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1.
Non-beta-lactamase-producing, penicillin-resistant strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae (CMRNG strains) produce altered forms of penicillin-binding protein 2 (PBP2) that have decreased affinity for penicillin. A feature of PBP2 from all CMRNG strains is the presence of an additional residue (Asp-345A) that is absent from PBP2 of penicillin-sensitive strains. The role of the additional aspartic acid residue in the decreased affinity of PBP2 is unclear as PBP2 of all previously examined CMRNG strains possess several other amino acid sequence alterations, in addition to the insertion of Asp-345A, compared to PBP2 of penicillin-sensitive strains. Site-directed mutagenesis has been used to insert the Asp-345A codon into the penA gene from a penicillin-sensitive gonococcus. The resulting penA gene expressed an altered form of PBP2 that had a decreased affinity for benzylpenicillin and was able to transform a penicillin-sensitive strain of N. gonorrhoeae to an increased level of resistance to benzylpenicillin. Insertion of amino acids other than aspartic acid did not produce forms of PBP2 that provided increased resistance to penicillin. Removal of the Asp-345A codon from the penA gene of a CMRNG strain reduced its ability to transform a penicillin-sensitive strain to an increased level of penicillin resistance. The reduction in the affinity of PBP2 in CMRNG strains is therefore largely, although not exclusively, due to the insertion of Asp-345A. Clinical isolates that produce altered forms of PBP2 that differ from that of penicillin-sensitive strains only in the insertion of Asp-345A have been identified.  相似文献   

2.
Insertion of an aspartate residue at position 345a in penicillin-binding protein 2 (PBP 2), which lowers the rate of penicillin acylation by ~6-fold, is commonly observed in penicillin-resistant strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae. Here, we show that insertions of other amino acids also lower the penicillin acylation rate of PBP 2, but none supported growth of N. gonorrhoeae, indicating loss of essential transpeptidase activity. The Asp345a mutation likely acts by altering the interaction between its adjacent residue, Asp346, in the β2a-β2d hairpin loop and Ser363, the middle residue of the SXN active site motif. Because the adjacent aspartate creates ambiguity in the position of the insertion, we also examined if insertions at position 346a could confer decreased susceptibility to penicillin. However, only aspartate insertions were identified, indicating that only an Asp-Asp couple can confer resistance and retain transpeptidase function. The importance of the Asp346-Ser363 interaction was assessed by mutation of each residue to Ala. Although both mutants lowered the acylation rate of penicillin G by 5-fold, neither could support growth of N. gonorrhoeae, again indicating loss of transpeptidase function. Interaction between a residue in the equivalent of the β2a-β2d hairpin loop and the middle residue of the SXN motif is observed in crystal structures of other Class B PBPs, and its importance is also supported by multisequence alignments. Overall, these results suggest that this conserved interaction can be manipulated (e.g., by insertion) to lower the acylation rate by β-lactam antibiotics and increase resistance, but only if essential transpeptidase activity is preserved.  相似文献   

3.
Resistance to penicillin in non-beta-lactamase-producing strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae (CMRNG strains) is mediated in part by the production of altered forms of penicillin-binding protein 2 (PBP 2) that have a decreased affinity for penicillin. The reduction in the affinity of PBP 2 is largely due to the insertion of an aspartic acid residue (Asp-345a) into the amino acid sequence of PBP 2. Truncated forms of N. gonorrhoeae PBP 2, which differed only by the insertion of Asp-345a, were constructed by placing the region of the penA genes encoding the periplasmic domain of PBP 2 (amino acids 42-581) into an ATG expression vector. When the recombinant PBP 2 molecules were overexpressed in Escherichia coli, insoluble PBP 2 inclusion bodies, which could be isolated by low-speed centrifugation of cell lysates, were formed. These insoluble aggregates were solubilized and the truncated PBP 2 polypeptides were partially purified by cation-exchange chromatography and gel filtration in the presence of denaturant prior to the refolding of the enzyme in vitro. After renaturation, gel filtration was used to separate monomeric soluble PBP 2 from improperly folded protein aggregates and other protein contaminants. A 4-liter culture of induced E. coli cells yielded 1.4 mg of soluble PBP 2 or PBP 2' (PBP 2 containing the Asp-345a insertion), both of which were estimated to be 99% pure. The affinity of soluble PBP 2' for [3H]penicillin G was decreased fourfold relative to that of soluble PBP 2, and their affinities were found to be identical to the affinities of the full-length PBP 2 enzymes that were previously determined in N. gonorrhoeae membranes. Furthermore, soluble PBP 2 displayed a rank order of affinity for several other beta-lactam antibiotics that was consistent with the rank order of affinities previously reported for the native molecules. On the basis of these results, both of these soluble PBPs should be suitable for crystallization and X-ray crystallographic analysis.  相似文献   

4.
A soluble form of penicillin-binding protein 3 (PBP 3) from Neisseria gonorrhoeae was expressed and purified from Escherichia coli and characterized for its interaction with beta-lactam antibiotics, its catalytic properties with peptide and peptidoglycan substrates, and its role in cell viability and morphology. PBP 3 had an unusually high k(2)/K' value relative to other PBPs for acylation with penicillin (7.7 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1)) at pH 8.5 at 25 degrees C and hydrolyzed bound antibiotic very slowly (k(3) < 4.6 x 10(-5) s(-1), t(1/2) > 230 min). PBP 3 also demonstrated exceptionally high carboxypeptidase activity with a k(cat) of 580 s(-1) and a k(cat)/K(m) of 1.8 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1) with the substrate N(alpha)-Boc-N(epsilon)-Cbz-L-Lys-D-Ala-D-Ala. This is the highest k(cat) value yet reported for a PBP or other serine peptidases. Activity against a approximately D-Ala-D-Lac peptide substrate was approximately 2-fold lower than against the analogous approximately D-Ala-D-Ala peptide substrate, indicating that deacylation is rate determining for both amide and ester hydrolysis. The pH dependence profiles of both carboxypeptidase activity and beta-lactam acylation were bell-shaped with maximal activity at pH 8.0-8.5. PBP 3 displayed weak transpeptidase activity in a model transpeptidase reaction but was active as an endopeptidase, cleaving dimeric peptide cross-links. Deletion of PBP 3 alone had little effect on viability, growth rate, and morphology of N. gonorrhoeae, although deletion of both PBP 3 and PBP 4, the other low-molecular-mass PBP in N. gonorrhoeae, resulted in a decreased growth rate and marked morphological abnormalities.  相似文献   

5.
Beta-lactam antibiotics, including penicillins and cephalosporins, inhibit penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs), which are essential for bacterial cell wall biogenesis. Pathogenic bacteria have evolved efficient antibiotic resistance mechanisms that, in Gram-positive bacteria, include mutations to PBPs that enable them to avoid beta-lactam inhibition. Lactivicin (LTV; 1) contains separate cycloserine and gamma-lactone rings and is the only known natural PBP inhibitor that does not contain a beta-lactam. Here we show that LTV and a more potent analog, phenoxyacetyl-LTV (PLTV; 2), are active against clinically isolated, penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae strains. Crystallographic analyses of S. pneumoniae PBP1b reveal that LTV and PLTV inhibition involves opening of both monocyclic cycloserine and gamma-lactone rings. In PBP1b complexes, the ring-derived atoms from LTV and PLTV show a notable structural convergence with those derived from a complexed cephalosporin (cefotaxime; 3). The structures imply that derivatives of LTV will be useful in the search for new antibiotics with activity against beta-lactam-resistant bacteria.  相似文献   

6.
Staphylococci, a leading cause of infections worldwide, have devised two mechanisms for resistance to beta-lactam antibiotics. One is production of beta-lactamases, hydrolytic resistance enzymes, and the other is the expression of penicillin-binding protein 2a (PBP 2a), which is not susceptible to inhibition by beta-lactam antibiotics. The beta-lactam sensor-transducer (BlaR), an integral membrane protein, binds beta-lactam antibiotics on the cell surface and transduces the information to the cytoplasm, where gene expression is derepressed for both beta-lactamase and penicillin-binding protein 2a. The gene for the sensor domain of the sensor-transducer protein (BlaR(S)) of Staphylococcus aureus was cloned, and the protein was purified to homogeneity. It is shown that beta-lactam antibiotics covalently modify the BlaR(S) protein. The protein was shown to contain the unusual carboxylated lysine that activates the active site serine residue for acylation by the beta-lactam antibiotics. The details of the kinetics of interactions of the BlaR(S) protein with a series of beta-lactam antibiotics were investigated. The protein undergoes acylation by beta-lactam antibiotics with microscopic rate constants (k(2)) of 1-26 s(-1), yet the deacylation process was essentially irreversible within one cell cycle. The protein undergoes a significant conformational change on binding with beta-lactam antibiotics, a process that commences at the preacylation complex and reaches its full effect after protein acylation has been accomplished. These conformational changes are likely to be central to the signal transduction events when the organism is exposed to the beta-lactam antibiotic.  相似文献   

7.
Penicillin-binding protein 5 (PBP 5) of Escherichia coli functions as a d-alanine carboxypeptidase (CPase), cleaving d-alanine from the C terminus of cell wall peptides. Like all PBPs, PBP 5 forms a covalent acyl-enzyme complex with beta-lactam antibiotics; however, PBP 5 is distinguished by its high rate of deacylation of the acylenzyme complex (t(1/2) approximately 10 min). A Gly105 --> Asp mutation in PBP 5 markedly impairs deacylation with only minor effects on acylation, and abolishes CPase activity. We have determined the three-dimensional structure of a soluble form of wild-type PBP 5 at 1.85-A resolution and have also refined the structure of the G105D mutant form of PBP 5 to 1.9-A resolution. Comparison of the two structures reveals that the major effect of the mutation is to disorder a loop comprising residues 74-90 that sits atop the SXN motif of the active site. Deletion of the 74-90 loop in wild-type PBP 5 markedly diminished the deacylation rate of penicillin G with a minimal impact on acylation, and abolished CPase activity. These effects were very similar to those observed in the G105D mutant, reinforcing the idea that this mutation causes disordering of the 74-90 loop. Mutation of two consecutive serines within this loop, which hydrogen bond to Ser110 and Asn112 in the SXN motif, had marked effects on CPase activity, but not beta-lactam antibiotic binding or hydrolysis. These data suggest a direct role for the SXN motif in deacylation of the acyl-enzyme complex and imply that the functioning of this motif is modulated by the 74-90 loop.  相似文献   

8.
The mechanism of synergy between vancomycin and penicillin, as well as other beta-lactam antibiotics, was examined in a penicillin-resistant E. faecium (D366) expressing an inducible low-level resistance to vancomycin. It was demonstrated that penicillin per se was not able to reduce the inducible expression of the 39.5-kDa protein (VANB) or the carboxypeptidase activity which are involved in the mechanism of vancomycin resistance of this strain. Assays of competition between 3H-benzylpenicillin and diverse beta-lactam antibiotics suggested as the most likely explanation of the synergy that, once vancomycin resistance has been induced, the high-molecular mass penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs), and possibly PBP1 in particular, which have a high affinity for beta-lactam antibiotics, take over the role of the low-affinity PBP5 which is, in the non-induced strain, responsible for beta-lactam resistance.  相似文献   

9.
Penicillin-binding protein 2a (PBP2a) of Staphylococcus aureus is refractory to inhibition by available beta-lactam antibiotics, resulting in resistance to these antibiotics. The strains of S. aureus that have acquired the mecA gene for PBP2a are designated as methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA). The mecA gene was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli, and PBP2a was purified to homogeneity. The kinetic parameters for interactions of several beta-lactam antibiotics (penicillins, cephalosporins, and a carbapenem) and PBP2a were evaluated. The enzyme manifests resistance to covalent modification by beta-lactam antibiotics at the active site serine residue in two ways. First, the microscopic rate constant for acylation (k2) is attenuated by 3 to 4 orders of magnitude over the corresponding determinations for penicillin-sensitive penicillin-binding proteins. Second, the enzyme shows elevated dissociation constants (Kd) for the non-covalent pre-acylation complexes with the antibiotics, the formation of which ultimately would lead to enzyme acylation. The two factors working in concert effectively prevent enzyme acylation by the antibiotics in vivo, giving rise to drug resistance. Given the opportunity to form the acyl enzyme species in in vitro experiments, circular dichroism measurements revealed that the enzyme undergoes substantial conformational changes in the course of the process that would lead to enzyme acylation. The observed conformational changes are likely to be a hallmark for how this enzyme carries out its catalytic function in cross-linking the bacterial cell wall.  相似文献   

10.
Penicillin-binding protein 2x (PBP 2x) of Streptococcus pneumoniae is one of the high-molecular-weight PBPs involved in the development of intrinsic beta-lactam resistance. Point mutations in the PBP 2x genes (pbpX) have now been characterized in five independent spontaneous laboratory mutants in order to identify protein regions which are important for interaction with beta-lactam antibiotics. All mutant genes contained two to four mutations resulting in amino acid substitutions within the penicillin-binding domain of PBP 2x, and none of the mutants carried an identical set of mutations. For one particular mutant, C606, carrying four mutations in pbpX, the mutations at positions 601 and 597 conferred first- and second-level resistance when introduced into the susceptible parent strain S. pneumoniae R6. However, the other two mutations, at amino acid positions 289 and 422, which were originally selected at the fifth and sixth isolation steps, did not contribute at all to resistance in similar experiments. This suggests that they are phenotypically expressed only in combination with mutations in other genes. Three PBP 2x regions were mutated in from two to all four mutants carrying a low-affinity PBP 2x. However, in a fifth mutant containing a PBP 2x with apparent zero affinity for beta-lactams, the three mutations in pbpX mapped at entirely different positions. This demonstrates that different mutational pathways exist for remodeling this PBP during resistance development.  相似文献   

11.
Penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs) are the main targets for beta-lactam antibiotics, such as penicillins and cephalosporins, in a wide range of bacterial species. In some Gram-positive strains, the surge of resistance to treatment with beta-lactams is primarily the result of the proliferation of mosaic PBP-encoding genes, which encode novel proteins by recombination. PBP2x is a primary resistance determinant in Streptococcus pneumoniae, and its modification is an essential step in the development of high level beta-lactam resistance. To understand such a resistance mechanism at an atomic level, we have solved the x-ray crystal structure of PBP2x from a highly penicillin-resistant clinical isolate of S. pneumoniae, Sp328, which harbors 83 mutations in the soluble region. In the proximity of the Sp328 PBP2x* active site, the Thr(338) --> Ala mutation weakens the local hydrogen bonding network, thus abrogating the stabilization of a crucial buried water molecule. In addition, the Ser(389) --> Leu and Asn(514) --> His mutations produce a destabilizing effect that generates an "open" active site. It has been suggested that peptidoglycan substrates for beta-lactam-resistant PBPs contain a large amount of abnormal, branched peptides, whereas sensitive strains tend to catalyze cross-linking of linear forms. Thus, in vivo, an "open" active site could facilitate the recognition of distinct, branched physiological substrates.  相似文献   

12.
Development of penicillin resistance in Streptococcus pneumoniae is due to successive mutations in penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs) which reduce their affinity for beta-lactam antibiotics. PBP2x is one of the high-Mr PBPs which appears to be altered both in resistant clinical isolates, and in cefotaxime-resistant laboratory mutants. In this study, we have sequenced a 2564 base-pair chromosomal fragment from the penicillin-sensitive S. pneumoniae strain R6, which contains the PBP2x gene. Within this fragment, a 2250 base-pair open reading frame was found which coded for a protein having an Mr of 82.35kD, a value which is in good agreement with the Mr of 80-85 kD measured by SDS-gel electrophoresis of the PBP2x protein itself. The N-terminal region resembled an unprocessed signal peptide and was followed by a hydrophobic sequence that may be responsible for membrane attachment of PBP2x. The corresponding nucleotide sequence of the PBP2x gene from C504, a cefotaxime-resistant laboratory mutant obtained after five selection steps, contained three nucleotide substitutions, causing three amino acid alterations within the beta-lactam binding domain of the PBP2x protein. Alterations affecting similar regions of Escherichia coli PBP3 and Neisseria gonorrhoeae PBP2 from beta-lactam-resistant strains are known. The penicillin-binding domain of PBP2x shows highest homology with these two PBPs and S. pneumoniae PBP2b. In contrast, the N-terminal extension of PBP2x has the highest homology with E. coli PBP2 and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus PBP2'. No significant homology was detected with PBP1a or PBP1b of Escherichia coli, or with the low-Mr PBPs.  相似文献   

13.
PBP2x is a primary determinant of beta-lactams resistance in Streptococcus pneumoniae. Altered PBP2x with multiple mutations have a reduced "affinity" for the antibiotics. An important polymorphism is found in PBP2x sequences from clinical resistant strains. To understand the mechanism of resistance, it is necessary to identify and characterize the relevant substitutions. Many similar PBP2x sequences from resistant isolates have the previously studied T338A mutation, adjacent to the active site Ser337. We report here the structural and functional analysis of the M339F substitution that is found in a subset of these sequences, originating from highly resistant strains. The M339F mutation causes a 4-10-fold reduction of the reaction rate with beta-lactams, depending on the molecular context. In addition, release of the inactivated antibiotic from the active site is up to 3-fold faster as a result from the M339F mutation. These effects measured in vitro are correlated with the level of beta-lactam resistance in vivo conferred by several PBP2x variants. Thus, a single amino acid difference between similar PBP2x from clinical isolates can strongly modulate the degree of beta-lactam resistance. The crystal structure of the double mutant T338A/M339F solved to a resolution of 2.4 A shows a distortion of the active site and a reorientation of the hydroxyl group of the active site Ser337, which can explain the kinetic effects of the mutations.  相似文献   

14.
Kinetic interactions of beta-lactam antibiotics such as penicillin-G and cefotaxime with normal, penicillin-susceptible PBP2x from Streptococcus pneumoniae and a penicillin-resistant PBP2x (PBP2x(R)) from a resistant clinical isolate (CS109) of the bacterium have been extensively characterized using electrospray mass spectrometry coupled with a fast reaction (quench flow) technique. Kinetic evidence for a two-step acylation of PBP2x by penicillin-G has been demonstrated, and the dissociation constant, K(d) of 0.9 mm, and the acylation rate constant, k(2) of 180 s(-1), have been determined for the first time. The millimolar range K(d) implies that the beta-lactam fits to the active site pocket of the penicillin-sensitive PBP rather poorly, whereas the extremely fast k(2) value indicates that this step contributes most of the binding affinity of the beta-lactam. The values of K(d) (4 mm) and k(2) (0.56 s(-1)) were also determined for PBP2x(R). The combined value of k(2)/K(d), known as overall binding efficiency, for PBP2x(R) (137 m(-1) s(-1)) was over 1000-fold slower than that for PBP2x (200,000 m(-1) s(-1)), indicating that a major part is played by the acylation steps in penicillin resistance. Most of the decreased binding efficiency of PBP2x(R) comes from the decreased ( approximately 300-fold) k(2). Kinetic studies of cefotaxime acylation of the two PBP2x proteins confirmed all of the above findings. Deacylation rate constants (k(3)) for the third step of the interactions were determined to be 8 x 10(-6) s(-1) for penicilloyl-PBP2x and 5.7 x 10(-4) s(-1) for penicilloyl-PBP2x(R), corresponding to over 70-fold increase of the deacylation rate for the resistant PBP2x(R). Similarly, over 80-fold enhancement of the deacylation rate was found for cefotaxime-PBP2x(R) complex (k(3) = 3 x 10(-4) s(-1)) as compared with that of cefotaxime-PBP2x complex (3.5 x 10(-6) s(-1)). This is the first time that such a significant increase of k(3) values was found for a beta-lactam-resistant penicillin-binding protein. These data indicate that the deacylation step also plays a role, which is much more important than previously thought, in PBP2x(R) resistance to beta-lactams.  相似文献   

15.
The penicillin-binding proteins (PBP) of a methicillin-resistant strain of Staphylococcus epidermidis, 100,604 p+m+ and a non-isogenic sensitive strain, p-m- were characterised. The presence of a novel PBP, produced by the methicillin-resistant strain of S. epidermidis, with an Mr identical to that of PBP2' in Staphylococcus aureus 13,136 p-m+, was revealed by sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and subsequent fluorography of solubilised membrane proteins isolated from cells labelled with [3H]benzylpenicillin. This novel PBP was only detected in cells which had been grown at 30 degrees C, in media containing beta-lactam antibiotic and 5% NaCl. The sensitivity of an attachment transpeptidation reaction measured under non-growing conditions in the sensitive and resistant strains indicated that the novel PBP catalysed this reaction. The similarity of radiolabelled peptides resulting from partial proteolytic digestion of the novel PBP in S. epidermidis 100,604 p+m+ and from PBP2' in S. aureus 13,136 p+m+ lends support to the theory that the additional DNA encoding PBP2' in S. aureus and the same protein in S. epidermidis has been passed to both species from an unknown source. Studies of the development and loss of resistance of attachment transpeptidase activity, and the appearance and disappearance of the novel protein when cultures of the resistant strain were transferred from conditions allowing the expression of resistance to those not allowing such expression and vice-versa, indicated that there was a strong correlation between the presence of PBP2' and the degree of resistance of the attachment transpeptidation reaction and that the production of this protein was affected by temperature at a regulatory or genetic level. Studies on the induction and loss of beta-lactamase activity and of the novel PBP when the resistant strain was grown in the presence or absence of beta-lactam antibiotics at either 40 degrees C or 30 degrees C suggests that there is little relationship between the production of this enzyme and of PBP2' other than the fact that beta-lactam antibiotics are common inducers of both.  相似文献   

16.
Penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs), the primary targets for beta-lactam antibiotics, are periplasmic membrane-attached proteins responsible for the construction and maintenance of the bacterial cell wall. Bacteria have developed several mechanisms of resistance, one of which is the mutation of the target enzymes to reduce their affinity for beta-lactam antibiotics. Here, we describe the structure of PBP2x from Streptococcus pneumoniae determined to 2.4 A. In addition, we also describe the PBP2x structure in complex with cefuroxime, a therapeutically relevant antibiotic, at 2.8 A. Surprisingly, two antibiotic molecules are observed: one as a covalent complex with the active-site serine residue, and a second one between the C-terminal and the transpeptidase domains. The structure of PBP2x reveals an active site similar to those of the class A beta-lactamases, albeit with an absence of unambiguous deacylation machinery. The structure highlights a few amino acid residues, namely Thr338, Thr550 and Gln552, which are directly related to the resistance phenomenon.  相似文献   

17.
Class resistance to beta-lactam antibiotics in Gram-positive bacteria is mediated by structural changes in transpeptidase penicillin-binding proteins. These structural changes render a complex series of interactions between antibiotic and protein that are energetically unfavorable, such that the active site is inactivated not at all or too slowly to prevent cell-wall synthesis and bacterial growth. Determination of the crystal structure of the low-affinity penicillin-binding protein PBP2a, which mediates beta-lactam antibiotic resistance in staphylococci, has identified the molecular structures and interactions that are responsible for resistance. This information could be useful for designing beta-lactams to overcome these structural impediments, as well as resistance.  相似文献   

18.
The penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs) are ubiquitous bacterial enzymes involved in cell wall biosynthesis, and are the targets of the beta-lactam antibiotics. The low molecular mass Neisseria gonorrhoeae PBP 4 (NG PBP 4) is the fourth PBP revealed in the gonococcal genome. NG PBP 4 was cloned, overexpressed, purified, and characterized for beta-lactam binding, DD-carboxypeptidase activity, acyl-donor substrate specificity, transpeptidase activity, inhibition by a number of active site directed reagents, and pH profile. NG PBP 4 was efficiently acylated by penicillin (30,000 m-1.s-1). Against a set of five alpha- and epsilon-substituted l-Lys-D-Ala-D-Ala substrates, NG PBP 4 exhibited wide variation in specificity with a preference for N epsilon-acylated substrates, suggesting a possible preference for crosslinked pentapeptide substrates in the cell wall. Substrates with an N epsilon-Cbz group demonstrated pronounced substrate inhibition. NG PBP 4 showed 30-fold higher activity against the depsipeptide Lac-ester substrate than against the analogous peptide substrate, an indication that k2 (acylation) is rate determining for carboxypeptidase activity. No transpeptidase activity was apparent in a model transpeptidase reaction. Among a number of active site-directed agents, N-chlorosuccinimide, elastinal, iodoacetamide, iodoacetic acid, and phenylglyoxal gave substantial inhibition, and methyl boronic acid gave modest inhibition. The pH profile for activity against Ac2-l-Lys-D-Ala-d-Ala (kcat/Km) was bell-shaped, with pKa values at 6.9 and 10.1. Comparison of the enzymatic properties of NG PBP 4 with other DD-carboxypeptidases highlights both similarities and differences within these enzymes, and suggests the possibility of common mechanistic roles for the two highly conserved active site lysines in Class A and C low molecular mass PBPs.  相似文献   

19.
Cha J  Vakulenko SB  Mobashery S 《Biochemistry》2007,46(26):7822-7831
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) has evolved two mechanisms for resistance to beta-lactam antibiotics. One is production of a beta-lactamase, and the other is that of penicillin-binding protein 2a (PBP 2a). The expression of these two proteins is regulated by the bla and mec operons, respectively. BlaR1 and MecR1 are beta-lactam sensor/signal transducer proteins, which experience acylation by beta-lactam antibiotics on the cell surface and transduce the signal into the cytoplasm. The C-terminal surface domain of MecR1 (MecRS) has been cloned, expressed, and purified to homogeneity. This protein has been characterized by documenting that it has a critical and unusual Nzeta-carboxylated lysine at position 394. Furthermore, the kinetics of interactions with beta-lactam antibiotics were evaluated, a process that entails conformational changes for the protein that might be critical for the signal transduction event. Kinetics of acylation of MecRS are suggestive that signal sensing may be the step where the two systems are substantially different from one another.  相似文献   

20.
Fuda C  Suvorov M  Shi Q  Hesek D  Lee M  Mobashery S 《Biochemistry》2007,46(27):8050-8057
The genome of Staphylococcus aureus is constantly in a state of flux, acquiring genes that enable the bacterium to maintain resistance in the face of antibiotic pressure. The acquisition of the mecA gene from an unknown origin imparted S. aureus with broad resistance to beta-lactam antibiotics, with the resultant strain designated as methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA). Epidemiological and genetic evidence suggests that the gene encoding PBP 2a of MRSA might have originated from Staphylococcus sciuri, an animal pathogen, where it exists as a silent gene of unknown function. We synthesized, cloned, and expressed the mecA gene of S. sciuri in Escherichia coli, and the protein product was purified to homogeneity. Biochemical characterization and comparison of the protein to PBP 2a of S. aureus revealed them to be highly similar. These characteristics start with sequence similarity but extend to biochemical behavior in inhibition by beta-lactam antibiotics, to the existence of an allosteric site for binding of bacterial peptidoglycan, to the issues of the sheltered active site, and to the need for conformational change in making the active site accessible to the substrate and the inhibitors. Altogether, the evidence strongly argues that the kinship between the two proteins is deep-rooted on the basis of many biochemical attributes quantified in this study.  相似文献   

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