We investigated the roles of the Vibrio cholerae high-molecular-weight bifunctional penicillin binding proteins, PBP1a and PBP1b, in the fitness of this enteric pathogen. Using a screen for synthetic lethality, we found that the V. cholerae PBP1a and PBP1b proteins, like their Escherichia coli homologues, are each essential in the absence of the other and in the absence of the other's putative activator, the outer membrane lipoproteins LpoA and LpoB, respectively. Comparative analyses of V. cholerae mutants suggest that PBP1a/LpoA of V. cholerae play a more prominent role in generating and/or maintaining the pathogen's cell wall than PBP1b/LpoB. V. cholerae lacking PBP1b or LpoB exhibited wild-type growth under all conditions tested. In contrast, V. cholerae lacking PBP1a or LpoA exhibited growth deficiencies in minimal medium, in the presence of deoxycholate and bile, and in competition assays with wild-type cells both in vitro and in the infant mouse small intestine. PBP1a pathway mutants are particularly impaired in stationary phase, which renders them sensitive to a product(s) present in supernatants from stationary-phase wild-type cells. The marked competitive defect of the PBP1a pathway mutants in vivo was largely absent when exponential-phase cells rather than stationary-phase cells were used to inoculate suckling mice. Thus, at least for V. cholerae PBP1a pathway mutants, the growth phase of the inoculum is a key modulator of infectivity.T he main component of the bacterial cell wall, peptidoglycan (PG), is an intricate mesh of polysaccharide chains crosslinked by short peptide bridges. The periplasmic assembly of this complex polymer from [N-acetylglucosamine-N-acetylmuramic acid]pentapeptide subunits is facilitated by extracytoplasmic enzymes known as penicillin binding proteins (PBPs). These enzymes carry out two main reactions: transglycosylation (i.e., polymerization of glycan subunits) and transpeptidation (i.e., cross-linking the peptide side chains between polymerized glycan strands). In Escherichia coli-the focus of most studies of Gram-negative cell wall synthesis-two principal high-molecular-weight (HMW) PBPs with both transglycosylase and transpeptidase activity play a pivotal role in PG synthesis. E. coli PBP1a and PBP1b appear to be largely interchangeable, and mutants lacking one of the two proteins have at most mild phenotypes under standard growth conditions (1-3). However, cells lacking both proteins are not viable, and PBP1a and PBP1b are termed synthetically lethal. The activity of each PBP1 enzyme is strictly dependent on the presence of a specific outer membrane activator, either LpoA (for PBP1a) or LpoB (for PBP1b), and mutations in either lpo locus are consequently also synthetically lethal with a mutation of the noncognate pbp1 locus (4, 5). It has been proposed that PBP1a may contribute preferentially to cell elongation whereas PBP1b may play a more prominent role in cell division (3, 6); however, the viability of the individual mutants clearly demonstrates that each enzyme can ...