Specificity of the Autolysin of Streptococcus (Diplococcus) pneumoniae

LV Howard, H Gooder - Journal of bacteriology, 1974 - Am Soc Microbiol
LV Howard, H Gooder
Journal of bacteriology, 1974Am Soc Microbiol
A Streptococcus (Diplococcus) pneumoniae autolysin, partially purified from cellular
autolysates, was optimally active at pH 7.0 and was stimulated by monovalent cations.
Addition of autolysin to walls resulted in the appearance of only N-terminal l-alanine,
whereas no glycosidase activity was observed. Walls which had been solubilized by
autolysin were separated by gel filtration into a low-molecular-weight peptide containing
amino acids in the same ratios found in intact walls and a high molecular fraction containing …
A Streptococcus (Diplococcus) pneumoniae autolysin, partially purified from cellular autolysates, was optimally active at pH 7.0 and was stimulated by monovalent cations. Addition of autolysin to walls resulted in the appearance of only N-terminal l-alanine, whereas no glycosidase activity was observed. Walls which had been solubilized by autolysin were separated by gel filtration into a low-molecular-weight peptide containing amino acids in the same ratios found in intact walls and a high molecular fraction containing the amino acid-deficient peptidoglycan backbone. Thus, the major activity is an N-acetylmuramyl-l-alanine amidase. In addition, walls undergoing spontaneous lysis revealed no glycosidase activity but showed an increase in only N-terminal alanine. Autolysin, which was bound to walls in saline, was almost completely removed when walls were washed in distilled water, and all of the activity was recovered in the water wash fluid.
American Society for Microbiology