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Murein and lipopolysaccharide biosynthesis in synchronized cells ofEscherichia coliK 12 and the effect of penicillin G, mecillinam and nalidixic acid

✍ Scribed by Peter Essig; Hans Herbert Martin; Jobst Gmeiner


Publisher
Springer
Year
1982
Tongue
English
Weight
670 KB
Volume
132
Category
Article
ISSN
0302-8933

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✦ Synopsis


The incorporation of radioactive N-acetylglucosamine into murein and lipopolysaccharide of synchronized cells ofEscherichia coli K 12 was followed over 100 min in the presence of antibiotics. At 20 min intervals cell walls were prepared. Lipopolysaccharide and murein sacculi were isolated and the radioactivity was quantified in both polymers. Labelled, newly synthesized murein was characterized according to murein subunits linked to lipoprotein, and the degree of crosslinkage. Furthermore, murem subunits containing anhydromuramic acid were determined, permitting the calculation of the average glycan chain length. The results indicated that penicillin G at 30 gg/ml stimulated the incorporation of new murein subunits into sacculi followed by a sudden increase in lipopolysaccharide incorporation into the outer membrane. The degree of crosslinkage in murein synthesized in the presence of 30 gg/ml penicillin G was higher than in the control, and almost twice as high as in murein synthesized in the presence of 20 ~tg/ml nalidixic acid. Both antibiotics inhibited cell division at the concentrations indicated. Murein synthesized in the presence of 2gg/ml mecillinam also showed higher crosslinkage. However, about twice as much anhydromuramic acid-containing subunits were observed as in the control. At the same time lipopolysaccharide incorporation into the outer membrane was stimulated two-to three-fold.