Structure and Synthesis of Peptidoglycan
Structure and Synthesis of Peptidoglycan
Peptidoglycan
Lecture # 1
Microbial anatomy and physiology
Dr. Qasim Mughal
05-06-2023
Structure of Peptidoglycan
• Peptidoglycan, or murein, is an enormous meshl-ike polymer composed
of many identical subunits.
• The polymer contains two sugar derivatives,
– N-acetylglucosamine and
– N-acetylmuramic acid (the lactyl ether of N-acetylglucosamine), and
– several different amino acids.
• Three of these amino acids are not found in proteins:
– D-glutamic acid,
– D-alanine, and
– mesodiaminopimelic acid.
• The presence of D-amino acids protects against degradation by most
peptidases, which recognize only the L-isomers of amino acid residues.
Structure
• The backbone of this polymer is composed of alternating N-
acetylglucosamine and N-acetylmuramic acid residues.
• A peptide chain of four alternating D- and L-amino acids is
connected to the carboxyl group of N-acetylmuramic acid.
• Many bacteria replace meso-diaminopimelic acid with another
diaminoacid, usually L-lysine
• Figure: Peptidoglycan Subunit
Composition.
• The peptidoglycan subunit of E. coli,
most other gram-negative bacteria,
and many gram-positive bacteria.
– NAG is N-acetylglucosamine.
– NAM is N-acetylmuramic acid (NAG
with lactic acid attached by an ether
linkage).
– The tetrapeptide side chain is composed
of alternating D- and L-amino acids since
meso-diaminopimelic acid is connected
through its L-carbon.
– NAM and the tetrapeptide chain attached
to it are shown in different shades of
color for clarity
• Figure: Peptidoglycan Cross-Links.