Phage Endolysin: A Way To Understand A Binding Function Of C-Terminal Domains A Mini Review

Authors

  • VERONIKA JARÁBKOVÁ
  • LENKA TIŠÁKOVÁ
  • ANDREJ GODÁNY

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1515/nbec-2015-0021

Keywords:

bacteriophage, endolysin, cell wall binding domain (CBD), ligand/receptor, peptidoglycan (PG)

Abstract

Endolysins are bacteriophage-encoded peptidoglycan hydrolases, which are synthesized in the end of phage reproduction cycle, in an infected host cell. Usually, for endolysins from phages that infect Gram-positive bacteria, a modular structure is typical. Therefore, these are composed of at least two separate functional domains: an N-terminal catalytic domain (EAD) and a C-terminal cell wall binding domain (CBD). Specific ligand recognition of CBDs and following peptidoglycan (PG) binding mostly allows a rapid lytic activity of an EAD. Here we briefly characterize phage endolysin CBDs in conjuction with their domain architecture, (non)necessity for the following lytic activity and a high/low specificity of their ligands as well. Such an overall assessment of CBDs may help to find new ways to widen opportunities in their protein design to create ‛designer recombinant endolysins’ with diverse applications.

Downloads

Published

2015-12-30

How to Cite

JARÁBKOVÁ, V. ., TIŠÁKOVÁ, L. ., & GODÁNY, A. . (2015). Phage Endolysin: A Way To Understand A Binding Function Of C-Terminal Domains A Mini Review. Nova Biotechnologica Et Chimica, 14(2), 117–134. https://doi.org/10.1515/nbec-2015-0021

Issue

Section

Research Articles