首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Enoyl-acyl carrier protein (ACP) reductase catalyzes the last step of the fatty acid elongation cycle. The paradigm enoyl-ACP reductase is the FabI protein of Escherichia coli that is the target of the antibacterial compound, triclosan. However, some Gram-positive bacteria are naturally resistant to triclosan due to the presence of the triclosan-resistant enoyl-ACP reductase isoforms, FabK and FabL. The genome of the Gram-negative bacterium, Vibrio cholerae lacks a gene encoding a homologue of any of the three known enoyl-ACP reductase isozymes suggesting that this organism encodes a novel fourth enoyl-ACP reductase isoform. We report that this is the case. The gene encoding the new isoform, called FabV, was isolated by complementation of a conditionally lethal E. coli fabI mutant strain and was shown to restore fatty acid synthesis to the mutant strain both in vivo and in vitro. Like FabI and FabL, FabV is a member of the short chain dehydrogenase reductase superfamily, although it is considerably larger (402 residues) than either FabI (262 residues) or FabL (250 residues). The FabV, FabI and FabL sequences can be aligned, but only poorly. Alignment requires many gaps and yields only 15% identical residues. Thus, FabV defines a new class of enoyl-ACP reductase. The native FabV protein has been purified to homogeneity and is active with both crotonyl-ACP and the model substrate, crotonyl-CoA. In contrast to FabI and FabL, FabV shows a very strong preference for NADH over NADPH. Expression of FabV in E. coli results in markedly increased resistance to triclosan and the purified enzyme is much more resistant to triclosan than is E. coli FabI.  相似文献   

2.
Li H  Zhang X  Bi L  He J  Jiang T 《PloS one》2011,6(10):e26743

Background

Enoyl-ACP reductase (ENR) catalyses the last reduction reaction in the fatty acid elongation cycle in bacteria and is a good antimicrobial target candidate. FabV is the most recently discovered class of ENR, but we lack information about the atomic structure and the key residues involved in reductase activity except for the known conserved tyrosine and lysine residues in the Y-X8-K active site motif.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Here we report the crystal structure of FabV from Xanthomonas oryzae (xoFabV). The crystal structure of this enzyme has been solved to 1.6 Å resolution in space group P212121. The model of xoFabV consists of one monomer in the asymmetric unit which is composed of 13 α-helices and 11 β-strands, representing a canonical Rossmann fold architecture. Structural comparison presents that the locations of the conserved tyrosine (Y236) and lysine (K245) residues in the Y-X8-K active site motif of xoFabV and the Y-X6-K motif of ecFabI are notably similar. However, the conformations of Y236 in xoFabV and Y156 in ecFabI are distinct. Structure-based site-directed mutagenesis and enzymatic activity assays reveal that in addition to the conserved Y236 and K245 in the Y-X8-K motif, Y53, D111 and Y226 are key residues implicated in the reductase activity, and F113 and T276 are also important for enzyme function. Moreover, a proposed active lysine located immediately after the Y-X8-K motif in FabV from Burkholderia mallei (bmFabV) is altered to an inactive V246 in xoFabV.

Conclusions/Significance

We determine the first crystal structure of the FabV enzyme and identify several residues important for its enzymatic activity. These findings lay a solid foundation for the development of specific antibacterial inhibitors of the pathogenic bacteria, such as Vibrio cholerae, Burkholderia species and Xanthomonas species.  相似文献   

3.
The study has revealed that for the utilization of iron contained in transferrin the direct contact of Y. pestis with this metalloprotein is necessary. At 28 degrees C Y. pestis utilizes iron contained in transferrin. At 37 degrees C Y. pestis absorbs transferrin, but cannot utilize its iron, which is probably linked with disturbances in the system of the transfer of iron from the transferrin receptor complex into the bacterial cell.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Plague is caused by Yersinia pestis, which evolved from the enteric pathogen Y. pseudotuberculosis, which normally causes a chronic and relatively mild disease. Y. pestis is not only able to parasitize the flea but also highly virulent to rodents and humans, causing epidemics of a systemic and often fatal disease. Y. pestis could be used as a bio-weapon and for bio-terrorism. It uses a number of strategies that allow the pathogen to change its lifestyle rapidly to survive in fleas and to grow in the mammalian hosts. Extensive studies reviewed here give an overall picture of the determinants responsible for plague pathogenesis in mammalians and the transmission by fleas. The availability of multiple genomic sequences and more extensive use of genomics and proteomics technologies should allow a comprehensive dissection of the complex of host-adaptation and virulence in Y. pestis.  相似文献   

6.
Inducible (iNOS) and constitutive (eNOS, nNOS) nitric-oxide synthases differ in their Ca2+-calmodulin (CaM) dependence. iNOS binds CaM irreversibly but eNOS and nNOS, which bind CaM reversibly, have inserts in their reductase domains that regulate electron transfer. These include the 43-45-amino acid autoinhibitory element (AI) that attenuates electron transfer in the absence of CaM, and the C-terminal 20-40-amino acid tail that attenuates electron transfer in a CaM-independent manner. We constructed models of the reductase domains of the three NOS isoforms to predict the structural basis for CaM-dependent regulation. We have identified and characterized a loop (CD2A) within the NOS connecting domain that is highly conserved by isoform and that, like the AI element, is within direct interaction distance of the CaM binding region. The eNOS CD2A loop (eCD2A) has the sequence 834KGSPGGPPPG843, and is truncated to 809ESGSY813 (iCD2A) in iNOS. The eCD2A contributes to the Ca2+ dependence of CaM-bound activity to a level similar to that of the AI element. The eCD2A plays an autoinhibitory role in the control of NO, and CaM-dependent and -independent reductase activity, but this autoinhibitory function is masked by the dominant AI element. Finally, the iCD2A is involved in determining the salt dependence of NO activity at a post-flavin reduction level. Electrostatic interactions between the CD2A loop and the CaM-binding region, and CaM itself, provide a structural means for the CD2A to mediate CaM regulation of intra-subunit electron transfer within the active NOS complex.  相似文献   

7.
Boehr DD  Dyson HJ  Wright PE 《Biochemistry》2008,47(35):9227-9233
The catalytic cycle of an enzyme is frequently associated with conformational changes that may limit maximum catalytic throughput. In Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase, release of the tetrahydrofolate (THF) product is the rate-determining step under physiological conditions and is associated with an "occluded" to "closed" conformational change. In this study, we demonstrate that in dihydrofolate reductase the closed to occluded conformational change in the product ternary complex (E.THF.NADP (+)) also gates progression through the catalytic cycle. Using NMR relaxation dispersion, we have measured the temperature and pH dependence of microsecond to millisecond time scale backbone dynamics of the occluded E.THF.NADP (+) complex. Our studies indicate the presence of three independent dynamic regions, associated with the active-site loops, the cofactor binding cleft, and the C-terminus and an adjacent loop, which fluctuate into discrete conformational substates with different kinetic and thermodynamic parameters. The dynamics of the C-terminally associated region is pH-dependent (p K a < 6), but the dynamics of the active-site loops and cofactor binding cleft are pH-independent. The active-site loop dynamics access a closed conformation, and the accompanying closed to occluded rate constant is comparable to the maximum pH-independent hydride transfer rate constant. Together, these results strongly suggest that the closed to occluded conformational transition in the product ternary complex is a prerequisite for progression through the catalytic cycle and that the rate of this process places an effective limit on the maximum rate of the hydride transfer step.  相似文献   

8.
Glutathione reductase from the cyanobacterium Anabaena PCC 7120 contains a pyridine-nucleotide-binding motif differing from that of the enzyme from other sources and an insertion of 10 amino acid residues. Homology modeling was used to obtain a model of the enzyme structure. It revealed that in the Anabaena enzyme Lys(203) replaces Arg, found to interact with the 2'-phosphate of NADP(H) in the enzyme from other sources, and that it has an extra loop near the entrance of the pyridine-nucleotide-binding site. The steady-state and preequilibrium kinetic properties were characterized for the wild-type enzyme, a K203R, and a loop deletion mutant. All enzyme forms had higher catalytic efficiency with NADPH than with NADH, although the difference was less than for glutathione reductase from other sources. The specificity was most pronounced in the formation of the charge-transfer complex between the pyridine nucleotide and oxidized enzyme-bound FAD, as compared to later steps in the reaction. Unexpectedly, by replacing Lys(203) with Arg, the specificity for NADPH was diminished in the complete redox reaction. Ser(174) appears to interact with the 2'-phosphate of NADPH and introduction of arginine instead of lysine, therefore, has little effect on the interaction with this coenzyme. However, the efficiency in forming the charge-transfer complex between the pyridine nucleotide and oxidized enzyme-bound FAD was increased in the K203R mutant using NADPH but not with NADH. The lack of affinity toward 2',5'-ADP-Sepharose by the wild-type enzyme was not changed by replacing Lys(203) with Arg but deletion of the loop resulted in an enzyme that bound to the immobilized ligand. Removal of the loop increased the efficiency of the enzyme in the reductive half-reaction with both pyridine-nucleotides as well as in the overall catalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

9.
10.
To elucidate the influence of local motion of the polypeptide chain on the catalytic mechanism of an enzyme, we have measured (15)N relaxation data for Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase in three different complexes, representing different stages in the catalytic cycle of the enzyme. NMR relaxation data were analyzed by the model-free approach, corrected for rotational anisotropy, to provide insights into the backbone dynamics. There are significant differences in the backbone dynamics in the different complexes. Complexes in which the cofactor binding site is occluded by the Met20 loop display large amplitude motions on the picosecond/nanosecond time scale for residues in the Met20 loop, the adjacent betaF-betaG loop and for residues 67-69 in the adenosine binding loop. Formation of the closed Met20 loop conformation in the ternary complex with folate and NADP(+), results in attenuation of the motions in the Met20 loop and the betaF-betaG loop but leads to increased flexibility in the adenosine binding loop. New fluctuations on a microsecond/millisecond time scale are observed in the closed E:folate:NADP(+) complex in regions that form hydrogen bonds between the Met20 and the betaF-betaG loops. The data provide insights into the changes in backbone dynamics during the catalytic cycle and point to an important role of the Met20 and betaF-betaG loops in controlling access to the active site. The high flexibility of these loops in the occluded conformation is expected to promote tetrahydrofolate-assisted product release and facilitate binding of the nicotinamide ring to form the Michaelis complex. The backbone fluctuations in the Met20 loop become attenuated once it closes over the active site, thereby stabilizing the nicotinamide ring in a geometry conducive to hydride transfer. Finally, the relaxation data provide evidence for long-range motional coupling between the adenosine binding loop and distant regions of the protein.  相似文献   

11.
The nucleotide sequences of the Tc's insect toxin complex genes have been analyzed in 18 natural strains of the main and non-main subspecies of Yersinia pestis isolated in different natural foci in the Russian Federation, as well as neighboring and more remote countries, as compared to the data on Y. pestis and Y. pseudotuberculosis strains stored in the NCBI GenBank database. The nucleotide sequences of these genes in plague agent strains have been found to be highly conserved, in contrast to those of the pseudotuberculosis agent. The sequences of two genes, tcaC and tccC2, have been found to be almost identical in Y. pestis strains, whereas other three genes (tcaA, tcaB, and tccC1) contain a few mutations, which, however, are not common for all strains of the plague agent. Exceptions are only strains of the Y. pestis biovar orientalis, whose tcaB gene is in a nonfunctional state due to a nucleotide deletion. The results suggest that the formation of the species Y. pestis as an agent of a natural focal infection with a transmissive mechanism has not resulted in degradation of the Tc's complex genes. Instead, these genes are likely to have been altered as the plague agent have been adapting to the new environment.  相似文献   

12.
Xylose reductase is a homodimeric oxidoreductase dependent on NADPH or NADH and belongs to the largely monomeric aldo-keto reductase superfamily of proteins. It catalyzes the first step in the assimilation of xylose, an aldose found to be a major constituent monosaccharide of renewable plant hemicellulosic material, into yeast metabolic pathways. It does this by reducing open chain xylose to xylitol, which is reoxidized to xylulose by xylitol dehydrogenase and metabolically integrated via the pentose phosphate pathway. No structure has yet been determined for a xylose reductase, a dimeric aldo-keto reductase or a family 2 aldo-keto reductase. The structures of the Candida tenuis xylose reductase apo- and holoenzyme, which crystallize in spacegroup C2 with different unit cells, have been determined to 2.2 A resolution and an R-factor of 17.9 and 20.8%, respectively. Residues responsible for mediating the novel dimeric interface include Asp-178, Arg-181, Lys-202, Phe-206, Trp-313, and Pro-319. Alignments with other superfamily members indicate that these interactions are conserved in other dimeric xylose reductases but not throughout the remainder of the oligomeric aldo-keto reductases, predicting alternate modes of oligomerization for other families. An arrangement of side chains in a catalytic triad shows that Tyr-52 has a conserved function as a general acid. The loop that folds over the NAD(P)H cosubstrate is disordered in the apo form but becomes ordered upon cosubstrate binding. A slow conformational isomerization of this loop probably accounts for the observed rate-limiting step involving release of cosubstrate. Xylose binding (K(m) = 87 mM) is mediated by interactions with a binding pocket that is more polar than a typical aldo-keto reductase. Modeling of xylose into the active site of the holoenzyme using ordered waters as a guide for sugar hydroxyls suggests a convincing mode of substrate binding.  相似文献   

13.
Succinate:quinone reductase is a membrane-bound enzyme of the citric acid cycle and the respiratory chain. Carboxin is a potent inhibitor of the enzyme of certain organisms. The bacterium Paracoccus denitrificans was found to be sensitive to carboxin in vivo, and mutants that grow in the presence of 3′-methyl carboxin were isolated. Membranes of the mutants showed resistant succinate:quinone reductase activity. The mutation conferring carboxin resistance was identified in four mutants. They contained the same missense mutation in the sdhD gene, which encodes one of two membrane-intrinsic polypeptides of the succinate:quinone reductase complex. The mutation causes an Asp to Gly replacement at position 89 in the SdhD polypeptide. P. denitrificans strains that overproduced wild-type or mutant enzymes were constructed. Enzymic properties of the purified enzymes were analyzed. The apparent K m for quinone (DPB) and the sensitivity to thenoyltrifluoroacetone was normal for the carboxin-resistant enzyme, but the succinate:quinone reductase activity was lower than for the wild-type enzyme. Mutations conferring carboxin resistance indicate the region on the enzyme where the inhibitor binds. A previously reported His to Leu replacement close to the [3Fe-4S] cluster in the iron-sulfur protein of Ustilago maydis succinate:quinone reductase confers resistance to carboxin and thenoyltrifluoroacetone. The Asp to Gly replacement in the P. denitrificans SdhD polypeptide, identified in this study to confer resistance to carboxin but not to thenoyltrifluoroacetone, is in a predicted cytoplasmic loop connecting two transmembrane segments. It is likely that this loop is located in the neighborhood of the [3Fe-4S] cluster. Received: 18 November 1997 / Accepted: 13 February 1998  相似文献   

14.
The function of a highly mobile loop in Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase was studied by constructing a mutant (DL1) using cassette mutagenesis that had four residues deleted in the middle section of the loop (Met16-Ala19) and a glycine inserted to seal the gap. This part of the loop involves residues 16-20 and is disordered in the X-ray crystal structures of the apoprotein and the NADP+ binary complex but forms a hairpin turn that folds over the nicotinamide moiety of NADP+ and the pteridine moiety of folate in the ternary complex [Bystroff, C., & Kraut, J. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 2227-2239]. The steady-state and pre-steady-state kinetics and two-dimensional 1H NMR spectra were analyzed and compared to the wild-type protein. The kinetics on the DL1 mutant enzyme show that the KM value for NADPH (5.3 microM), the KM for dihydrofolate (2 microM), the rate constant for the release of the product tetrahydrofolate (10.3 s-1), and the intrinsic pKa value (6.2) are similar to those exhibited by the wild-type enzyme. However, the hydride-transfer rate declines markedly from the wild-type value of 950 s-1 to 1.7 s-1 for the DL1 mutant and when taken with data for substrate binding indicates that the loop contributes to substrate flux by a factor of 3.5 x 10(4). Thus, the mobility of loop I may provide a mechanism of recruiting hydrophobic residues which can properly align the nicotinamide and pteridine rings for the hydride-transfer process (a form of transition-state stabilization).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
Stehr M  Lindqvist Y 《Proteins》2004,55(3):613-619
NrdH-redoxins constitute a family of small redox proteins, which contain a conserved CXXC sequence motif, and are characterized by a glutaredoxin-like amino acid sequence but a thioredoxin-like activity profile. Here we report the structure of Corynebacterium ammoniagenes NrdH at 2.7 A resolution, determined by molecular replacement using E. coli NrdH as model. The structure is the first example of a domain-swapped dimer from the thioredoxin family. The domain-swapped structure is formed by an inter-chain two-stranded anti-parallel beta-sheet and is stabilized by electrostatic interactions at the dimer interface. Size exclusion chromatography, and MALDI-ESI experiments revealed however, that the protein exists as a monomer in solution. Similar to E. coli NrdH-redoxin and thioredoxin, C. ammoniagenes NrdH-redoxin has a wide hydrophobic pocket at the surface that could be involved in binding to thioredoxin reductase. However, the loop between alpha2 and beta3, which is complementary to a crevice in the reductase in the thioredoxin-thioredoxin reductase complex, is the hinge for formation of the swapped dimer in C. ammoniagenes NrdH-redoxin. C. ammoniagenes NrdH-redoxin has the highly conserved sequence motif W61-S-G-F-R-P-[DE]67 which is unique to the NrdH-redoxins and which determines the orientation of helix alpha3. An extended hydrogen-bond network, similar to that in E. coli NrdH-redoxin, determines the conformation of the loop formed by the conserved motif.  相似文献   

16.
When nitrate is the only nitrogen source, Neurospora crassa's nitrate reductase (NR) shows endogenous oscillations in its nitrate reductase activity (NRA) on a circadian time scale. These NRA oscillations can be observed in darkness or continuous light conditions and also in a frq(9) mutant in which no functional FRQ protein is formed. Even in a white-collar-1 knockout mutant, NRA oscillations have been observed, although with a highly reduced amplitude. This indicates that the NRA oscillations are not a simple output rhythm of the white-collar-driven frq oscillator but may be generated by another oscillator that contains the nit-3 autoregulatory negative feedback loop as a part. In this negative feedback loop, a product in the reaction chain catalyzed by nitrate reductase, probably glutamine, induces repression of the nitrate reductase gene and thus downregulates its own production. This is the first example of an endogenous, nutritionally induced daily rhythm with known molecular components that is observed in the absence of an intact FRQ protein.  相似文献   

17.
In vivo studies with the fruit-fly Drosophila melanogaster have shown that the Sniffer protein prevents age-dependent and oxidative stress-induced neurodegenerative processes. Sniffer is a NADPH-dependent carbonyl reductase belonging to the enzyme family of short-chain dehydrogenases/reductases (SDRs). The crystal structure of the homodimeric Sniffer protein from Drosophila melanogaster in complex with NADP+ has been determined by multiple-wavelength anomalous dispersion and refined to a resolution of 1.75 A. The observed fold represents a typical dinucleotide-binding domain as detected for other SDRs. With respect to the cofactor-binding site and the region referred to as substrate-binding loop, the Sniffer protein shows a striking similarity to the porcine carbonyl reductase (PTCR). This loop, in both Sniffer and PTCR, is substantially shortened compared to other SDRs. In most enzymes of the SDR family this loop adopts a well-defined conformation only after substrate binding and remains disordered in the absence of any bound ligands or even if only the dinucleotide cofactor is bound. In the structure of the Sniffer protein, however, the conformation of this loop is well defined, although no substrate is present. Molecular modeling studies provide an idea of how binding of substrate molecules to Sniffer could possibly occur.  相似文献   

18.
Enoyl acyl carrier protein (ACP) reductase catalyses the last reductive step of fatty acid biosynthesis, reducing the enoyl group of a growing fatty acid chain attached to ACP to its acyl product using NAD(P)H as the cofactor. This enzyme is the target for the diazaborine class of antibacterial agents, the biocide triclosan, and one of the targets for the front-line anti-tuberculosis drug isoniazid. The structures of complexes of Escherichia coli enoyl-ACP reductase (ENR) from crystals grown in the presence of NAD+ and a family of diazaborine compounds have been determined. Analysis of the structures has revealed that a mobile loop in the structure of the binary complex with NAD+ becomes ordered on binding diazaborine/NAD+ but displays a different conformation in the two subunits of the asymmetric unit. The work presented here reveals how, for one of the ordered conformations adopted by the mobile loop, the mode of diazaborine binding correlates well with the activity profiles of the diazaborine family. Additionally, diazaborine binding provides insights into the pocket on the enzyme surface occupied by the growing fatty acid chain.  相似文献   

19.
Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) has several flexible loops surrounding the active site that play a functional role in substrate and cofactor binding and in catalysis. We have used heteronuclear NMR methods to probe the loop conformations in solution in complexes of DHFR formed during the catalytic cycle. To facilitate the NMR analysis, the enzyme was labeled selectively with [(15)N]alanine. The 13 alanine resonances provide a fingerprint of the protein structure and report on the active site loop conformations and binding of substrate, product, and cofactor. Spectra were recorded for binary and ternary complexes of wild-type DHFR bound to the substrate dihydrofolate (DHF), the product tetrahydrofolate (THF), the pseudosubstrate folate, reduced and oxidized NADPH cofactor, and the inactive cofactor analogue 5,6-dihydroNADPH. The data show that DHFR exists in solution in two dominant conformational states, with the active site loops adopting conformations that closely approximate the occluded or closed conformations identified in earlier X-ray crystallographic analyses. A minor population of a third conformer of unknown structure was observed for the apoenzyme and for the disordered binary complex with 5,6-dihydroNADPH. The reactive Michaelis complex, with both DHF and NADPH bound to the enzyme, could not be studied directly but was modeled by the ternary folate:NADP(+) and dihydrofolate:NADP(+) complexes. From the NMR data, we are able to characterize the active site loop conformation and the occupancy of the substrate and cofactor binding sites in all intermediates formed in the extended catalytic cycle. In the dominant kinetic pathway under steady-state conditions, only the holoenzyme (the binary NADPH complex) and the Michaelis complex adopt the closed loop conformation, and all product complexes are occluded. The catalytic cycle thus involves obligatory conformational transitions between the closed and occluded states. Parallel studies on the catalytically impaired G121V mutant DHFR show that formation of the closed state, in which the nicotinamide ring of the cofactor is inserted into the active site, is energetically disfavored. The G121V mutation, at a position distant from the active site, interferes with coupled loop movements and appears to impair catalysis by destabilizing the closed Michaelis complex and introducing an extra step into the kinetic pathway.  相似文献   

20.
Larrabee, Allan R. (Fort Detrick, Frederick, Md.), John D. Marshall, and Dan Crozier. Isolation of antigens of Pasteurella pestis. I. Lipopolysaccharide-protein complex and R and S antigens. J. Bacteriol. 90:116-119. 1965.-Pasteurella pestis contains at least 18 different antigens, 2 of which will protect experimental animals from challenge infection. A specific polysaccharide isolated and described as a hapten was isolated as a complete antigen. Two additional antigens were isolated from P. pestis. The preparation of antisera directed against these three antigens and the content of protein, lipid, and carbohydrate of each preparation were studied. None of the preparations will protect mice from challenge infection with virulent P. pestis. A basis for naming the new antigens which does not conflict with previously published designations is presented.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号