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1.
The mycobacterial membrane protein large 3 (MmpL3) transporter is essential and required for shuttling the lipid trehalose monomycolate (TMM), a precursor of mycolic acid (MA)-containing trehalose dimycolate (TDM) and mycolyl arabinogalactan peptidoglycan (mAGP), in Mycobacterium species, including Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Mycobacterium smegmatis. However, the mechanism that MmpL3 uses to facilitate the transport of fatty acids and lipidic elements to the mycobacterial cell wall remains elusive. Here, we report 7 structures of the M. smegmatis MmpL3 transporter in its unbound state and in complex with trehalose 6-decanoate (T6D) or TMM using single-particle cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) and X-ray crystallography. Combined with calculated results from molecular dynamics (MD) and target MD simulations, we reveal a lipid transport mechanism that involves a coupled movement of the periplasmic domain and transmembrane helices of the MmpL3 transporter that facilitates the shuttling of lipids to the mycobacterial cell wall.

Mycobacterial membrane protein Large 3 (MmpL3) is a transporter required for shuttling trehalose monomycolate. Structures of M. smegmatis MmpL3 with and without substrate reveal the mechanism by which MmpL3 transports this essential precursor of lipids for the mycobacterial cell wall.  相似文献   

2.
When the localization of mycolic acid biosynthetic activity was examined with Bacterionema matruchotii cells disrupted by the ultrasonic vibration method, activity was detected only in the cell wall fraction, not in the inner membrane nor in the 78,000g supernatant. Either the supernatant or sugar was absolutely required for the incorporation of [14C]palmitate into mycolic acids. Among sugars examined, glucose was most effective, with maltose being second. Unexpectedly, trehalose was inert. As to substrate, the present system utilized free palmitic acid rather than palmitoyl-CoA. The reaction products from palmitate and glucose were glucose mycolate and trehalose monomycolate, in which the label from [14C]palmitate or [14C]glucose was incorporated. Glucose palmitate was also formed. Addition of trehalose resulted in a shift from glucose mycolate to trehalose monomycolate. These data clearly indicate that sugars play an important role in the synthesis of mycolic acids from free fatty acids.  相似文献   

3.
Mycolic acids are essential components of the cell walls of bacteria belonging to the suborder Corynebacterineae, including the important human pathogens Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Mycobacterium leprae. Mycolic acid biosynthesis is complex and the target of several frontline antimycobacterial drugs. The condensation of two fatty acids to form a 2-alkyl-3-keto mycolate precursor and the subsequent reduction of this precursor represent two key and highly conserved steps in this pathway. Although the enzyme catalyzing the condensation step has recently been identified, little is known about the putative reductase. Using an extensive bioinformatic comparison of the genomes of M. tuberculosis and Corynebacterium glutamicum, we identified NCgl2385, the orthologue of Rv2509 in M. tuberculosis, as a potential reductase candidate. Deletion of the gene in C. glutamicum resulted in a slow growing strain that was deficient in arabinogalactan-linked mycolates and synthesized abnormal forms of the mycolate-containing glycolipids trehalose dicorynomycolate and trehalose monocorynomycolate. Analysis of the native and acetylated trehalose glycolipids by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry indicated that these novel glycolipids contained an unreduced beta-keto ester. This was confirmed by analysis of sodium borodeuteride-reduced mycolic acids by gas chromatography mass spectrometry. Reintroduction of the NCgl2385 gene into the mutant restored the transfer of mature mycolic acids to both the trehalose glycolipids and cell wall arabinogalactan. These data indicate that NCgl2385, which we have designated CmrA, is essential for the production of mature trehalose mycolates and subsequent covalent attachment of mycolic acids onto the cell wall, thus representing a focus for future structural and pathogenicity studies.  相似文献   

4.
We have isolated and purified to homogeneity an alpha,alpha'-trehalose 6-monomycolate:alpha,alpha'-trehalose mycolyltransferase (trehalose mycolyltransferase) from Mycobacterium smegmatis that catalyzes the exchange of a mycolyl group between trehalose, trehalose 6-monomycolate (TM), and trehalose 6,6'-dimycolate (TD). This enzyme was prominent in M. smegmatis and it catalyzed the following reactions. TM + [14C]trehalose in equilibrium [14C]TM + trehalose [14C]TM + TM in equilibrium [14C]TD + trehalose This enzyme was purified by (i) ammonium sulfate fractionation, (ii) QAE-Sephadex A-50 column chromatography, (iii) gel filtration on a Sephadex G-75 column, and (iv) SP-Sephadex C-50 column chromatography. The purified protein yielded a single band on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and its molecular weight was estimated to be 25,000. This enzyme was a glycoprotein, had no cofactor requirement, and was highly specific for alpha,alpha'-trehalose as the mycolate acceptor. It was less specific for the acyl donor group since the palmitoyl group in trehalose 6-monopalmitate was easily exchangeable. There was no TM acylhydrolase activity in the purified enzyme, suggesting that it is probably associated with the anabolic pathway of mycolic acid metabolism. We postulate the formation of a mycolyl-enzyme intermediate in this reaction. Such an intermediate could play a central role in the transfer of mycolic acid to form the prominent cell wall components of mycobacterial TD and possibly murein-arabinogalactan-mycolate.  相似文献   

5.
Location of the mycolyl ester substituents in the cell walls of mycobacteria   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
The question of the precise location of mycolic acids, the single most distinctive cell wall entity of members of the Mycobacterium genus, has now been addressed. The free hydroxyl functions of the arabinogalactan component of the mycobacterial cell wall were O-methylated under conditions in which the mycolyl esters were not cleaved. Subsequent replacement of the mycolyl functions with O-ethyl groups resulted in an acid- and base-stable differentially O-alkylated surrogate polysaccharide, more amenable to analysis. Complete hydrolysis, reduction, acetylation, and gas chromatography/mass spectrometry revealed the unexpected finding that the mycolyl substituents were selectively and equally distributed on the 5-hydroxyl functions of terminal- and 2-linked arabinofuranosyl (Araf) residues. Further analysis of the O-alkylated cell wall through partial acid hydrolysis, NaB[2H]4 reduction, pentadeuterioethylation, and gas chromatography/mass spectrometry demonstrated that the mycolyl units are clustered in groups of four on the previously recognized nonreducing terminal pentaarabinosyl unit [beta-Araf-(1----2)-alpha-Araf)2-3, 5-alpha-Araf. However, only about two-thirds of the available pentasaccharide units are so substituted. Thus, the antigenicity of the arabinan component of mycobacterial cell walls may be explained by the fact that about one-third of the pentaarabinosyl units are not mycolyated and are available for interaction with the immune system. On the other hand, the extreme hydrophobicity and impenetrability of the mycobacterial cell may be explained by the same motif also acting as the fulerum for massive esterified paraffin residues. New fundamental information on the structure of mycobacterial cell walls will aid in our comprehension of its impenetrability to antibiotics and role in immunopathogenesis and persistence of disease.  相似文献   

6.
Four new sulfonates were prepared as potential inhibitors of antigen 85C, a mycolyl transferase involved in the biosynthesis of the mycobacterial cell wall being designed on the basis of the proposed catalytic mechanism and antigen 85C crystal structure. The inhibitors contained a sulfonate moiety, 3-phenoxybenzyl alcohol or N-(hydroxyethyl)phthalimide as trehalose mimetics, and an alkyl chain of different length mimicking either the mycolate (alpha-chain or the mycolic acid (beta-branch. One compound displayed promising activity in a mycolyltransferase inhibition assay (compound 2b, IC50 = 4.3 microM). The two compounds containing a phthalimide moiety (compounds 3a and 3b) showed significant and selective cytotoxicity against the breast cancer cell line MDA-MB231.  相似文献   

7.
Four new sulfonates were prepared as potential inhibitors of antigen 85C, a mycolyl transferase involved in the biosynthesis of the mycobacterial cell wall being designed on the basis of the proposed catalytic mechanism and antigen 85C crystal structure. The inhibitors contained a sulfonate moiety, 3-phenoxybenzyl alcohol or N-(hydroxyethyl)phthalimide as trehalose mimetics, and an alkyl chain of different length mimicking either the mycolate (α-chain or the mycolic acid (β-branch. One compound displayed promising activity in a mycolyltransferase inhibition assay (compound 2b, IC50 = 4.3 μM). The two compounds containing a phthalimide moiety (compounds 3a and 3b) showed significant and selective cytotoxicity against the breast cancer cell line MDA-MB231.  相似文献   

8.
Mycolic acids constitute the waxy layer of the outer cell wall of Mycobacterium spp. and a few other genera. They are diverse in structure, providing a unique chromatographic foot-print for almost each of the more than 70 Mycobacterium species. Although mainly esterified to cell wall arabinogalactan, trehalose or glucose, some free mycolic acid is secreted during in vitro growth of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. In M. tuberculosis, α-, keto- and methoxy-mycolic acids are the main classes, each differing in their ability to attract neutrophils, induce foamy macrophages or adopt an antigenic structure for antibody recognition. Of interest is their particular relationship to cholesterol, discovered by their ability to attract cholesterol, to bind Amphotericin B or to be recognised by monoclonal antibodies that cross-react with cholesterol. The structural elements that determine this diverse functionality include the carboxylic acid in the mycolic motif, as well as the nature and stereochemistry of the two functional groups in the merochain. The functional diversity of mycolic acid classes implies that much information may be contained in the selective expression and secretion of mycolic acids to establish tuberculosis after infection of the host. Their cholesteroid nature may relate to how they utilize host cholesterol for their persistent survival.  相似文献   

9.
Control of cell wall assembly by a histone-like protein in Mycobacteria   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Bacteria coordinate assembly of the cell wall as well as synthesis of cellular components depending on the growth state. The mycobacterial cell wall is dominated by mycolic acids covalently linked to sugars, such as trehalose and arabinose, and is critical for pathogenesis of mycobacteria. Transfer of mycolic acids to sugars is necessary for cell wall biogenesis and is mediated by mycolyltransferases, which have been previously identified as three antigen 85 (Ag85) complex proteins. However, the regulation mechanism which links cell wall biogenesis and the growth state has not been elucidated. Here we found that a histone-like protein has a dual concentration-dependent regulatory effect on mycolyltransferase functions of the Ag85 complex through direct binding to both the Ag85 complex and the substrate, trehalose-6-monomycolate, in the cell wall. A histone-like protein-deficient Mycobacterium smegmatis strain has an unusual crenellated cell wall structure and exhibits impaired cessation of glycolipid biosynthesis in the growth-retarded phase. Furthermore, we found that artificial alteration of the amount of the extracellular histone-like protein and the Ag85 complex changes the growth rate of mycobacteria, perhaps due to impaired down-regulation of glycolipid biosynthesis. Our results demonstrate novel regulation of cell wall assembly which has an impact on bacterial growth.  相似文献   

10.
By data mining in the sequence of the Corynebacterium glutamicum ATCC 13032 genome, six putative mycolyltransferase genes were identified that code for proteins with similarity to the N-terminal domain of the mycolic acid transferase PS1 of the related C. glutamicum strain ATCC 17965. The genes identified were designated cop1, cmt1, cmt2, cmt3, cmt4, and cmt5 ( cmt from corynebacterium mycolyl transferases). cop1 encodes a protein of 657 amino acids, which is larger than the proteins encoded by the cmt genes with 365, 341, 483, 483, and 411 amino acids. Using bioinformatics tools, it was shown that all six gene products are equipped with signal peptides and esterase domains. Proteome analyses of the cell envelope of C. glutamicum ATCC 13032 resulted in identification of the proteins Cop1, Cmt1, Cmt2, and Cmt4. All six mycolyltransferase genes were used for mutational analysis. cmt4 could not be mutated and is considered to be essential. cop1 was found to play an additional role in cell shape formation. A triple mutant carrying mutations in cop1, cmt1, and cmt2 aggregated when cultivated in MM1 liquid medium. This mutant was also no longer able to synthesize trehalose di coryno mycolate (TDCM). Since single and double mutants of the genes cop1, cmt1, and cmt2 could form TDCM, it is concluded that the three genes, cop1, cmt1, and cmt2, are involved in TDCM biosynthesis. The presence of the putative esterase domain makes it highly possible that cop1, cmt1, and cmt2 encode enzymes synthesizing TDCM from trehalose monocorynomycolate.  相似文献   

11.
Isolation of glycolipids from Nocardia asteroides, N. farcinica, Gordona lentifragmenta and G. bronchialis, by column chromatography of lipid extracts on a 50% (w/w) mixture of silicic acid and silica gel H, is described. The isolated materials were partially characterized by infrared spectroscopy, optical rotation and refractive index measurements, and by identifying the products of alkaline hydrolysis. Analytical studies showed that the glycolipids released only trehalose in the aqueous phase while mycolic acids were the constituent fatty acids identified.The isolated lipids are trehalose esters in which the trehalose molecule is esterified with mycolic acids.  相似文献   

12.
Mycolic acids are a key component of the mycobacterial cell wall, providing structure and forming a major permeability barrier. In Mycobacterium tuberculosis mycolic acids are synthesized by type I and type II fatty acid synthases. One of the enzymes of the type II system is encoded by fabG1. We demonstrate here that this gene can be deleted from the M. tuberculosis chromosome only when another functional copy is provided elsewhere, showing that under normal culture conditions fabG1 is essential. FabG1 activity can be replaced by the corresponding enzyme from the closely related species Mycobacterium smegmatis but not by the enzyme from Escherichia coli. M. tuberculosis carrying FabG from M. smegmatis showed no phenotypic changes, and both the mycolic acids and cell wall permeability were unchanged. Thus, M. tuberculosis and M. smegmatis enzymes are interchangeable and do not control the lengths and types of mycolic acids synthesized.  相似文献   

13.
The major cell wall amino acids and sugars in 177 strains of coryneform bacteria were determined using a 'rapid'method. Representatives were examined for free mycolic acids and the oxygen requirements of all strains were determined. Included were named strains, most of which were labelled Arthrobacter, Brevibacterium, Cellulomonas, Corynebacterium or Microbacterium , and a similar number of unnamed isolates from various natural sources. Strains which contained meso -diaminopimelic acid (DAP) were divided into four groups according to their oxygen requirements, the wall sugars and the occurrence and nature of free mycolic acids. Group 1 strains were mainly facultatively anaerobic and contained arabinose and mycolic acids of the Corynebacterium type. They were considered to be members of Corynebacterium sensu stricto and included Cor. diphtheriae and related animal parasites, Microbact. flavum , and Cor. glutamicum and similar species. Group 2 strains were aerobic, contained arabinose and mycolic acids of the 'rhodochrous'type and were considered members of the ' rhodochrous 'complex. Group 3 strains were aerobic, contained ribose and no mycolic acids. Most were Br. linens strains from cheese but a few, possibly related strains, were from other habitats. Group 4 strains were aerobic and contained neither a pentose sugar nor mycolic acids and were of unknown taxonomic status. Most remaining strains contained lysine or ornithine in the wall and smaller numbers contained L-DAP or diaminobutyric acid; none contained mycolic acids. The chemotaxonomic data are discussed in relation to recent numerical taxonomic studies of coryneform bacteria.  相似文献   

14.
A 105,000 x g residue fraction of Mycobacteriumsmegmatis contains an enzyme (acyl transferase) that transfers endogenous mycolic acid to trehalose monomycolate to yield trehalose dimycolate. This enzyme activity is stable to repeated freezing and thawing and is unaffected by the antimycobacterial drug, ethambutol. These results show that trehalose monomycolate is a direct precursor of trehalose dimycolate and suggest the presence of activated mycolic acids (acyl donor) in the cell-free system.  相似文献   

15.
The mycobacterial cell wall is extraordinarily thick and tight consisting mainly of (1). long chain fatty acids, the mycolic acids, and (2). a unique polysaccharide, arabinogalactan (AG). These two chemical constituents are covalently linked through ester bonds. Minnikin (The Biology of the Mycobacteria; Academic: London, 1982) proposed that the mycobacterial cell wall is composed of an asymmetric lipid bilayer. The inner leaflet of the cell wall contains mycolic acids covalently linked to AG. This inner leaflet is believed to have the lowest permeability to organic compounds of the overall cell wall. Conformational search and molecular dynamics simulation were used to explore the conformational profile of AG and the conformations and structural organization of the mycolic acid-AG complex, and overall, an inner leaflet molecular model of the cell wall was constructed. The terminal arabinose residues of AG that serve as linkers between AG and mycolic acids were found to exist in four major chemical configurations. The mycolate hydrocarbon chains were determined to be tightly packed and perpendicular to the "plane" formed by the oxygen atoms of the 5-hydroxyl groups of the terminal arabinose residues. For Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the average packing distance between mycolic acids is estimated to be approximately 7.3 A. Thus, Minnikin's model is supported by this computational study. Overall, this modeling and simulation approach provides a way to probe the mechanism of low permeability of the cell wall and the intrinsic drug resistance of M. tuberculosis. In addition, monolayer models were built for both dipalmitoylphosphatidylethanolamine and dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine, two common phospholipids in bacterial and animal membranes, respectively. Structural comparisons of these cell wall phospholipid membrane models were made to the M. tuberculosis cell wall model.  相似文献   

16.
The Mycobacterium tuberculosis 30 kDa major secretory protein (antigen 85B) is the most abundant protein exported by M. tuberculosis, as well as a potent immunoprotective antigen and a leading drug target. A mycolyl transferase of 285 residues, it is closely related to two other mycolyl transferases, each of molecular mass 32 kDa: antigen 85A and antigen 85C. All three catalyze transfer of the fatty acid mycolate from one trehalose monomycolate to another, resulting in trehalose dimycolate and free trehalose, thus helping to build the bacterial cell wall. We have determined two crystal structures of M. tuberculosis antigen 85B (ag85B), initially by molecular replacement using antigen 85C as a probe. The apo ag85B model is refined against 1.8 A data, to an R-factor of 0.196 (R(free) is 0.276), and includes all residues except the N-terminal Phe. The active site immobilizes a molecule of the cryoprotectant 2-methyl-2,4-pentanediol. Crystal growth with addition of trehalose resulted in a second ag85B crystal structure (1.9 A resolution; R-factor is 0.195; R(free) is 0.285). Trehalose binds in two sites at opposite ends of the active-site cleft. In our proposed mechanism model, the trehalose at the active site Ser126 represents the trehalose liberated by temporary esterification of Ser126, while the other trehalose represents the incoming trehalose monomycolate just prior to swinging over to the first trehalose site to displace the mycolate from its serine ester. Our proposed interfacial mechanism minimizes aqueous exposure of the apolar mycolates. Based on the trehalose-bound structure, we suggest a new class of antituberculous drugs, made by connecting two trehalose molecules by an amphipathic linker.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Mycolic acids are 70-90 carbon, alpha-alkyl, beta-hydroxy fatty acids constituting a major component of the cell envelope of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The fact that the mycolic acid biosynthetic pathway is both essential in mycobacteria and the target for many first-line anti-TB drugs necessitates a detailed understanding of its biochemistry. A whole cell-free, but cell particulate- and membrane-containing enzyme preparation for mycolic acid biosynthesis was developed a few years ago and studied extensively. This system was shown to catalyze the synthesis of mature mycolic acids from [14C]acetate, but allows only minimal deposition into the cell wall proper. In the meantime the sequence of the entire genome of M. tuberculosis has been elucidated and its analysis using numerous protein sequence-based algorithms predicted cytoplasmic localization and a soluble, not a particulate, nature for the enzymes involved in the mycolic acid synthetic pathway. Accordingly, we re-assessed the 'cell-free' system for mycolic acid synthesis and concluded that it is probably due to the presence of unbroken cells, since viable cells were recovered from the cell wall preparation. The amount of whole cells depended upon the efficiency of the cell disruption method and conditions, and the amount of mycolic acid synthesized by the putative cell-free system correlated with the content of whole cells. Thus, accumulated results from the use of this 'cell-free' cell wall-based system should be re-evaluated in the light of these new data.  相似文献   

19.
Ligation of mycolic acids to structural components of the mycobacterial cell wall generates a hydrophobic, impermeable barrier that provides resistance to toxic compounds such as antibiotics. Secreted proteins FbpA, FbpB, and FbpC attach mycolic acids to arabinogalactan, generating mycolic acid methyl esters (MAME) or trehalose, generating alpha,alpha'-trehalose dimycolate (TDM; also called cord factor). Our studies of Mycobacterium smegmatis showed that disruption of fbpA did not affect MAME levels but resulted in a 45% reduction of TDM. The fbpA mutant displayed increased sensitivity to both front-line tuberculosis-targeted drugs as well as other broad-spectrum antibiotics widely used for antibacterial chemotherapy. The irregular, hydrophobic surface of wild-type M. smegmatis colonies became hydrophilic and smooth in the mutant. While expression of M. smegmatis fbpA restored defects of the mutant, heterologous expression of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis fbpA gene was less effective. A single mutation in the M. smegmatis FbpA esterase domain inactivated its ability to provide antibiotic resistance. These data show that production of TDM by FbpA is essential for the intrinsic antibiotic resistance and normal colonial morphology of some mycobacteria and support the concept that FbpA-specific inhibitors, alone or in combination with other antibiotics, could provide an effective treatment to tuberculosis and other mycobacterial diseases.  相似文献   

20.
Cord factor (trehalose 6,6'-dimycolate, CF) is a glycolipid located in the outer mycobacterial cell wall that is implicated in the pathogenesis of mycobacteria. Furthermore, CF is a convenient model for studying mycolic acid residues, the major lipid constituents of the mycobacterial cell wall that are believed to form a barrier against drug penetration. The surface properties of CF and its interactions with phosphatidylinositol (PI) have been investigated using the monolayer technique. During compression/expansion/recompression cycles, CF monolayers switch from a loosely packed to a more tightly packed structure. The change in surface properties suggests a molecular rearrangement, perhaps involving interdigitation of long and short chains of the CF molecules. In CF-PI monolayers, maximal lateral packing density occurs between 0.5 and 0.7 mole fraction CF, which is close to the relative composition of mycolic acid residues and shorter-chain lipids in the mycobacterial cell wall. Low concentrations of CF increase the order in PI monolayers, consistent with CF toxicity involving rigidification of cell membranes.  相似文献   

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