b, a gene encoding a penicillin-binding protein involved in peptidoglycan biosynthesis. Our results indicate that lowering or turning off PBP2b activity suppresses the requirement for PSP and ameliorates substantially bacterial fitness and morphology.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Losing polysaccharide pellicle without losing fitness: isolation of non-GMO phage resistant mutants of Lactococcus lactis

Archive ouverte | Guérin, Hugo | CCSD

International audience

Another brick in the wall: a rhamnan polysaccharide trapped inside peptidoglycan of Lactococcus lactis

Archive ouverte | Sadovskaya, Irina | CCSD

International audience. Polysaccharides are ubiquitous components of the Gram-positive bacterial cell wall. In Lactococcus lactis, a polysaccharide pellicle (PSP) forms a layer at the cell surface. The PSP structure...

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

Archive ouverte | Guérin, Hugo | CCSD

International audience. 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,...

Chargement des enrichissements...