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1.
Key information about the biosynthesis of polyketide metabolites has been uncovered by sequence analysis of the tetracenomycin C polyketide synthase genes (tcml) from Streptomyces glaucescens GLA.0. The sequence data revealed the presence of three complete open reading frames (ORFs). ORF1 and ORF2 appear to be translationally coupled and would encode proteins containing 426 and 405 amino acids, respectively. The two deduced proteins are homologous to known beta-ketoacyl synthases. ORF3 begins 70 nucleotides after the stop codon of ORF2 and would code for an 83 amino acid protein with a strong resemblance to known bacterial, animal and plant acyl-carrier proteins (ACP). The presence of an ACP gene within the tcm gene cluster suggests that different ACPs are used in fatty acid and polyketide biosynthesis in Streptomyces. We conclude from these data and earlier information that polyketide biosynthesis in S. glaucescens, and most likely in other bacteria, involves a multienzyme complex consisting of at least five types of enzymes: acylCoA transferases that load the acyl and 2-carboxyacyl precursors onto the ACP; a beta-ketoacyl synthase that, along with the acylated ACP, forms the poly-beta-ketoacyl intermediates; a poly-beta-ketone cyclase that forms carbocyclic structures from the latter intermediates; a beta-ketoacyl oxidoreductase that forms beta-hydroxyacyl intermediates or reduces ketone groups in fully formed polyketides; and a thioesterase that releases the assembled polyketide from the enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
Mycolic acids are long chain alpha-alkyl branched, beta-hydroxy fatty acids that represent a characteristic component of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis cell wall. Through their covalent attachment to peptidoglycan via an arabinogalactan polysaccharide, they provide the basis for an essential outer envelope membrane. Mycobacteria possess two fatty acid synthases (FAS); FAS-I carries out de novo synthesis of fatty acids while FAS-II is considered to elongate medium chain length fatty acyl primers to provide long chain (C(56)) precursors of mycolic acids. Here we report the crystal structure of Mycobacterium tuberculosis beta-ketoacyl acyl carrier protein synthase (ACP) II mtKasB, a mycobacterial elongation condensing enzyme involved in FAS-II. This enzyme, along with the M. tuberculosis beta-ketoacyl ACP synthase I mtKasA, catalyzes the Claisen-type condensation reaction responsible for fatty acyl elongation in FAS-II and are potential targets for development of novel anti-tubercular drugs. The crystal structure refined to 2.4 A resolution revealed that, like other KAS-II enzymes, mtKasB adopts a thiolase fold but contains unique structural features in the capping region that may be crucial to its preference for longer fatty acyl chains than its counterparts from other bacteria. Modeling of mtKasA using the mtKasB structure as a template predicts the overall structures to be almost identical, but a larger entrance to the active site tunnel is envisaged that might contribute to the greater sensitivity of mtKasA to the inhibitor thiolactomycin (TLM). Modeling of TLM binding in mtKasB shows that the drug fits the active site poorly and results of enzyme inhibition assays using TLM analogues are wholly consistent with our structural observations. Consequently, the structure described here further highlights the potential of TLM as an anti-tubercular lead compound and will aid further exploration of the TLM scaffold towards the design of novel compounds, which inhibit mycobacterial KAS enzymes more effectively.  相似文献   

3.
W Bao  P J Sheldon  C R Hutchinson 《Biochemistry》1999,38(30):9752-9757
Biosynthesis of the polyketide-derived carbon skeleton of daunorubicin (DNR) begins with propionate rather than acetate, which is the starter unit for most other aromatic polyketides. The dpsCgene has been implicated in specifying the unique propionate-starter unit, and it encodes a protein that is very similar to the Escherichia coli beta-ketoacyl:acyl carrier protein (ACP) synthase III (FabH or KS III) enzyme of fatty acid biosynthesis. Purified DpsC was found to use propionyl-coenzyme A as substrate and to be acylated by propionate at the Ser-118 residue. DpsC exhibits KS III activity in catalyzing the condensation of propionyl-CoA and malonyl-ACP, and also functions as an acyltransferase in the transfer of propionate to an ACP. The DpsC enzyme has a high-substrate specificity, utilizing only propionyl-CoA, and not malonyl-CoA, 2-methylmalonyl-CoA or acetyl-CoA, as the starter unit of DNR biosynthesis.  相似文献   

4.
5.
A putative instance of horizontal gene transfer (HGT) involving adjacent, discrete beta-ketoacyl synthase (KS), acyl carrier protein (ACP) and nonribosomal peptide synthase (NRPS) domains of the epothilone Type I polyketide biosynthetic gene cluster from the myxobacterium Sorangium cellulosom was identified using molecular phylogenetics and sequence analyses. The specific KS domain of the module EPO B fails to cluster phylogenetically with other epothilone KS sequences present at this locus, in contrast to what is typically observed in many other Type I polyketide synthase (PKS) biosynthetic loci. Furthermore, the GC content of the epoB KS, epoA ACP and NRPS domains differs significantly from the base composition of other epothilone domain sequences. In addition, the putatively transferred epothilone loci are located near previously identified transposon-like sequences. Lastly, comparison with other KS loci revealed another possible case of horizontal transfer of secondary metabolite genes in the genus Pseudomonas. This study emphasizes the use of several lines of concordant evidence (phylogenetics, base composition, transposon sequences) to infer the evolutionary history of particular gene and enzyme sequences, and the results support the idea that genes coding for adaptive traits, e.g. defensive natural products, may be prone to transposition between divergent prokaryotic taxa and genomes.  相似文献   

6.
The relationships between the aggregation state and the enzymatic activities of chicken liver fatty acid synthase have been explored by monitoring the changes in light scattering, fluorescence, and the overall, beta-ketoacyl synthase, beta-ketoacyl reductase and enoyl reductase activities during dissociation and reassociation of the enzyme. The data obtained indicate that the enzyme dissociates at low temperature in both 0.1 M potassium phosphate (pH 7.0), 1 mM EDTA, and 5 mM Tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane, 35 mM glycine (pH 8.3) and 1 mM EDTA, but the extent of dissociation is less in the phosphate buffer. The assay conditions influence the assessment of the degree of dissociation and association: high temperatures, phosphate (high salt), NADPH and acetoacetyl-coenzyme A promote association of the monomeric enzyme, whereas dilution in the Tris-glycine buffer (low salt) and low temperature promote dissociation. Both the rate and extent of association and dissociation are altered by substrates. The monomeric enzyme does not possess beta-ketoacyl synthase and beta-ketoacyl reductase activities. Results obtained with the 1,3-dibromo-2-propanone cross-linked enzyme, which lacks beta-ketoacyl synthase activity, indicate that the NADPH-binding site of beta-ketoacyl reductase is disrupted at low ionic strength. In contrast, changes in ionic strength have little effect on the enoyl reductase activity. The dimer is stabilized by both electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions, with the former being of special importance for maintenance of the beta-ketoacyl reductase active site. site.  相似文献   

7.
The 4'-phosphopantetheine of chicken liver fatty acid synthase was specifically labeled with the fluorescent substrate analog coenzyme A 6-[7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol-4-yl]aminohexanoate at low salt concentrations. A serine at the active site of the thioesterase was specifically labeled with the fluorescent compounds 6-[7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol-4-yl]aminopentylmethylphosphono fluoridate and/or pyrenebutyl methylphosphonofluoridate. Dynamic anisotropy measurements indicate the thioesterase has considerable segmental flexibility, whereas the fluorescent labeled 4'-phosphopantetheine does not display detectable local or segmental flexibility. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer measurements indicate that the distance between the fluorescent label at the end of the 4'-phosphopantetheine and NADPH bound to the beta-ketoacyl reductase or enoyl reductase site on the same polypeptide chain is essentially the same, approximately 38 A. The two types of reductases were distinguished by specifically blocking enoyl reductase with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. No significant energy transfer occurs between sites on different polypeptide chains so that the distances must be greater than 55 A. The distance between the serine on the thioesterase and the 4'-phosphopantetheine on the same polypeptide is 48 A; again no interpolypeptide chain energy transfer was observed. The distance between the serines of the two thioesterases within a fatty acid synthase molecule is greater than 56 A. The monomeric enzyme obtained at 1 degree C does not have beta-ketoacyl synthase and reductase activities. Also fluorescent titrations indicate NADPH is not bound to beta-ketoacyl reductase in monomeric enzyme. The addition of potassium phosphate to the monomers at 1 degree C rapidly dimerizes the enzyme and restores the beta-ketoacyl reductase activity. The beta-ketoacyl synthase activity is slowly restored when the dimer is raised to room temperature. The results obtained suggest that relatively large conformational changes may be part of the catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

8.
A human beta-ketoacyl synthase implicated in a mitochondrial pathway for fatty acid synthesis has been identified, cloned, expressed, and characterized. Sequence analysis indicates that the protein is more closely related to freestanding counterparts found in prokaryotes and chloroplasts than it is to the beta-ketoacyl synthase domain of the human cytosolic fatty acid synthase. The full-length nuclear-encoded 459-residue protein includes an N-terminal sequence element of approximately 38 residues that functions as a mitochondrial targeting sequence. The enzyme can elongate acyl-chains containing 2-14 carbon atoms with malonyl moieties attached in thioester linkage to the human mitochondrial acyl carrier protein and is able to restore growth to the respiratory-deficient yeast mutant cem1 that lacks the endogenous mitochondrial beta-ketoacyl synthase and exhibits lowered lipoic acid levels. To date, four components of a putative type II mitochondrial fatty acid synthase pathway have been identified in humans: acyl carrier protein, malonyl transferase, beta-ketoacyl synthase, and enoyl reductase. The substrate specificity and complementation data for the beta-ketoacyl synthase suggest that, as in plants and fungi, in humans this pathway may play an important role in the generation of octanoyl-acyl carrier protein, the lipoic acid precursor, as well as longer chain fatty acids that are required for optimal mitochondrial function.  相似文献   

9.
A three-dimensional model of the Streptomyces coelicolor actinorhodin beta-ketoacyl synthase (Act KS) was constructed based on the X-ray crystal structure of the related Escherichia coli fatty acid synthase condensing enzyme beta-ketoacyl synthase II, revealing a similar catalytic active site organization in these two enzymes. The model was assessed by site-directed mutagenesis of five conserved amino acid residues in Act KS that are in close proximity to the Cys169 active site. Three substitutions completely abrogated polyketide biosynthesis, while two replacements resulted in significant reduction in polyketide production. (3)H-cerulenin labeling of the various Act KS mutant proteins demonstrated that none of the amino acid replacements affected the formation of the active site nucleophile.  相似文献   

10.
S Donadio  L Katz 《Gene》1992,111(1):51-60
Localization of the enzymatic domains in the three multifunctional polypeptides from Saccharopolyspora erythraea involved in the formation of the polyketide portion of the macrolide antibiotic erythromycin was determined by computer-assisted analysis. Comparison of the six synthase units (SU) from the eryA genes with each other and with mono- and multifunctional fatty acid and polyketide synthases established the extent of each beta-ketoacyl acyl-carrier protein (ACP) synthase, acyltransferase, beta-ketoreductase, ACP, and thioesterase domain. The extent of the enoyl reductase (ER) domain was established by detecting similarity to other sequences in the database. A segment containing the putative dehydratase (DH) domain in EryAII, with a potential active-site histidine residue, was also found. The finding of conservation of a portion of the DH-ER interdomain region in the other five SU, which lack these two functions, suggests a possible evolutionary path for the generation of the six SU.  相似文献   

11.
BACKGROUND: Acyl carrier protein (ACP) is a fundamental component of fatty acid biosynthesis in which the fatty acid chain is elongated by the fatty acid synthetase system while attached to the 4'-phosphopantetheine prosthetic group (4'-PP) of ACP. Activation of ACP is mediated by holo-acyl carrier protein synthase (ACPS) when ACPS transfers the 4'-PP moiety from coenzyme A (CoA) to Ser36 of apo-ACP. Both ACP and ACPS have been identified as essential for E. coli viability and potential targets for development of antibiotics. RESULTS: The solution structure of B. subtilis ACP (9 kDa) has been determined using two-dimensional and three-dimensional heteronuclear NMR spectroscopy. A total of 22 structures were calculated by means of hybrid distance geometry-simulated annealing using a total of 1,050 experimental NMR restraints. The atomic rmsd about the mean coordinate positions for the 22 structures is 0.45 +/- 0.08 A for the backbone atoms and 0.93 +/- 0.07 A for all atoms. The overall ACP structure consists of a four alpha-helical bundle in which 4'-PP is attached to the conserved Ser36 that is located in alpha helix II. CONCLUSIONS: Structural data were collected for both the apo and holo forms of ACP that suggest that the two forms of ACP are essentially identical. Comparison of the published structures for E. coli ACP and actinorhodin polyketide synthase acyl carrier protein (act apo-ACP) from Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) with B. subtilis ACP indicates similar secondary structure elements but an extremely large rmsd between the three ACP structures (>4.3 A). The structural difference between B. subtilis ACP and both E. coli and act apo-ACP is not attributed to an inherent difference in the proteins, but is probably a result of a limitation in the methodology available for the analysis for E. coli and act apo-ACP. Comparison of the structure of free ACP with the bound form of ACP in the ACP-ACPS complex reveals a displacement of helix II in the vicinity of Ser36. The induced perturbation of ACP by ACPS positions Ser36 proximal to coenzyme A and aligns the dipole of helix II to initiate transfer of 4'-PP to ACP.  相似文献   

12.
A Witkowski  A K Joshi  Y Lindqvist  S Smith 《Biochemistry》1999,38(36):11643-11650
beta-Ketoacyl synthases involved in the biosynthesis of fatty acids and polyketides exhibit extensive sequence similarity and share a common reaction mechanism, in which the carbanion participating in the condensation reaction is generated by decarboxylation of a malonyl or methylmalonyl moiety; normally, the decarboxylation step does not take place readily unless an acyl moiety is positioned on the active-site cysteine residue in readiness for the ensuing condensation reaction. Replacement of the cysteine nucleophile (Cys-161) with glutamine, in the beta-ketoacyl synthase domain of the multifunctional animal fatty acid synthase, completely inhibits the condensation reaction but increases the uncoupled rate of malonyl decarboxylation by more than 2 orders of magnitude. On the other hand, replacement with Ser, Ala, Asn, Gly, and Thr compromises the condensation reaction without having any marked effect on the decarboxylation reaction. The affinity of the beta-ketoacyl synthase for malonyl moieties, in the absence of acetyl moieties, is significantly increased in the Cys161Gln mutant compared to that in the wild type and is similar to that exhibited by the wild-type beta-ketoacyl synthase in the presence of an acetyl primer. These results, together with modeling studies of the Cys --> Gln mutant from the crystal structure of the Escherichia coli beta-ketoacyl synthase II enzyme, suggest that the side chain carbonyl group of the Gln-161 can mimic the carbonyl of the acyl moiety in the acyl-enzyme intermediate so that the mutant adopts a conformation analogous to that of the acyl-enzyme intermediate. Catalysis of the decarboxylation of malonyl-CoA requires the dimeric form of the Cys161Gln fatty acid synthase and involves prior transfer of the malonyl moiety from the CoA ester to the acyl carrier protein domain and subsequent release of the acetyl product by transfer back to a CoA acceptor. These results suggest that the role of the Cys --> Gln beta-ketoacyl synthases found in the loading domains of some modular polyketide synthases likely is to act as malonyl, or methylmalonyl, decarboxylases that provide a source of primer for the chain extension reactions catalyzed by associated modules containing fully competent beta-ketoacyl synthases.  相似文献   

13.
Acyl carrier protein (ACP) is a required cofactor for fatty acid synthesis in Escherichia coli. Mutants lacking beta-ketoacyl-ACP synthase II activity (fabF1 or fabF3) possessed a different molecular species of ACP (F-ACP) that was separated from the normal form of the protein by conformationally sensitive gel electrophoresis. Synthase I mutants contained the normal protein. Complementation of fabF1 mutants with an F' factor harboring the wild-type synthase II allele resulted in the appearance of normal ACP, whereas complementation with an F' possessing the fabF2 allele (a mutation that produces a synthase II enzyme with altered catalytic activity) resulted in the production of both forms of ACP. The structural difference between F-ACP and ACP persisted after the removal of the 4'-phosphopantetheine prosthetic group, and both forms of the protein had identical properties in an in vitro fatty acid synthase assay. Both ACP and F-ACP were purified to homogeneity, and their primary amino acid sequences were determined. The two ACP species were identical but differed from the sequence reported for E. coli E-15 ACP in that an Asn instead of an Asp was at position 24 and an Ile instead of a Val was at position 43. Therefore, F-ACP appears to be a modification of ACP that is detected when beta-ketoacyl-ACP synthase II activity is impaired.  相似文献   

14.
The antibiotic TA of Myxococcus xanthus is produced by a type-I polyketide synthase mechanism. Previous studies have indicated that TA genes are clustered within a 36-kb region. The chemical structure of TA indicates the need for several post-modification steps, which are introduced to form the final bioactive molecule. These include three C-methylations, an O-methylation and a specific hydroxylation. In this study, we describe the genetic analysis of taK, encoding a specific polyketide beta-ketoacyl:acyl carrier protein synthase, which contains an unusual beta-ketoacyl synthase and acyltransferase motifs and is likely to be involved in antibiotic TA post-modification. Functional analysis of this beta-ketoacyl:acyl carrier protein synthase by specific gene disruption suggests that it is essential for the production of an active TA molecule.  相似文献   

15.
The inactivation and conformational changes of the multifunctional fatty acid synthase (acyl-CoA:malonyl-CoA C-acyltransferase (decarboxylating, oxoacyl- and enoyl-reducing and thioester-hydrolyzing), EC 2.3.1.85) from chicken liver have been studied in urea solution. The results show that complete inactivation of the fatty acid synthase occurs before obvious conformational changes with regard to the overall, beta-ketoacyl reduction and acetoacetyl-CoA reduction reactions. Significant conformational changes indicated by the changes of the intrinsic fluorescence emission and the circular dichroism spectra occurred at higher urea concentrations. The kinetic rate constants for the two phase inactivation and unfolding reactions were measured and semilogarithmic plots of the activity versus time gave curves which could be resolved into two straight lines, indicating that both the inactivation and unfolding processes consisted of fast and slow phases as a first-order reaction. The results from Lineweaver-Burk plots indicated that urea is a competitive inhibitor for acetyl-CoA and malonyl-CoA, with K(m) increasing with increasing urea concentrations. However, urea is a noncompetitive inhibitor for NADPH, the substrate of the overall reaction and beta-ketoacyl reduction reaction, and acetylacetate, the substrate of the beta-ketoacyl reduction reaction. Activation by low concentrations of urea was observed although this activation was only temporarily induced in an early stage of inactivation. The aggregation phenomenon of the fatty acid synthase in a certain concentration range of urea (3-4 M) was also observed during unfolding. This result shows that this multifunctional enzyme unfolds with competition with misfolding in the folding pathway. Comparison of inactivation and conformational changes of the enzyme as well as aggregation imply that unfolding intermediates may exist during urea denaturation. The possible unfolding pathway of fatty acid synthase is also discussed in this paper.  相似文献   

16.
Structural and functional organization of the animal fatty acid synthase   总被引:23,自引:0,他引:23  
The entire pathway of palmitate synthesis from malonyl-CoA in mammals is catalyzed by a single, homodimeric, multifunctional protein, the fatty acid synthase. Each subunit contains three N-terminal domains, the beta-ketoacyl synthase, malonyl/acetyl transferase and dehydrase separated by a structural core from four C-terminal domains, the enoyl reductase, beta-ketoacyl reductase, acyl carrier protein and thiosterase. The kinetics and specificities of the substrate loading reaction catalyzed by the malonyl/acetyl transferase, the condensation reaction catalyzed by beta-ketoacyl synthase and chain-terminating reaction catalyzed by the thioesterase ensure that intermediates do not leak off the enzyme, saturated chains exclusively are elongated and palmitate is released as the major product. Only in the fatty acid synthase dimer do the subunits adopt conformations that facilitate productive coupling of the individual reactions for fatty acid synthesis at the two acyl carrier protein centers. Introduction of a double tagging and dual affinity chromatographic procedure has permitted the engineering and isolation of heterodimeric fatty acid synthases carrying different mutations on each subunit. Characterization of these heterodimers, by activity assays and chemical cross-linking, has been exploited to map the functional topology of the protein. The results reveal that the two acyl carrier protein domains engage in substrate loading and condensation reactions catalyzed by the malonyl/acetyl transferase and beta-ketoacyl synthase domains of either subunit. In contrast, the reactions involved in processing of the beta-carbon atom, following each chain elongation step, together with the release of palmitate, are catalyzed by the cooperation of the acyl carrier protein with catalytic domains of the same subunit. These findings suggest a revised model for the fatty acid synthase in which the two polypeptides are oriented such that head-to-tail contacts are formed both between and within subunits.  相似文献   

17.
Global proteome of the antibiotic-production strain 103 and the nonantibiotic-production mutant cnn1 were directly analyzed using 2D LC-MS/MS. A total of 726 and 809 proteins have been identified, respectively. Physical and chemical characterization, subcellular location and functional classification of the global protein were carried out. By searching the key enzymes of several probable antibiotic biosynthesis pathways in the identified proteins of strain 103, only polyketide synthase was found, which suggested that Maituolaimysin be synthesized through polyketide pathway. The same searching result was obtained in strain cnn1, which confirmed the conclusion drew from strain 103. Other proteins associated with the polyketide pathway of the two strains were searched according to the protein classification scheme of Streptomyces coelicolor (available at http://www.sanger.ac.uk/Projects/S_coelicolor/) and most of them were found. The activity inhibition of beta-ketoacyl ACP synthase, a key enzyme in the polyketide pathway, directly resulted in the decrease of Maituolaimysin production, which proved the conclusion obtained in the proteomic research.  相似文献   

18.
The actinorhodin (act) minimal polyketide synthase (PKS) from Streptomyces coelicolor consists of three proteins: an acyl carrier protein (ACP) and two beta-ketoacyl ACP synthase components known as KSalpha and KSbeta. The act minimal PKS catalyzes at least 18 separate reactions which can be divided into loading, initiation, extension, and cyclization and release phases. Two quantitative kinetic assays were developed and used to measure individual rate and Michaelis constants for loading, initiation and extension steps. In the minimal PKS, the reaction between malonyl CoA and ACP to form malonyl ACP (loading) is the rate-limiting step (kcat = 0.49 min-1, KM = 207 microM). This reaction increases 5-fold in rate in the presence of KSalphaKSbeta (kcat = 2.3 min-1, KM = 215 microM). In the presence of S. coelicolor malonyl CoA:ACP transacylase (MCAT), the rate of loading increases and the kinetic parameters of malonyl-ACP as a substrate of KSalphaKSbeta can be measured (kcat = 20.6 min-1, KM = 2.4 microM). Under these conditions, it appears that decarboxylation of malonyl-ACP to form acetyl-ACP (initiation) is the rate-limiting step. When an excess of acetyl ACP is supplied, either chain extension, cyclization, or release steps become rate limiting (k approximately 60 min-1). No ACP-bound intermediates could be observed, suggesting that partially or fully extended chains do not accumulate because chain extension is rate limiting under these conditions and that cyclization and release are fast. apo-ACP acts as a mixed inhibitor of malonyl ACP binding to KSalpha/KSbeta (Kic = 50 microM, Kiu = 137 microM), but apo-ACP does not appear to inhibit MCAT.  相似文献   

19.
A DNA fragment containing the Pseudomonas aeruginosa fabD (encoding malonyl-coenzyme A [CoA]:acyl carrier protein [ACP] transacylase), fabG (encoding beta-ketoacyl-ACP reductase), acpP (encoding ACP), and fabF (encoding beta-ketoacyl-ACP synthase II) genes was cloned and sequenced. This fab gene cluster is delimited by the plsX (encoding a poorly understood enzyme of phospholipid metabolism) and pabC (encoding 4-amino-4-deoxychorismate lyase) genes; the fabF and pabC genes seem to be translationally coupled. The fabH gene (encoding beta-ketoacyl-ACP synthase III), which in most gram-negative bacteria is located between plsX and fabD, is absent from this gene cluster. A chromosomal temperature-sensitive fabD mutant was obtained by site-directed mutagenesis that resulted in a W258Q change. A chromosomal fabF insertion mutant was generated, and the resulting mutant strain contained substantially reduced levels of cis-vaccenic acid. Multiple attempts aimed at disruption of the chromosomal fabG gene were unsuccessful. We purified FabD as a hexahistidine fusion protein (H6-FabD) and ACP in its native form via an ACP-intein-chitin binding domain fusion protein, using a novel expression and purification scheme that should be applicable to ACP from other bacteria. Matrix-assisted laser desorption-ionization spectroscopy, native polyacrylamide electrophoresis, and amino-terminal sequencing revealed that (i) most of the purified ACP was properly modified with its 4'-phosphopantetheine functional group, (ii) it was not acylated, and (iii) the amino-terminal methionine was removed. In an in vitro system, purified ACP functioned as acyl acceptor and H(6)-FabD exhibited malonyl-CoA:ACP transacylase activity.  相似文献   

20.
The stopped flow method has been used to determine the pH dependence of the kinetics of the binding of NADPH to chicken liver fatty acid synthase over the pH range 6.0-8.5. The kinetics is consistent with a one-step binding mechanism, and the pH dependence of the second order rate constant indicates that an ionizable group either on the enzyme or on NADPH with a pK alpha of 6.1 is of importance in the binding process. The isotope rate effects have been determined for the steady state reaction with (S)- and (R)-[4-2H] NADPH as substrates and are very small. The pH dependence of the rate constant characterizing the reduction of acetoacetyl by NADPH on the enzyme (beta-ketoacyl reductase) and the isotope rate effects on this constant with (S)-[4-2H]NADPH as substrate also have been measured with the stopped flow method. A small pH-dependent isotope rate effect is found; these results suggest hydride transfer is not rate limiting for the beta-ketoacyl reductase reaction on the enzyme surface. The pH dependence of this rate constant is bell shaped and is very similar to that of the turnover number for the overall reaction; this suggests that the beta-ketoacyl reductase reaction may be partially rate limiting for the overall reaction when the enzyme is saturated with substrates.  相似文献   

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