Literature DB >> 1551845

Fan-shaped ejections of regularly arranged murosomes involved in penicillin-induced death of staphylococci.

P Giesbrecht1, T Kersten, J Wecke.   

Abstract

Electron microscopic research into the murosomes of staphylococci has shown that the number of murosomes involved in penicillin-induced death varies depending on the experimental conditions employed. With 0.1 micrograms of penicillin G per ml, only 1 of a total of about 20 murosomes, the "killing murosome," completely perforated the pressure-stabilized peripheral cell wall during a three-step process. This strictly localized event was mainly attributed to a mechanical effect being comparable to the process of aneurysm formation. Wall perforation was also considered to mark the very moment of penicillin-induced death ("nonlytic killing event"), while bacteriolysis started only postmortem. By varying the osmolarity of the growth medium, the number of murosomes involved in penicillin-induced killing increased considerably, which resulted in the ejection of a fan-shaped row of murosomes at the second division plane. These data are compatible with the finding that, in untreated or chloramphenicol-treated staphylococci, the activation of the murosomes resulted in (i) the formation of regularly arranged "blebs" on the cell surface, containing traces of disintegrated wall material, and (ii) the subsequent liberation of the murosomes lying underneath, leaving behind their former sites in the peripheral wall as a row of regularly arranged "pores" in every division plane. The number, distribution, and positioning of these blebs corresponded with those of the pores and the original murosomes. The significance of wall autolysins liberated from the first division plane for penicillin-induced wall perforation at the second division plane is discussed.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1551845      PMCID: PMC205845          DOI: 10.1128/jb.174.7.2241-2252.1992

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Bacteriol        ISSN: 0021-9193            Impact factor:   3.490


  15 in total

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5.  Onset of penicillin-induced bacteriolysis in staphylococci is cell cycle dependent.

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Review 8.  The mechanism of the irreversible antimicrobial effects of penicillins: how the beta-lactam antibiotics kill and lyse bacteria.

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5.  Targeting of muralytic enzymes to the cell division site of Gram-positive bacteria: repeat domains direct autolysin to the equatorial surface ring of Staphylococcus aureus.

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9.  Mode of action of the lantibiotic mersacidin: inhibition of peptidoglycan biosynthesis via a novel mechanism?

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Review 10.  Molecular control of bacterial death and lysis.

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