Peer Review History

Original SubmissionMarch 28, 2025

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Submitted filename: 154672_1_rebuttal_3340614_stsjyh.pdf
Decision Letter - Melissa Vazquez Hernandez, Editor

Dear Dr Ting,

Thank you for submitting your manuscript entitled "An Interbacterial Cysteine Protease Toxin Inhibits Cell Growth by Targeting Type II DNA Topoisomerases GyrB and ParE" for consideration as a Research Article by PLOS Biology.

Your manuscript has now been evaluated by the PLOS Biology editorial staff, as well as by an academic editor with relevant expertise, and I am writing to let you know that we would like to call in your study but send your revised manuscript back to the original reviewers from Review Commons for their feedback.

However, before we can send your manuscript to reviewers, we need you to complete your submission by providing the metadata that is required for full assessment. To this end, please login to Editorial Manager where you will find the paper in the 'Submissions Needing Revisions' folder on your homepage. Please click 'Revise Submission' from the Action Links and complete all additional questions in the submission questionnaire.

Once your full submission is complete, your paper will undergo a series of checks in preparation for peer review. After your manuscript has passed the checks it will be sent out for re-review. To provide the metadata for your submission, please Login to Editorial Manager (https://www.editorialmanager.com/pbiology) within two working days, i.e. by Apr 03 2025 11:59PM.

During the process of completing your manuscript submission, you will be invited to opt-in to posting your pre-review manuscript as a bioRxiv preprint. Visit http://journals.plos.org/plosbiology/s/preprints for full details. If you consent to posting your current manuscript as a preprint, please upload a single Preprint PDF.

Feel free to email us at plosbiology@plos.org if you have any queries relating to your submission.

Kind regards,

Melissa

Melissa Vazquez Hernandez, Ph.D.

Associate Editor

PLOS Biology

mvazquezhernandez@plos.org

Revision 1

Attachments
Attachment
Submitted filename: 154672_1_rebuttal_3340614_stsjyh_auresp_1.pdf
Decision Letter - Melissa Vazquez Hernandez, Editor

Dear Dr Ting,

Thank you for your patience while we considered your revised manuscript "An Interbacterial Cysteine Protease Toxin Inhibits Cell Growth by Targeting Type II DNA Topoisomerases GyrB and ParE" for consideration as a Research Article at PLOS Biology. Your revised study has now been evaluated by the PLOS Biology editors, the Academic Editor and the original reviewers.

In light of the reviews, which you will find at the end of this email, we are pleased to offer you the opportunity to address the remaining points from the reviewers in a revision that we anticipate should not take you very long. We will then assess your revised manuscript and your response to the reviewers' comments with our Academic Editor aiming to avoid further rounds of peer-review, although we might need to consult with the reviewers, depending on the nature of the revisions.

In light of the reviews, which you will find at the end of this email, while Reviewers 2 and 3 have agreed that the manuscript can be accepted as it is, Reviewer 1 is still raised an important concern. Reviewer 1 is not completely convinced about the explanation that overexpression of cleavage-resistant mutants of GyrB and ParE cannot confer resistance to Cpe1, and would like you to show immunoblotting of the expression of these mutants. We think that this request is reasonable and will ask you to include it in your revision.

In addition to these revisions, you will need to complete some formatting changes, which you will receive in a follow up email. A member of our team will be in touch with a set of requests shortly.

We expect to receive your revised manuscript within 2 months. Please email us (plosbiology@plos.org) if you have any questions or concerns, or would like to request an extension.

At this stage, your manuscript remains formally under active consideration at our journal; please notify us by email if you do not intend to submit a revision so that we withdraw the manuscript.

**IMPORTANT - SUBMITTING YOUR REVISION**

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You should also cite any additional relevant literature that has been published since the original submission and mention any additional citations in your response.

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https://blogs.plos.org/plos/2019/05/plos-journals-now-open-for-published-peer-review/

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Please note that as a condition of publication PLOS' data policy (http://journals.plos.org/plosbiology/s/data-availability) requires that you make available all data used to draw the conclusions arrived at in your manuscript. If you have not already done so, you must include any data used in your manuscript either in appropriate repositories, within the body of the manuscript, or as supporting information (N.B. this includes any numerical values that were used to generate graphs, histograms etc.). For an example see here: http://www.plosbiology.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pbio.1001908#s5

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To enhance the reproducibility of your results, we recommend that if applicable you deposit your laboratory protocols in protocols.io, where a protocol can be assigned its own identifier (DOI) such that it can be cited independently in the future. Additionally, PLOS ONE offers an option for publishing peer-reviewed Lab Protocol articles, which describe protocols hosted on protocols.io. Read more information on sharing protocols at https://plos.org/protocols?utm_medium=editorial-email&utm_source=authorletters&utm_campaign=protocols

Thank you again for your submission to our journal. We hope that our editorial process has been constructive thus far, and we welcome your feedback at any time. Please don't hesitate to contact us if you have any questions or comments.

Sincerely,

Melissa

Melissa Vazquez Hernandez, Ph.D.

Associate Editor

PLOS Biology

mvazquezhernandez@plos.org

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Reviewer #1:

The results that overexpression of cleavage-resistant mutants of GyrB and ParE cannot confer resistance to Cpe1 in both co-expression and killing assays is unexpected, particularly when these mutants were expressed from multi-copy plasmids. The authors' explanation was not satisfactory. Did the authors examine the expression of these mutants by methods like immunoblotting? If these mutants were properly expressed in the testing strains, and these strains are still resistant to Cpe1-meidated killing, the results should be included in the paper and appropriately discussed to acknowledge that Cpe1 likely targets other essential proteins.

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Reviewer #2 (Christina R Bourne):

I commend the authors on their careful revision in response to previous reviewer comments, including my own. Overall I believe this is a very well executed study of high interest to multiple sub-areas in microbiology. In my opinion, the revised version is acceptable without further changes.

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Reviewer #3:

This is a paper that I earlier reviewed and the authors have satisfactorily addressed all my comments

Revision 2

Attachments
Attachment
Submitted filename: Song et al 2025 Response to Reviewers.pdf
Decision Letter - Melissa Vazquez Hernandez, Editor

Dear Dr Ting,

Thank you for your patience while we considered your revised manuscript "An Interbacterial Cysteine Protease Toxin Inhibits Cell Growth by Targeting Type II DNA Topoisomerases GyrB and ParE" for publication as a Research Article at PLOS Biology. This revised version of your manuscript has been evaluated by the PLOS Biology editors, and the Academic Editor.

Based on our Academic Editor's assessment of your revision, we are likely to accept this manuscript for publication, provided you satisfactorily address the remaining editorial points. Please also make sure to address the following data and other policy-related requests.

a) Thank you so much for already providing all raw data from the figures. I just noticed that the labeling in the excel sheet for Figure 5 says "3E" and "3F".

b) Please cite the location of the data clearly in all relevant main and supplementary Figure legends, e.g. “The data underlying this Figure can be found in S1 Data” or “The data underlying this Figure can be found in https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.XXXXX”

c) Please provide the tree files for the phylogenetic trees in Figures

d) Please provide the raw proteomics data for Figure S6EF by uploading them in a repository like Zenodo, or proteomics-specific repositories like PRIDE. You can read about our policies and recommendations for repositories here: https://journals.plos.org/plosbiology/s/recommended-repositories

e) Please ensure that your Data Statement in the submission system accurately describes where your data can be found and is in final format, as it will be published as written there.

f) Per journal policy, if you have generated any custom code during the course of this investigation, please make it available without restrictions upon publication. Please ensure that the code is sufficiently well documented and reusable, and that your Data Statement in the Editorial Manager submission system accurately describes where your code can be found.

Please note that we cannot accept sole deposition of code in GitHub, as this could be changed after publication. However, you can archive this version of your publicly available GitHub code to Zenodo. Once you do this, it will generate a DOI number, which you will need to provide in the Data Accessibility Statement (you are welcome to also provide the GitHub access information). See the process for doing this here: https://docs.github.com/en/repositories/archiving-a-github-repository/referencing-and-citing-content

As you address these items, please take this last chance to review your reference list to ensure that it is complete and correct. If you have cited papers that have been retracted, please include the rationale for doing so in the manuscript text, or remove these references and replace them with relevant current references. Any changes to the reference list should be mentioned in the cover letter that accompanies your revised manuscript.

In addition to these revisions, you will need to complete some formatting changes, which you will receive in a follow up email. A member of our team will be in touch with a set of requests shortly.

We expect to receive your revised manuscript within two weeks.

To submit your revision, please go to https://www.editorialmanager.com/pbiology/ and log in as an Author. Click the link labelled 'Submissions Needing Revision' to find your submission record. Your revised submission must include the following:

- a cover letter that should detail your responses to any editorial requests, if applicable, and whether changes have been made to the reference list

- a Response to Reviewers file that provides a detailed response to the reviewers' comments (if applicable, if not applicable please do not delete your existing 'Response to Reviewers' file.)

- a track-changes file indicating any changes that you have made to the manuscript.

NOTE: If Supporting Information files are included with your article, note that these are not copyedited and will be published as they are submitted. Please ensure that these files are legible and of high quality (at least 300 dpi) in an easily accessible file format. For this reason, please be aware that any references listed in an SI file will not be indexed. For more information, see our Supporting Information guidelines:

https://journals.plos.org/plosbiology/s/supporting-information

*Published Peer Review History*

Please note that you may have the opportunity to make the peer review history publicly available. The record will include editor decision letters (with reviews) and your responses to reviewer comments. If eligible, we will contact you to opt in or out. Please see here for more details:

https://plos.org/published-peer-review-history/

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*Protocols deposition*

To enhance the reproducibility of your results, we recommend that if applicable you deposit your laboratory protocols in protocols.io, where a protocol can be assigned its own identifier (DOI) such that it can be cited independently in the future. Additionally, PLOS ONE offers an option for publishing peer-reviewed Lab Protocol articles, which describe protocols hosted on protocols.io. Read more information on sharing protocols at https://plos.org/protocols?utm_medium=editorial-email&utm_source=authorletters&utm_campaign=protocols

Please do not hesitate to contact me should you have any questions.

Sincerely,

Melissa

Melissa Vazquez Hernandez, Ph.D.

Associate Editor

mvazquezhernandez@plos.org

PLOS Biology

Revision 3

Attachments
Attachment
Submitted filename: Song_et_al_2025_Response_to_Reviewers_auresp_3.pdf
Decision Letter - Melissa Vazquez Hernandez, Editor

Dear Dr Ting,

Thank you for the submission of your revised Research Article "An Interbacterial Cysteine Protease Toxin Inhibits Cell Growth by Targeting Type II DNA Topoisomerases GyrB and ParE" for publication in PLOS Biology. On behalf of my colleagues and the Academic Editor, Michael Laub, I am pleased to say that we can in principle accept your manuscript for publication, provided you address any remaining formatting and reporting issues. These will be detailed in an email you should receive within 2-3 business days from our colleagues in the journal operations team; no action is required from you until then. Please note that we will not be able to formally accept your manuscript and schedule it for publication until you have completed any requested changes.

Please take a minute to log into Editorial Manager at http://www.editorialmanager.com/pbiology/, click the "Update My Information" link at the top of the page, and update your user information to ensure an efficient production process.

PRESS

We frequently collaborate with press offices. If your institution or institutions have a press office, please notify them about your upcoming paper at this point, to enable them to help maximise its impact. If the press office is planning to promote your findings, we would be grateful if they could coordinate with biologypress@plos.org. If you have previously opted in to the early version process, we ask that you notify us immediately of any press plans so that we may opt out on your behalf.

We also ask that you take this opportunity to read our Embargo Policy regarding the discussion, promotion and media coverage of work that is yet to be published by PLOS. As your manuscript is not yet published, it is bound by the conditions of our Embargo Policy. Please be aware that this policy is in place both to ensure that any press coverage of your article is fully substantiated and to provide a direct link between such coverage and the published work. For full details of our Embargo Policy, please visit http://www.plos.org/about/media-inquiries/embargo-policy/.

Thank you again for choosing PLOS Biology for publication and supporting Open Access publishing. We look forward to publishing your study. 

Sincerely, 

Melissa

Melissa Vazquez Hernandez, Ph.D., Ph.D.

Associate Editor

PLOS Biology

mvazquezhernandez@plos.org

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