Olga Jeske1, Margarete Schüler2, Peter Schumann3, Alexander Schneider4, Christian Boedeker1, Mareike Jogler1, Daniel Bollschweiler2, Manfred Rohde5, Christoph Mayer4, Harald Engelhardt2, Stefan Spring3, Christian Jogler1. 1. Independent Junior Research Group Microbial Cell Biology and Genetics, Leibniz Institute-DSMZ, Inhoffenstraße 7b, Braunschweig 38124, Germany. 2. Department of Molecular Structural Biology, Max-Planck-Institute for Biochemistry, Am Klopferspitz 18, Martinsried 82152, Germany. 3. Department of Microbiology, Leibniz Institute-DSMZ, Inhoffenstraße 7b, Braunschweig 38124, Germany. 4. Department of Microbiology and Biotechnology, University of Tübingen, Auf der Morgenstelle 28, Tübingen 72076, Germany. 5. Research Group Molecular Mechanisms of Streptococci, Helmholtz Center for Infection Research GmbH, Inhoffenstraße 7, Braunschweig 38124, Germany.
Abstract
Most bacteria contain a peptidoglycan (PG) cell wall, which is critical for maintenance of shape and important for cell division. In contrast, Planctomycetes have been proposed to produce a proteinaceous cell wall devoid of PG. The apparent absence of PG has been used as an argument for the putative planctomycetal ancestry of all bacterial lineages. Here we show, employing multiple bioinformatic methods, that planctomycetal genomes encode proteins required for PG synthesis. Furthermore, we biochemically demonstrate the presence of the sugar and the peptide components of PG in Planctomycetes. In addition, light and electron microscopic experiments reveal planctomycetal PG sacculi that are susceptible to lysozyme treatment. Finally, cryo-electron tomography demonstrates that Planctomycetes possess a typical PG cell wall and that their cellular architecture is thus more similar to that of other Gram-negative bacteria. Our findings shed new light on the cellular architecture and cell division of the maverick Planctomycetes.
Most bacteria contain a peptidoglycan (PG) cell wall, which is critical for maintenance of shape and important for cell division. In contrast, Planctomycetes have been proposed to produce a proteinaceous cell wall devoid of PG. The apparent absence of PG has been used as an argument for the putative planctomycetal ancestry of all bacterial lineages. Here we show, employing multiple bioinformatic methods, that planctomycetal genomes encode proteins required for PG synthesis. Furthermore, we biochemically demonstrate the presence of the sugar and the peptide components of PG in Planctomycetes. In addition, light and electron microscopic experiments reveal planctomycetal PG sacculi that are susceptible to lysozyme treatment. Finally, cryo-electron tomography demonstrates that Planctomycetes possess a typical PG cell wall and that their cellular architecture is thus more similar to that of other Gram-negative bacteria. Our findings shed new light on the cellular architecture and cell division of the maverick Planctomycetes.
Dissolved solutes within free-living microorganisms cause significant osmotic pressure
that challenges cell integrity. While most archaea rely on S-layers as protective
exoskeletons1, bacteria possess peptidoglycan (PG) for maintaining
their cell shape. PG is a rigid polymeric mesh of linear glycans2
cross-linked via short peptides3, whose remodelling—together with
FtsZ and other proteins—is essential for septal formation during cell
division4. Thus, most bacteria possess both, a PG cell wall and FtsZ,
while the PG synthesis proteins and cell division proteins are encoded in the division
and cell wall (dcw) operon. While members of the class Mollicutes lack PG,
several species encode FtsZ5. However, Mollicutes are osmotically
fragile, exhibit plasticity and pleomorphism6, and depend on an
eukaryotic host to provide an osmotically stable environment for living. Thus, they are
not considered as free-living. In contrast, cells of the free-living, ubiquitous and
environmentally important phylum Planctomycetes were thought to lack PG and FtsZ as
well789, and to possess a proteinaceous cell wall instead1011. Indeed, the dcw clusters show signs of degradation in some
Planctomycetes, where some genes are lost while other are present89.
The absence of FtsZ may contribute to the unusual polar budding cell division of most
Planctomycetes7. The inability to identify PG formed a cornerstone in
the concept of a planctomycetal cell architecture that differs from all other bacteria.
It was further proposed that their cytosol is divided by an additional intracytoplasmic
membrane system into a paryphoplasm and a pirellulosome7, a concept that
has been challenged recently employing bioinformatic and microscopic methods that
pointed towards a more Gram-negative-like planctomycetal cell plan121314. The question whether PG is present or absent in Planctomycetes
is key for understanding (i) the compartmentalized planctomycetal cell architecture,
(ii) the unusual FtsZ-independent cell division and (iii) the planctomycetal
endocytosis-like uptake of proteins. Furthermore, this question is of significance in
evolutionary terms as Planctomycetes were suggested as a ‘missing link'
between prokaryotes and eukaryotes15 or as species ‘beyond the
bacterium7. The postulation of a proteinaceous cell wall dates back
three decades10 and has been passed on since then. Despite its conceptual
importance, the cell wall composition of Planctomycetes has been rarely addressed
experimentally111617. However, recent reports on penicillin
sensitivity of anammox Planctomycetes questioned their lack of a PG cell wall18. Furthermore, employing state-of-the-art methods, Chlamydiae were
recently found to produce PG and a long lasting dispute about the ‘Chlamydiae
anomaly' was settled1920.In this study, we revisit the nature of the planctomycetal cell wall. Employing modern
bioinformatic approaches, we demonstrate that planctomycetal genomes harbour the genes
required for PG synthesis. In addition, biochemical assays reveal the sugar and peptide
components of PG in selected planctomycetal species. Our findings are further supported
by light- and electron microscopic experiments that reveal planctomycetal cells and PG
sacculi, both being susceptible to lysozyme treatment. Finally, cryo-electron tomography
(CET) demonstrates that Planctomycetes possess a cell wall, comparable to that of other
Gram-negative bacteria.
Results
Bioinformatic analysis
We re-analysed the planctomycetal phylogeny of the 16S rRNA gene sequences from
selected species, including the novel, deep-branching, obligate anaerobic and
halophilic strain L21-RPul-D3 (Supplementary Table 1), employing Maximum Likelihood, Neighbour
Joining and Maximum Parsimony algorithms. The resulting phylogenetic tree (Supplementary Fig. 1) guided the
selection of suitable model organisms for bioinformatic, biochemical and
microscopic analyses, while its long branches might correspond to a high
evolutionary divergence of cultivated planctomycetal species (see Supplementary Fig. 1, and Supplementary Note 1 for details).In a second step, we employed comparative genomics to analyse planctomycetal
genomes with respect to genes required for PG synthesis. Taking the assumed
large evolutionary divergence of Planctomycetes into account, we used methods
apt to deal with evolutionarily more distant sequences, and analysed entire
planctomycetal genomes employing dynamic queries and position-specific iterative
BLAST searches17 (see Supplementary Note 2 for details). Thus, contrary to a previous study
that reported the absence of genes required for PG synthesis in some
planctomycetal genomes17, we found that all the analysed species
harbour essential genes for PG synthesis (Supplementary Tables 1 and 2, Supplementary Data 1-4 and Supplementary Discussion).Another main argument for the absence of a PG cell wall has been the
planctomycetal resistance to beta-lactam antibiotics, which target PG
biosynthesis10. In an earlier study17, an
alternative cause for the observed resistance, the production of
beta-lactamases, has been ruled out for Planctomycetes. However, the employed
nitrocefin-based activity test for beta-lactamases is not reliable21 (Supplementary Fig.
3 and Supplementary Note
3). Thus, we addressed the question of beta-lactam inactivating
enzymes in Planctomycetes again, this time from a genomic perspective. We first
identified representative proteins belonging to the beta-lactamase molecular
classes A–D (Supplementary Table
3). With these sequences as queries, while employing very strict
thresholds (see Supplementary Note
3 and Supplementary
Discussion for details), we found at least one homologue in all the
selected planctomycetal genomes (Supplementary Tables 4 and 5).Thus, Planctomycetes have the genomic potential to synthesize PG, and also to
produce beta-lactamases that could confer resistance against beta-lactam
antibiotics.
Biochemical analysis of the planctomycetal cell wall
In all bacteria the glycan part of PG consists of alternating residues of the
β-1,4-linked amino sugarsN-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc)
and N-acetylmuramic acid (MurNAc) (Fig. 1a; for a
review see refs 2, 22).
To detect these sugar monomers, we employed a radioactive kinase assay to
analyse cells of three representative planctomycetal species (Planctomyces
limnophilus, Gemmata obscuriglobus and Rhodopirellula
baltica). This assay is based on the specific MurK-mediated transfer of
the radioactively labelled γ-phosphoryl group from
[γ-32P]-ATP exclusively to the 6-position of
GlcNAc and MurNAc monomers, yielding GlcNAc-6-phosphate and MurNAc-6-phosphate,
respectively23. Subsequent separation by thin-layer
chromatography and detection via autoradiography revealed no signals for either
of the sugar monomers when cells were not treated. The same result was obtained
if PG was only partially digested with mutanolysin, a PG hydrolase like
lysozyme, that cleaves the MurNAc-β-(1,4)-GlcNAc linkage of PG24 (Fig. 1b). In contrast, after full
digestion with mutanolysin, the amidases AmiD and the
N-acetylglucosaminidase BsNagZ, both sugar components were
detected in all the three investigated Planctomycetes, demonstrating the
presence of MurNAc and GlcNAc in polymeric glycan strands (Fig.
1b).
Figure 1
Radioactive labelling and detection of the PG sugars GlcNAc and MurNAc by
TLC.
(a) Principle of the radioactive kinase assay: polymeric PG is first
partly digested by mutanolysin into disaccharides (stem peptides are still
linked to MurNAc). The GlcNAc/MurNAc kinase MurK is not able to transfer
phosphate (P) from [γ-32P]-ATP to polymers
(1) and disaccharides (2) and thus, no signal is detected in TLC.
Subsequently, the disaccharides are further digested into monomers and stem
peptides (3). MurK is able to transfer the
[γ-32P] from
[γ-32P]-ATP to the sugar monomers GlcNAc and
MurNAc and thus, a radioactive signal can be detected by TLC. (b)
Radioactive detection of GlcNAc and MurNAc in either undigested, partly
digested (treatment with mutanolysin) or fully digested (treatment with
mutanolysin, AmiD and BsNagZ) preparations of P. limnophilus, R.
baltica and G. obscuriglobus cells on incubation with
[γ-32P]-ATP and MurNAc/GlcNAc kinase MurK
and subsequent TLC separation. Shown are time 0 and 1 h of incubation
with [γ-32P]-ATP. C−: water negative
control; C+: GlcNAc and MurNAc standards as positive controls.
In most Gram-negative bacteria these glycan strands are cross-linked via stem
peptide chains by the non-proteinogenic 2,6-diaminopimelic acid (DAP), which
serves as trifunctional linker, typically at the third position in stem
peptides22. The only well-documented exceptions are found
among members of the Spirochaetaceae that use ornithine instead of DAP
for cross-linking PG (for example, refs 25,
26). Consequently, the absence of DAP does not
necessarily correspond to the absence of PG, while the presence of DAP is a
strong indicator for cross-linked PG in bacteria. We analysed three
planctomycetal model species together with strain L21-RPul-D3 for the presence
of DAP by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS). All four investigated
planctomycetal cell hydrolysates showed the specific fragment ion set for DAP at
the respective retention time in the extracted ion chromatograms. The signals
were significantly stronger than in Spirochaeta asiatica that served as a
negative control (Fig. 2). The observed low levels of DAP
(<2.5 kCounts) in our negative controls can be explained by the de
novo synthesis of lysine in which DAP is synthesized as intermediate
metabolite27.
Figure 2
Mass spectrometric detection of the cell wall component DAP in planctomycetal
cells.
Ion chromatograms of the DAP derivative (N-heptafluorobutyryl DAP
isobutylester) from whole-cell hydrolysates of: C+: E.
coli K12 as positive control; C−: Spirochaeta
asiatica DSM 8901 (ornithine-based PG) as negative control;
A: P. limnophilus DSM 3776T; B: G.
obscuriglobus DSM 5831T; C: R. baltica
DSM 10527T; D: L21-RPul-D3. All the planctomycetal
hydrolysates show peaks for specific masses (380, 324, 306 and
278 m/z) and retention time (23.7 min) of DAP
fragments.
In conclusion, our biochemical analyses provide an evidence for the existence of
PG in Planctomycetes.
Microscopic analyses of planctomycetal cell walls
Lysozyme treatment leads to cell disruption by hydrolysis of the
β-1,4-linkages between MurNAc and GlcNAc28. Images of
untreated Planctomycetes show subcellular details under phase-contrast
illumination that potentially correspond to the planctomycetal cell
compartmentalization (Fig. 3a-d, panels I and II). After
lysozyme treatment, the cells lose these details along with their shape or lyse
entirely (Fig. 3a-d, panels III and IV). Thus, lysozyme
disrupts the planctomycetal cell structure.
Figure 3
Effect of lysozyme on planctomycetal cells.
Phase-contrast micrographs of (a) P. limnophilus, (b)
G. obscuriglobus, (c) R. baltica and (d)
L21-RPul-D3 cells after lysozyme treatment (III and IV). Untreated cells (I
and II) serve as negative control. Scale bars, 5 μm (I, III)
and 2 μm (II, IV).
Cell wall sacculi were prepared from P. limnophilus and G.
obscuriglobus and purified from lipid and protein by treatment in a
boiling SDS solution. Both species yielded intact sacculi of cell size (Fig. 4a–d) that resemble PG sacculi of other
Gram-negative bacteria in shape and appearance29. Treatment of
isolated sacculi with lysozyme led to disintegration and fragmentation of the
sacculi structures (Fig. 4e–h). Moreover, we could
verify the presence of DAP in P. limnophilus sacculi by employing our
GC/MS detection method (Supplementary
Fig. 2).
Figure 4
Effect of lysozyme on planctomycetal PG sacculi.
TEM micrographs of planctomycetal cell sacculi prepared after 3 h of
boiling in 10% SDS and purification through ultracentrifugation.
Sacculi of G. obscuriglobus DSM 5831T
(a,b,e,f) and P. limnophilus DSM
3776T (c,d,g,h) were
untreated (a,b,c,d) or incubated with lysozyme
(e,f,g,h) before negative staining with
0.1%–2% aqueous uranyl acetate. Scale bars,
1 μm.
P. limnophilus cells vitrified and thinned by focused ion beam
milling30, and investigated under near-native conditions by
CET showed an electron-dense layer between the external and the internal
membrane (Fig. 5 and Supplementary Movie 1). This layer could be
seen in cells from different growth phases and in all the 25 tomograms
inspected. The location and somewhat fuzzy appearance is typical for a thin PG
network of Gram-negative cells31. The optical density of the PG
layer is generally poor in the polar regions and in slices that are distant from
the cell's central plane (this is an effect of the oblique orientation of
the PG with respect to the x–y slice, and of the
‘missing wedge'31). However, the cell wall layer can
be detected in tomographic slices from central cell regions and particularly
clearly in averaged subframes of the cell envelope (Fig.
5b).
Figure 5
CET of P. limnophilus cells.
(a) Tomographic slice from a vitrified, cryo-thinned P.
limnophilus sample showing the pole regions of three adjacent cells.
A cell wall layer between the outer and inner membrane is visible in regions
where the two membranes run parallel (arrowheads). The layer remains close
to the outermost membrane where the inner membrane is invaginated (arrow).
The reconstruction is binned three times and filtered. Scale bar,
200 nm. (b) Average of 1,059 subframes extracted from
tomographic x–y slices along the cell envelope from
non-polar regions where the inner membrane (bottom) runs approximately in
parallel to the outer one (top). The inner membrane is only imperfectly
aligned because of its varying distance to the outer membrane (also visible
in a). The cell wall layer in between is clearly detectable
(centre-to-centre distance to the outer membrane ≈22 nm). Contrary
to the inner and outer membrane layers, which show high electron density,
typically originating from phosphate in lipid head groups, the PG layer
produces less contrast. Size of image 45 nm × 65 nm.
(c) Segmentation of the reconstructed volume. Green: external
membrane, cyan: internal membrane, red: PG layer, magenta: crateriform
structures, violet: ribosomes, yellow: storage granules and white: holdfast
substance.
Discussion
Planctomycetes belong together with Verrucomicrobia and Chlamydiae to the PVC
superphylum32, an unusual group of bacteria that comprise several
exceptional traits33. Besides Chlamydiae19,
Planctomycetes and certain Verrucomicrobia (for example ref. 34) were thought to lack a PG cell wall. However, contrary to the
longstanding belief, we found that Planctomycetes do possess a rigid PG cell
wall.All our results are in agreement with what is known about typical constituents and
features of PG from Gram-negative bacteria. Aside from specific biochemical and
enzymatic evidence, we were able to isolate intact PG sacculi by harsh treatment,
and could show the existence of a thin (≤10 nm) cell wall layer between
the outer and inner planctomycetal membranes, that is the basic architecture of cell
envelopes from Gram-negative bacteria. We assume that the PG sacculi completely
cover the cells but can currently not exclude that local or temporary
discontinuities occur.Our results put the principal hypothesis on the uniqueness of planctomycetal cellular
structure to test and are in line with a number of other recent findings121314. For instance, presence of an asymmetric outer membrane
layer in Planctomycetes was suggested14 and the report on the 3D
structure of G. obscuriglobus cells13 challenged the current
view of its compartmentalization7. In this context, the existence of
a PG layer, as shown in this study, is thus an important aspect as it strongly
supports the ‘classical' Gram-negative organization of the
planctomycetal cell envelope. Whether the massive invaginations of the inner
membrane observed in our tomograms of P. limnophilus may result in closed
compartments other than a single cytoplasmic volume –as recently suggested for
G. obscuriglobus13—remains to be investigated in
detail.Furthermore, the existence of a PG layer in Planctomycetes has implications with
respect to the endocytosis-like protein uptake in Planctomycetes35.
Vesicles of 50 to 200 nm in size, which are thought to originate from the
outer planctomycetal membrane by invagination35, could be blocked by
a PG layer with a typical mesh size of 1.6–2.0 nm (ref. 29).Future studies have to elucidate whether the planctomycetal PG comprises pores or if
the functional concept of endocytosis in Planctomycetes must be reconsidered.The results of this study mark Planctomycetes as second phylum after Chlamydiae19, in which simultaneous presence of PG and absence of the otherwise
universal and essential bacterial cell division protein FtsZ was observed. A study
on L-form Bacillus strains demonstrated that FtsZ became
non-essential in cells growing without a wall36. This study further
suggested that Planctomycetes might use the same—potentially ancient—way
of division36. However, our work and the lack of FtsZ among
Planctomycetes89 demonstrate that bacterial cell division
without FtsZ does not correlate with the absence of a PG cell wall. Thus, a
fundamentally different molecular mechanism of planctomycetal cell division through
budding might exist. The recent finding of PG in Chlamydiae that lack FtsZ as
well19, further supports this interpretation and bacterial cell
division might be more diverse than currently appreciated.Given that Planctomycetes (this study), anammox Planctomycetes (van Teseling et
al.52) and Chlamydiae1920 contain PG cell
walls, the question remains whether certain Verrucomicrobia are really exceptional
in this aspect34. The methods used and developed in this study will
be instrumental to address this question in the future.In conclusion our findings suggest that, despite several unique features,
Planctomycetes are more Gram-negative-like than previously proposed7.
Methods
Phylogeny
Gene sequences (16S rRNA; Supplementary
Table 1) were aligned (SINA Alignment Service37) and
manually corrected. Maximum Likelihood (RAxML module; rate distribution model
GTRGAMMA; rapid bootstrap analysis algorithm), NJ (ARB NJ tool; Felsenstein
correction) and Maximum Parsimony (Phylip DNAPARS module) trees were calculated
including the E. coli 16S rRNA gene positions 63–1,406, employing
the ARB software package38. Bootstrap values were computed with
1,000-fold resampling.
Beta-lactamase assay
Beta-lactamase production was triggered for 2 h
(100 μg ml−1 ampicillin). Cells
were then lysed on ice by sonication (2 × 2 min, 70%;
Bandelin, Sonopuls) and pelleted using a centrifuge. Then 50 μl
nitrocefin (0.5 mg ml−1; Calbiochem) were
added to 500 μl of the supernatant. After 30 min incubation
in the dark a red colour indicated beta-lactamase activity.
Bioinformatic analysis of planctomycetal genomes
Proteins required for PG synthesis from E. coli were used as blastp39 and PSI-BLAST (five iterations40) query to
identify homologues in P. limnophilus and P. brasiliensis. The
obtained planctomycetal proteins were then compared against all the other
sequenced Planctomycetes (Supplementary
Table 1 and 2 and Supplementary
Data 2-4). Homologues required a threshold (identity >30%
and an e value <1e-6), conserved domain architecture41 and a reciprocal blastp match against E. coli.Beta-lactamase enzymes (selected based on ref. 42,
see Supplementary Table 3) were
compared against the NCBI database using blastp40 with default
settings and ‘Planctomycetes' as taxon filter. Homologues were
identified using an initial threshold (identity⩾20%;
coverage⩾40%; e value≤e-4) and a reciprocal blast
analysis (identity⩾30%; coverage⩾45%; e
value≤e-6).
Cultivation conditions
Unless noted otherwise, Rhodopirellula baltica SH1DSM 10527 was cultured
at 28 °C in M2 medium composed of
1 g l−1 peptone,
1 g l−1 glucose, 250 ml
double-concentrated artificial sea water
(46.94 g l−1 NaCl,
7.84 g l−1 Na2SO4,
21.28 g l−1 MgCl2 ×
6H2O, 2.86 g l−1
CaCl2 × 2H2O,
0.384 g l−1 NaHCO3,
1.384 g l−1 KCl,
0.192 g l−1 KBr,
0.052 g l−1 H3BO3,
0.08 g l−1 SrCl2 ×
6H2O, 0.006 g l−1 NaF),
10 ml vitamin solution (double concentrated) and
20 ml l−1 mineral salt solution buffered
with 5 mM Tris/HCl at pH 7.5. Planctomyces limnophilus DSM 3776
and Gemmata obscuriglobus DSM 5831 were cultivated at 28 °C in
M3 medium composed of 1 g l−1 peptone,
1 g l−1 yeast extract,
1 g l−1 glucose, 5 ml vitamin
solution (double concentrated) and 20 ml l−1
mineral salt solution buffered with 10 mM HEPES at pH 7.5. Strain
L21-RPul-D3 was obtained from the anoxic zone of a hypersaline microbial mat on
the Kiritmati atoll (Central Pacific). Cells of this strain were cultured
anaerobically at 35 °C for 6 days in DSMZ medium 1527 in which
D-glucose was replaced with
0.5 g l−1 dextran as a carbon source.
Mineral salt solution and vitamin solution were prepared according to DSMZ
medium 621. The metal salts for preparing mineral salt solution consisted of
250 mg l−1 Na-EDTA, 1095,
mg l−1 ZnSO4 × 7H2O,
500 mg l−1 FeSO4 ×
7H2O, 154 mg l−1
MnSO4 × H2O, 39.5 CuSO4 ×
7H2O mg l−1,
20.3 mg l−1 CoCl2 ×
6H2O, 17.7 mg l−1
Na2B4O7 × 10H2O of which
50 ml were added per litre of mineral salt solution. Escherichia
coli cells DSM 498 were grown over night at 37 °C in lysogeny
broth (LB). Spirochaeta asiatica DSM 8901 was cultivated for 2 days in
DSMZ medium 1263 at 35 °C. For the detection of diaminopimelic acid,
P. limnophilus was cultivated in 10 μM
NH4Cl, 10 μM KH2PO4,
100 μM KNO3, 200 μM MgSO4
× 7H2O, 100 μM CaCl2 ×
2H2O, 250 μM CaCO3 and
300 μM NaHCO3,
20 ml l−1 mineral salts solution and
R. baltica was cultured in
250 ml l−1 of 2 × artificial sea
water (46.94 g l−1 NaCl,
7.84 g l−1 Na2SO4,
21.28 g l−1 MgCl2 ×
6H2O, 2.86 g l−1
CaCl2 × 2H2O,
0.384 g l−1 NaHCO3,
1.384 g l−1 KCl,
0.192 g l−1 KBr,
0.052 g l−1 H3BO3,
0.08 g l−1 SrCl2 ×
6H2O and 0.006 g l−1 NaF) and
5 ml l−1 1M Tris/HCl pH 7.5). Each
culture broth was supplemented with
0.25 g l−1 glucose. G.
obscuriglobus cells were grown like P. limnophilus, but
supplemented with 0.25 g l−1 pullulan instead
of glucose. Cultures were incubated at 28 °C for at least 3 days.
S. asiatica was grown in DSMZ medium 1263 at 35 °C for 2
days. For MurNAc and GlcNAc detection P. limnophilus medium was
supplemented with 0.25 g l−1 dextran instead
of glucose at 28 °C for 3 days. M. vannielii was cultivated in
DSMZ medium 119 at 35 °C for 2 days.
Detection of GlcNAc and MurNAc
Cell pellets from 50 ml culture were treated with substrate-specific
PG-hydrolysing enzymes (Streptomyces globisporus mutanolysin from Sigma,
E. coliMurNAc-L-alanyl amidase D, AmiD, isolated
according to ref. 43, Bacillus subtilis
N-acetylglucosaminidase, BsNagZ, isolated according to ref. 44; 10 μg enzyme were used each, per
40 μl sample) and then incubated with 80 ng of the
MurNAc/GlcNAc specific kinase of Clostridium acetobutylicum, MurK,
isolated according to ref. 41 and
[γ-32P]-ATP (3,000 Bq). Samples
were spotted immediately and after 1 h of incubation on a thin-layer
chromatography (TLC) plate. The TLC was developed in a solvent mixture of
n-butanol, methanol, 25% aqueous NH3 and water
(5:4:2:1) and detected after incubation for 12 h using a photosensitive
screen (Kodak) on a Typhoon FLA7000 biomolecular phosphoimager (GE
Healthcare).
Detection of diaminopimelic acid
Cell pellets were obtained from 6–20 ml cultures, lyophilized,
hydrolysed (200 μl 4 N HCl, 100 °C, 16 h)
and dried in a vacuum desiccator. Amino-acids derivatized to
N-heptafluorobutyryl isobutylesters45 were resolved in
ethyl acetate and analysed by GC/MS (Singlequad 320, Varian; electron impact
ionization, scan range 60 to 800 m/z). The derivatized
diaminopimelic acid was detected in Extracted Ion Chromatograms using the
characteristic fragment ion set 380, 324, 306 and 278 m/z at a
retention time of 23.7 min.
Lysozyme assay
To increase osmotic stress, P. limnophilus and G. obscuriglobus
cells were washed with ddH2O, while R. baltica and L21-RPul-D3
were washed in tap water and artificial sea water, respectively. Cells were
incubated with EDTA (20 mM) and lysozyme
(10 mg ml−1) for up to 48 h at
37 °C and shaking (300 r.p.m.), while lysozyme was omitted in
the negative controls. Cells were immobilized (1% agarose-pad) in MatTek
35-mm glass-bottom dishes and imaged under phase-contrast illumination using a
Nikon Ti microscope at × 100 magnification and the Nikon DS-Ri2 camera
employing the Nikon NIS-Elements software.
TEM analysis of planctomycetal PG sacculi
G. obscuriglobus DSM 5831T and P. limnophilus DSM
3776T were cultivated in 1 l of respective growth
media. Cells were harvested (10 min, 4,000 g,
4 °C; JA-14 rotor, Beckman Coulter) and cell pellets were resuspended
in 10 ml 10% SDS (w/v) and boiled for 3 h. Sacculi were
harvested (30 min, 139,699 g, 4 °C; SW 60 Ti
rotor, Beckman Coulter), washed four times in 3 ml water and resuspended
in 1 ml water supplemented with 0.02% (w/v) sodium azide. Half of
the prepared sacculi were incubated with lysozyme
(100 mg ml−1) for 2 h at
37 °C under slight agitation (300 r.p.m.), while lysozyme was
omitted in the negative controls. TEM micrographs of murein sacculi were taken
after negatively staining with 0.1–2% aqueous uranyl acetate,
employing a Zeiss transmission electron microscope EM 910 at an acceleration
voltage of 80 kV at calibrated magnifications as previously
described46.
CET of P. limnophilus cells
A late-exponential-phase culture of P. limnophilus was gently filtered
(10 μm membrane filter, Whatman Nuclepore) to remove aggregated
cells. Aliquots (3 μl) of the filtered cell suspension were mixed
with the same volume of BSA-stabilized 15 nm colloidal gold solution
(Aurion) and placed on holey-carbon coated 200 mesh copper grids (R2/1,
Quantifoil, Jena, Germany) immediately before thin-film vitrification by
plunge-freezing in liquid propane (63%)/ethane (37%). Grids with
frozen-hydrated samples were mounted in autogrids47 and
∼200 nm thin lamellae of vitrified material were milled with
30 keV gallium ions after the application of a protective platinum layer
in a dual-beam (FIB/SEM) instrument (Quanta 3D FEG, FEI, Hillsboro, OR, USA)
equipped with a Quorum cryo-stage maintained at −185 °C
(PP2000T, Quorum, East Sussex, UK). Milling was carried out at a nominal
incident ion beam angle of 22° (15° effectively) using gallium beam
currents of 300, 100 and 30 pA in sequential milling steps. Afterwards
tomographic tilt series were recorded under low-dose conditions (total dose
typically 150 e Å−2) on a Titan Krios
II (FEI, Hillsboro, OR, USA) equipped with a post-column energy filter and a K2
summit direct electron detector (Gatan, Pleasanton, CA, USA). In the exemplary
tomogram (Fig. 5) an angular range from −68° to
54° was covered in 2° increments, and the tilt series was recorded at a
nominal defocus of −5 μm and a primary magnification of
× 33,000 (that is, a pixel size of 0.42 nm on the object level).
Dose fractionation mode was employed and subframes of each projection were
sampled, which were then aligned using custom-made scripts. Estimation and
correction of the contrast transfer function was performed for the
frame-corrected set of projections according to ref. 48, followed by 3D reconstruction in IMOD v4.7.8, using patch
tracking for fine alignment since not enough gold markers were present after
sample thinning. Cell wall cross-section averaging for density profile
calculation was done on a 3D data set (binned once; 0.85 nm per pixel) as
described in ref. 49. Subframes (90 × 90
pixels) of the cell envelope were extracted from 17 x–y slices
central to the z-direction of a tomogram, aligned and averaged. MatLab8
(MathWorks) incorporating the TOM toolbox50 was used for all
image processing.Prior to segmentation, the 3D volume was binned three times and filtered by
nonlinear anisotropic diffusion in IMOD (K value 0.03, 20 iterations).
Segmentation in general was done in Amira v5.6.0 with specific automatic
membrane segmentation according to ref. 51.
Author contributions
O.J. and C.J. designed the project. S.S. isolated strain L21-RPul-D3. O.J. and S.S.
cultivated all the required bacteria with the help from M.J.. M.J. performed the
phylogenetic analysis and the bioinformatic screen for beta-lactamases. O.J.
identified PG-related genes. A.S. and C.M. detected the cell wall sugars with a
radioactive kinase assay. P.S. measured DAP employing GC/MS with help from O.J. and
S.S. C.B. treated the cells with lysozyme and performed light-microscopic
observations. O.J. prepared sacculi that were imaged with TEM by M.R. M.S. performed
CET experiments and M.S., D.B. and H.E. analysed the data. O.J. and C.J. wrote the
manuscript with the help from M.S. and H.E. and the input from all the other
authors.
Additional information
How to cite this article: Jeske, O. et al. Planctomycetes do possess a
peptidoglycan cell wall. Nat. Commun. 6:7116 doi: 10.1038/ncomms8116
(2015).
Tomographic reconstruction from a vitrified, cryo-thinned P. limnophilus
sample showing the pole regions of three adjacent cells. A cell wall layer
between the outer and inner membrane is visible in regions where the two
membranes run parallel. The layer remains close to the outermost membrane
where the inner membrane is invaginated. The reconstruction is binned three
times and filtered. Green: external membrane, cyan: internal membrane, red:
peptidoglycan layer, magenta: crateriform structures, violet: ribosomes,
yellow: storage granules, white: holdfast substance.
Supplementary Data 1
Blastp-based analysis for the identification of peptidoglycan biosynthesis
proteins in Planctomycetes employing E. coli proteins as query.
Supplementary Data 2
Blastp-based analysis for the identification of peptidoglycan biosynthesis
proteins in Planctomycetes employing P. limnophilus proteins as query.
Supplementary Data 3
PSI-BLAST-based analysis for the identification of peptidoglycan biosynthesis
proteins in Planctomycetes.
Supplementary Data 4
Reciprocal blastp based analysis of peptidoglycan biosynthesis proteins in
Planctomycetes.
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