Wall teichoic acids are a major and integral component of the
Gram-positive cell wall. These structures are present across all species
of Gram-positive bacteria and constitute roughly half of the cell wall.
Despite decades of careful investigation, a definitive physiological
function for wall teichoic acids remains elusive. Advances in the
genetics and biochemistry of wall teichoic acid synthesis have led to a
new understanding of the complexity of cell wall synthesis in
Gram-positive bacteria. Indeed, these innovations have provided new
molecular tools available to probe the synthesis and function of these
cell wall structures. Among recent discoveries are unexpected roles for
wall teichoic acid in cell division, coordination of peptidoglycan
synthesis and β-lactam resistance in methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). Notably, wall teichoic acid biogenesis has
emerged as a bona fide drug target in S. aureus, where remarkable
synthetic-viable interactions among biosynthetic genes have been
leveraged for the discovery and characterization of novel inhibitors of
the pathway.
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