Scientists uncover viral proteins targeting bacterial cell wall enzyme

Researchers at Caltech have discovered how viruses infect bacteria by disabling a key protein called MurJ, essential for cell wall construction. This mechanism, revealed through high-resolution imaging, suggests a new approach to combating antibiotic-resistant superbugs. The findings highlight convergent evolution in unrelated viruses blocking MurJ similarly.

Antibiotic resistance poses a growing threat, with bacteria evolving rapidly against existing treatments. In the United States alone, tens of thousands die annually from such infections, a number increasing steadily. As Bil Clemons, Arthur and Marian Hanisch Memorial Professor of Biochemistry at Caltech, explains, "Evolution is powerful, and in bacteria, resistance to antibiotics develops quickly. This means that we now deal with bacteria that are resistant to all the medicines that we have."

Scientists have long targeted the peptidoglycan biosynthesis pathway, unique to bacteria and absent in human cells. Clemons notes, "Peptidoglycan is a unique feature of bacteria, and that makes it an attractive antibiotic target." Key proteins in this pathway include MraY, MurG, and MurJ, which transport building blocks across the bacterial membrane. While antibiotics like penicillin disrupt later stages, no approved drugs directly inhibit these three proteins yet.

Bacteriophages, viruses that infect bacteria, offer insights. To escape host cells, phages must breach the peptidoglycan layer. The Clemons lab studied small phages using single-gene lysis proteins (Sgls). Earlier work identified SglM and SglPP7 blocking MurJ, a flippase that moves peptidoglycan precursors.

Using cryo-electron microscopy, Yancheng Evelyn Li visualized how these Sgls bind to a groove in MurJ, locking it in an outward-facing conformation and halting transport. Li states, "It is clear that both of these Sgls bind to MurJ in an outward-facing conformation, locking it into this position." This exposed form could aid drug access.

Remarkably, analysis of another phage genome revealed SglCJ3, which inhibits MurJ identically despite no evolutionary relation—a case of convergent evolution. Clemons says, "These peptides, which have no evolutionary links to each other, have both figured out how to target MurJ in a very similar way. We were surprised!" The team, including Li, Grace F. Baron, and collaborators from Texas A&M, published these results in the February 26, 2026, issue of Nature, titled "Convergent MurJ flippase inhibition by phage lysis proteins." Funding came from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, National Institutes of Health, and others.

This work underscores phages' potential to inspire new antibiotics by exploiting bacterial vulnerabilities.

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Illustration of Australian scientists developing antibodies targeting bacteria-specific sugar to treat drug-resistant infections in mice.
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Australian team develops antibodies targeting a bacteria-only sugar, clearing drug-resistant infection in mice

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Australian researchers report they have engineered monoclonal antibodies that recognize pseudaminic acid—a sugar made by bacteria but not by humans—and used them to help eliminate multidrug-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii infections in mice, a step toward potential passive-immunotherapy treatments for hard-to-treat hospital infections.

Researchers at the John Innes Centre have identified a three-gene system that causes bacteria to burst open, releasing virus-like particles that share DNA, including antibiotic resistance genes. The system, called LypABC, resembles a repurposed bacterial immune defense. The findings, published in Nature Microbiology, highlight how bacteria facilitate horizontal gene transfer.

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Researchers at the University of California San Diego report they have developed a second-generation CRISPR-based “Pro-Active Genetics” system, called pPro-MobV, that is designed to spread between bacteria and disable antibiotic-resistance genes, including inside hard-to-treat biofilms.

Researchers report that small doses of the antibiotic cephaloridine can prompt certain gut bacteria to increase production of colanic acid, a microbial polysaccharide previously tied to longer lifespan in laboratory animals. In experiments, treated roundworms lived longer and mice showed shifts in cholesterol or insulin measures associated with aging, with the team arguing the approach works by acting in the gut rather than throughout the body.

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Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology report that intelectin-2, a carbohydrate-binding lectin found in the gastrointestinal tract, can both crosslink mucus components to reinforce the gut’s protective barrier and bind certain bacteria, restricting their growth and reducing viability—findings that may inform future approaches to drug-resistant infections and inflammatory bowel disease.

Scientists have discovered a 5,000-year-old bacterium in a Romanian ice cave that resists several contemporary antibiotics. The microbe, isolated from permafrost, carries over 100 resistance genes and could inhibit dangerous superbugs. This finding highlights natural evolution of resistance and potential biotechnological applications.

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Scientists at Scripps Research have developed a nanodisc platform that mimics viral membranes, uncovering hidden interactions in HIV and Ebola proteins that traditional methods miss. The technology allows for more accurate study of antibody responses, potentially accelerating vaccine development. The findings appear in Nature Communications.

 

 

 

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