| Literature DB >> 30352940 |
Pascal D Odermatt1,2, Heidi A Arjes2, Fred Chang1, Kerwyn Casey Huang3,4,5.
Abstract
A central question in mechanobiology is how cellular-scale structures are established and regulated. In bacteria, the cell envelope is essential for mechanical integrity, protecting against environmental stresses and bearing the load from high turgor pressures. Trivedi et al. (mBio 9:e01340-18, 2018, https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01340-18) screened a Pseudomonas aeruginosa transposon library and identified genes that influence cell stiffness by measuring cell growth while cells were embedded in an agarose gel. Their findings provide a broad knowledge base for how biochemical pathways regulate cellular mechanical properties in this pathogen. Dozens of genes across diverse functional categories were implicated, suggesting that cellular mechanics is a systems-level emergent property. Furthermore, changes in d-alanine levels in a dadA (d-alanine dehydrogenase) mutant resulted in decreases in the expression of cell wall enzymes, cross-linking density, and cell stiffness. These insights into the biochemical and mechanical roles of dadA highlight the importance of systems-level investigations into the physical properties of cells.Entities:
Keywords: Pseudomonaszzm321990; high-throughput screening; mechanical genomics
Mesh:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30352940 PMCID: PMC6199500 DOI: 10.1128/mBio.02127-18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: mBio Impact factor: 7.867
FIG 1Deletion of dadA reduces the stiffness of P. aeruginosa. (A) Trivedi et al. used a high-throughput methodology for screening cell mechanics to discover that deletion of dadA, which encodes the d-alanine dehydrogenase, leads to a 3-fold reduction in the bending rigidity of P. aeruginosa cells. (B) Inside bacterial cells, l-alanine is converted into d-alanine, which is incorporated into cross-links in the peptidoglycan cell wall. In wild-type cells, DadA catabolizes d-alanine into pyruvate. In a dadA loss-of-function mutant, higher intracellular levels of d-alanine inhibit expression of ponA and dacC, which encode cell wall enzymes, and lead to a decrease in cell wall cross-linking. PG, peptidoglycan; WT, wild type.