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Keyword
- teichoic acid2
- teichoicase2
- Bacillus1
- cell wall1
- GlpQ1
- glycerol1
- glycerolphosphate1
- glycerophosphodiesterase1
- glycerophospholipid1
- glycobiology1
- Gram-positive bacteria1
- lipoteichoic acid (LTA)1
- microbiology1
- pathogen1
- phosphodiesterases1
- ribitol-5-phosphate1
- Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus)1
- stereochemistry1
- wall teichoic acid (WTA)1
Microbiology
2 Results
- Glycobiology and Extracellular MatricesOpen Access
Phosphoglycerol-type wall and lipoteichoic acids are enantiomeric polymers differentiated by the stereospecific glycerophosphodiesterase GlpQ
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 295Issue 12p4024–4034Published online: March 20, 2020- Axel Walter
- Sandra Unsleber
- Jeanine Rismondo
- Ana Maria Jorge
- Andreas Peschel
- Angelika Gründling
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 10The cell envelope of Gram-positive bacteria generally comprises two types of polyanionic polymers linked to either peptidoglycan (wall teichoic acids; WTA) or to membrane glycolipids (lipoteichoic acids; LTA). In some bacteria, including Bacillus subtilis strain 168, both WTA and LTA are glycerolphosphate polymers yet are synthesized through different pathways and have distinct but incompletely understood morphogenetic functions during cell elongation and division. We show here that the exolytic sn-glycerol-3-phosphodiesterase GlpQ can discriminate between B. - MicrobiologyOpen Access
Staphylococcus aureus counters phosphate limitation by scavenging wall teichoic acids from other staphylococci via the teichoicase GlpQ
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 293Issue 38p14916–14924Published online: August 1, 2018- Ana Maria Jorge
- Jonathan Schneider
- Sandra Unsleber
- Guoqing Xia
- Christoph Mayer
- Andreas Peschel
Cited in Scopus: 19Staphylococcus aureus is part of the human nasal and skin microbiomes along with other bacterial commensals and opportunistic pathogens. Nutrients are scarce in these habitats, demanding effective nutrient acquisition and competition strategies. How S. aureus copes with phosphate limitation is still unknown. Wall teichoic acid (WTA), a polyol-phosphate polymer, could serve as a phosphate source, but whether S. aureus can utilize it during phosphate starvation remains unknown. S. aureus secretes a glycerophosphodiesterase, GlpQ, that cleaves a broad variety of glycerol-3-phosphate (GroP) headgroups of deacylated phospholipids, providing this bacterium with GroP as a carbon and phosphate source.