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γ-PGA Hydrolases of Phage Origin in Bacillus subtilis and Other Microbial Genomes

Poly-γ-glutamate (γ-PGA) is an industrially interesting polymer secreted mainly by members of the class Bacilli which forms a shield able to protect bacteria from phagocytosis and phages. Few enzymes are known to degrade γ-PGA; among them is a phage-encoded γ-PGA hydrolase, PghP. The supposed role o...

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Autores principales: Mamberti, Stefania, Prati, Paola, Cremaschi, Paolo, Seppi, Claudio, Morelli, Carlo F., Galizzi, Alessandro, Fabbi, Massimo, Calvio, Cinzia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4497714/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26158264
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0130810
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author Mamberti, Stefania
Prati, Paola
Cremaschi, Paolo
Seppi, Claudio
Morelli, Carlo F.
Galizzi, Alessandro
Fabbi, Massimo
Calvio, Cinzia
author_facet Mamberti, Stefania
Prati, Paola
Cremaschi, Paolo
Seppi, Claudio
Morelli, Carlo F.
Galizzi, Alessandro
Fabbi, Massimo
Calvio, Cinzia
author_sort Mamberti, Stefania
collection PubMed
description Poly-γ-glutamate (γ-PGA) is an industrially interesting polymer secreted mainly by members of the class Bacilli which forms a shield able to protect bacteria from phagocytosis and phages. Few enzymes are known to degrade γ-PGA; among them is a phage-encoded γ-PGA hydrolase, PghP. The supposed role of PghP in phages is to ensure access to the surface of bacterial cells by dismantling the γ-PGA barrier. We identified four unannotated B. subtilis genes through similarity of their encoded products to PghP; in fact these genes reside in prophage elements of B. subtilis genome. The recombinant products of two of them demonstrate efficient polymer degradation, confirming that sequence similarity reflects functional homology. Genes encoding similar γ-PGA hydrolases were identified in phages specific for the order Bacillales and in numerous microbial genomes, not only belonging to that order. The distribution of the γ-PGA biosynthesis operon was also investigated with a bioinformatics approach; it was found that the list of organisms endowed with γ-PGA biosynthetic functions is larger than expected and includes several pathogenic species. Moreover in non-Bacillales bacteria the predicted γ-PGA hydrolase genes are preferentially found in species that do not have the genetic asset for polymer production. Our findings suggest that γ-PGA hydrolase genes might have spread across microbial genomes via horizontal exchanges rather than via phage infection. We hypothesize that, in natural habitats rich in γ-PGA supplied by producer organisms, the availability of hydrolases that release glutamate oligomers from γ-PGA might be a beneficial trait under positive selection.
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spelling pubmed-44977142015-07-14 γ-PGA Hydrolases of Phage Origin in Bacillus subtilis and Other Microbial Genomes Mamberti, Stefania Prati, Paola Cremaschi, Paolo Seppi, Claudio Morelli, Carlo F. Galizzi, Alessandro Fabbi, Massimo Calvio, Cinzia PLoS One Research Article Poly-γ-glutamate (γ-PGA) is an industrially interesting polymer secreted mainly by members of the class Bacilli which forms a shield able to protect bacteria from phagocytosis and phages. Few enzymes are known to degrade γ-PGA; among them is a phage-encoded γ-PGA hydrolase, PghP. The supposed role of PghP in phages is to ensure access to the surface of bacterial cells by dismantling the γ-PGA barrier. We identified four unannotated B. subtilis genes through similarity of their encoded products to PghP; in fact these genes reside in prophage elements of B. subtilis genome. The recombinant products of two of them demonstrate efficient polymer degradation, confirming that sequence similarity reflects functional homology. Genes encoding similar γ-PGA hydrolases were identified in phages specific for the order Bacillales and in numerous microbial genomes, not only belonging to that order. The distribution of the γ-PGA biosynthesis operon was also investigated with a bioinformatics approach; it was found that the list of organisms endowed with γ-PGA biosynthetic functions is larger than expected and includes several pathogenic species. Moreover in non-Bacillales bacteria the predicted γ-PGA hydrolase genes are preferentially found in species that do not have the genetic asset for polymer production. Our findings suggest that γ-PGA hydrolase genes might have spread across microbial genomes via horizontal exchanges rather than via phage infection. We hypothesize that, in natural habitats rich in γ-PGA supplied by producer organisms, the availability of hydrolases that release glutamate oligomers from γ-PGA might be a beneficial trait under positive selection. Public Library of Science 2015-07-09 /pmc/articles/PMC4497714/ /pubmed/26158264 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0130810 Text en © 2015 Mamberti et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mamberti, Stefania
Prati, Paola
Cremaschi, Paolo
Seppi, Claudio
Morelli, Carlo F.
Galizzi, Alessandro
Fabbi, Massimo
Calvio, Cinzia
γ-PGA Hydrolases of Phage Origin in Bacillus subtilis and Other Microbial Genomes
title γ-PGA Hydrolases of Phage Origin in Bacillus subtilis and Other Microbial Genomes
title_full γ-PGA Hydrolases of Phage Origin in Bacillus subtilis and Other Microbial Genomes
title_fullStr γ-PGA Hydrolases of Phage Origin in Bacillus subtilis and Other Microbial Genomes
title_full_unstemmed γ-PGA Hydrolases of Phage Origin in Bacillus subtilis and Other Microbial Genomes
title_short γ-PGA Hydrolases of Phage Origin in Bacillus subtilis and Other Microbial Genomes
title_sort γ-pga hydrolases of phage origin in bacillus subtilis and other microbial genomes
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4497714/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26158264
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0130810
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