The Pks13/FadD32 Crosstalk for the Biosynthesis of Mycolic Acids in Mycobacterium tuberculosis |
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Authors: | Sabine Gavalda Mathieu Léger Beno?t van der Rest Alexandre Stella Fabienne Bardou Henri Montrozier Christian Chalut Odile Burlet-Schiltz Hedia Marrakchi Mamadou Daffé Anna?k Quémard |
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Affiliation: | From CNRS, IPBS (Institut de Pharmacologie et de Biologie Structurale), Départements ‡Mécanismes Moléculaires des Infections Mycobacteriennes and ;¶Biologie du Cancer, 205 route de Narbonne, F-31077 Toulouse, France and ;the §Université de Toulouse, UPS, IPBS, F-31077 Toulouse, France |
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Abstract: | ![]() The last steps of the biosynthesis of mycolic acids, essential and specific lipids of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and related bacteria, are catalyzed by proteins encoded by the fadD32-pks13-accD4 cluster. Here, we produced and purified an active form of the Pks13 polyketide synthase, with a phosphopantetheinyl (P-pant) arm at both positions Ser-55 and Ser-1266 of its two acyl carrier protein (ACP) domains. Combination of liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry of protein tryptic digests and radiolabeling experiments showed that, in vitro, the enzyme specifically loads long-chain 2-carboxyacyl-CoA substrates onto the P-pant arm of its C-terminal ACP domain via the acyltransferase domain. The acyl-AMPs produced by the FadD32 enzyme are specifically transferred onto the ketosynthase domain after binding to the P-pant moiety of the N-terminal ACP domain of Pks13 (N-ACPPks13). Unexpectedly, however, the latter step requires the presence of active FadD32. Thus, the couple FadD32-(N-ACPPks13) composes the initiation module of the mycolic condensation system. Pks13 ultimately condenses the two loaded fatty acyl chains to produce α-alkyl β-ketoacids, the precursors of mycolic acids. The developed in vitro assay will constitute a strategic tool for antimycobacterial drug screening.Mycolic acids, α-branched and β-hydroxylated fatty acids of unusual chain length (C30-C90), are the hallmark of the Corynebacterineae suborder that includes the causative agents of tuberculosis (Mycobacterium tuberculosis) and leprosy (Mycobacterium leprae). Members of each genus biosynthesize mycolic acids of specific chain lengths, a feature used in taxonomy. For example, Corynebacterium holds the simplest prototypes (C32-C36), called “corynomycolic acids,” which result from an enzymatic condensation between two regular size fatty acids (C16–C18). In contrast, the longest mycolates (C60-C90) are the products of condensation between a very long meromycolic chain (C40-C60) and a shorter α-chain (C22-C26) (1). These so-called “eumycolic acids” are found in mycobacteria and display various structural features present on the meromycolic chain. Eumycolic acids are major and essential components of the mycobacterial envelope where they contribute to the formation of the outer membrane (2, 3) that plays a crucial role in the permeability of the envelope. They also impact on the pathogenicity of some mycobacterial species (4).The first in vitro mycolate biosynthesis assays have been developed using Corynebacterium cell-wall extracts in the presence of a radioactive precursor (5, 6) and have brought key information about this pathway. Yet, any attempt to fractionate these extracts to identify the proteins involved has ended in failure. Later, enzymes catalyzing the formation of the meromycolic chain and the introduction of functions have been discovered with the help of novel molecular biology tools (for review, see Ref. 1), culminating with the identification of the putative operon fadD32-pks13-accD4 that encodes enzymes implicated in the mycolic condensation step in both corynebacteria and mycobacteria (see ) (7–9). AccD4, a putative carboxyltransferase, associates at least with the AccA3 subunit to form an acyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC)3 complex that most likely activates, through a C2-carboxylation step, the extender unit to be condensed with the meromycolic chain (see ). In Corynebacterium glutamicum, the carboxylase would metabolize a C16 substrate (8, 10), whereas in M. tuberculosis the purified complex AccA3-AccD4 was shown to carboxylate C24-C26 acyl-CoAs (11). Furthermore, FadD32, predicted to belong to a new class of long-chain acyl-AMP ligases (FAAL) (12), is most likely required for the activation of the meromycolic chain prior to the condensation reaction. At last, the cmrA gene controls the reduction of the β-keto function to yield the final mycolic motif (13) (see ).Open in a separate windowProposed scheme for the biosynthesis of mycolic acids. The asymmetrical carbons of the mycolic motif have a R,R configuration. R1-CO, meromycolic chain; R2, branch chain. In mycobacteria, R1-CO = C40-C60 and R2 = C20-C24; in corynebacteria, R1-CO = C16-C18 and R2 = C14-C16; X1, unknown acceptor of the mycolic α-alkyl β-ketoacyl chains; X2, unknown acceptor of the mycolic acyl chains.Although the enzymatic properties of the ACC complex have been well characterized (9, 11), those of Pks13 and FadD32 are poorly or not described. Pks13 is a type I polyketide synthase (PKS) made of a minimal module holding ketosynthase (KS), acyltransferase (AT), and acyl carrier protein (ACP) domains, and additional N-terminal ACP and C-terminal thioesterase domains (). Its ACP domains are naturally activated by the 4′-phosphopantetheinyl (P-pant) transferase PptT (14). The P-pant arm has the general function of carrying the substrate acyl chain via a thioester bond involving its terminal thiol group. In the present article we report the purification of a soluble activated form of the large Pks13 protein. For the first time, the loading mechanisms of both types of substrates on specific domains of the PKS were investigated. We describe a unique catalytic mechanism of the Pks13-FadD32 enzymatic couple and the development of an in vitro condensation assay that generates the formation of α-alkyl β-ketoacids, the precursors of mycolic acids. |
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