Processing of LtaS restricts LTA assembly and YSIRK preprotein trafficking into cross-walls.

mBio

Department of Microbiology, Howard Taylor Ricketts Laboratory, The University of Chicago, Lemont, Illinois, USA.

Published: February 2024

Septal membranes of serve as the site of secretion for precursors endowed with the YSIRK motif. Depletion of , a gene required for lipoteichoic acid (LTA) synthesis, results in the loss of restricted trafficking of YSIRK precursors to septal membranes. Here, we seek to understand the mechanism that ties LTA assembly and trafficking of YSIRK precursors. We confirm that catalytically inactive lipoteichoic acid synthase (LtaS) does not support YSIRK precursor trafficking to septa. We hypothesize that the enzyme's reactants [gentiobiosyldiacylglycerol (Glc-DAG) and phosphatidylglycerol (PG)] or products [LTA and diacylglycerol (DAG)], not LtaS, must drive this process. Indeed, we observe that septal secretion of the staphylococcal protein A YSIRK precursor is lost in and mutants that produce glycerophosphate polymers [poly(Gro-P)] without the Glc-DAG lipid anchor. These mutants display longer poly(Gro-P) chains, implying enhanced PG consumption and DAG production. Our experiments also reveal that in the absence of Glc-DAG, the processing of LtaS to the extracellular catalytic domain, eLtaS, is impaired. Conversely, LTA polymerization is delayed in a strain producing LtaS, a variant processed more slowly than LtaS. We conclude that Glc-DAG binding to the enzyme couples catalysis by LtaS and the physical release of eLtaS. We propose a model for the temporal and localized assembly of LTA into cross-walls. When LtaS is not processed in a timely manner, eLtaS no longer diffuses upon daughter cell splitting, LTA assembly continues, and the unique septal-lipid pool, PG over DAG ratio, is not established. This results in profound physiological changes in cells, including the inability to restrict the secretion of YSIRK precursors at septal membranes.IMPORTANCEIn , peptidoglycan is assembled at the septum. Dedicated cell division proteins coordinate septal formation and the fission of daughter cells. Lipoteichoic acid (LTA) assembly and trafficking of preproteins with a YSIRK motif also occur at the septum. This begs the question as to whether cell division components also recruit these two pathways. This study shows that the processing of lipoteichoic acid synthase (LtaS) to extracellular LtaS by signal peptidase is regulated by gentiobiosyldiacylglycerol (Glc-DAG), the priming substrate for LTA assembly. A model is proposed whereby a key substrate controls the temporal and spatial activity of an enzyme. In turn, this mechanism enables the establishment of a unique and transient lipid pool that defines septal membranes as a targeting site for the secretion of YSIRK preproteins.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10865820PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.02852-23DOI Listing

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