Disclosure of the mycobacterial outer membrane: Cryo-electron tomography and vitreous sections reveal the lipid bilayer structure
0301 basic medicine
03 medical and health sciences
Glucosides
Cell Wall
Cell Membrane
Cryoelectron Microscopy
Lipid Bilayers
Mycobacterium smegmatis
Corynebacterium
Models, Biological
Tomography
DOI:
10.1073/pnas.0709530105
Publication Date:
2008-03-04T01:54:00Z
AUTHORS (5)
ABSTRACT
The cell walls of mycobacteria form an exceptional permeability barrier, and they are essential for virulence. They contain extractable lipids and long-chain mycolic acids that are covalently linked to peptidoglycan via an arabinogalactan network. The lipids were thought to form an asymmetrical bilayer of considerable thickness, but this could never be proven directly by microscopy or other means. Cryo-electron tomography of unperturbed or detergent-treated cells of
Mycobacterium smegmatis
embedded in vitreous ice now reveals the native organization of the cell envelope and its delineation into several distinct layers. The 3D data and the investigation of ultrathin frozen-hydrated cryosections of
M. smegmatis
,
Myobacterium bovis
bacillus Calmette–Guérin, and
Corynebacterium glutamicum
identified the outermost layer as a morphologically symmetrical lipid bilayer. The structure of the mycobacterial outer membrane necessitates considerable revision of the current view of its architecture. Conceivable models are proposed and discussed. These results are crucial for the investigation and understanding of transport processes across the mycobacterial cell wall, and they are of particular medical relevance in the case of pathogenic mycobacteria.
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