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The N-Acetylmannosamine Transferase Catalyzes the...
Journal article

The N-Acetylmannosamine Transferase Catalyzes the First Committed Step of Teichoic Acid Assembly in Bacillus subtilis and Staphylococcus aureus

Abstract

There have been considerable strides made in the characterization of the dispensability of teichoic acid biosynthesis genes in recent years. A notable omission thus far has been an early gene in teichoic acid synthesis encoding the N-acetylmannosamine transferase (tagA in Bacillus subtilis; tarA in Staphylococcus aureus), which adds N-acetylmannosamine to complete the synthesis of undecaprenol pyrophosphate-linked disaccharide. Here, we show that the N-acetylmannosamine transferases are dispensable for growth in vitro, making this biosynthetic enzyme the last dispensable gene in the pathway, suggesting that tagA (or tarA) encodes the first committed step in wall teichoic acid synthesis.

Authors

D'Elia MA; Henderson JA; Beveridge TJ; Heinrichs DE; Brown ED

Journal

Journal of Bacteriology, Vol. 191, No. 12, pp. 4030–4034

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Publication Date

June 15, 2009

DOI

10.1128/jb.00611-08

ISSN

0021-9193

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