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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, September 2001, p. 3888-3896, Vol. 67, No. 9
School of Molecular and Cellular Biosciences,
University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, Scottsville 3209, South
Africa
Received 30 January 2001/Accepted 8 June 2001
Streptococcus milleri NMSCC 061 produces an
endopeptidase, millericin B, which hydrolyzes the peptide moiety of
susceptible cell wall peptidoglycan. The nucleotide sequence of a
4.9-kb chromosomal region showed three open reading frames (ORFs) and a
putative tRNALeu sequence. The three ORFs encode a
millericin B preprotein (MilB), a putative immunity protein
(MilF), and a putative transporter protein (MilT). The
milB gene encodes a 277-amino-acid preprotein with an
18-amino-acid signal peptide with a consensus IIGG cleavage motif. The
predicted protein encoded by milT is homologous to ABC
(ATP-binding cassette) transporters of several bacteriocin systems and
to proteins implicated in the signal-sequence-independent export of
Escherichia coli hemolysin A. These similarities
strongly suggest that the milT gene product is involved
in the translocation of millericin B. The gene milF
encodes a protein of 302 amino acids that shows similarities to the
FemA and FemB proteins of Staphylococcus aureus, which
are involved in the addition of glycine to a pentapeptide peptidoglycan
precursor. Comparisons of the cell wall mucopeptide of S.
milleri NMSCC 061(resistant to lysis by millericin B) and
S. milleri NMSCC 051(sensitive) showed a single amino
acid difference. Serial growth of S. milleri NMSCC 051 in a cell wall minimal medium containing an increased concentration of
leucine resulted in the in vivo substitution of leucine for threonine
in the mucopeptide of the cell wall. A cell wall variant of S.
milleri NMSCC 051 (sensitive) that contained an amino acid substitution (leucine for threonine) within its peptidoglycan cross
bridge showed partial susceptibility to millericin B. The putative
tRNALeu sequence located upstream of milB
may be a cell wall-specific tRNA and could together with the
milF protein, play a potential role in the addition of
leucine to the pentapeptide peptidoglycan precursor and thereby,
contributing to self-protection to millericin B in the producer strain.
0099-2240/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.67.9.3888-3896.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Self-Protection against Cell Wall Hydrolysis in
Streptococcus milleri NMSCC 061 and Analysis
of the Millericin B Operon
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Biochemistry, University of Stellenbosch, Private Bag X1, Matieland, 7602, South Africa. Phone: 27 21 808-5872. Fax: 27 21 808-5863. E-mail:
jhastings{at}worldonline.co.za.
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