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Trimethoprim binds in a bacterial mode to the wild-type and E30D mutant of mouse dihydrofolate reductase
Authors:C R Groom  J Thillet  A C North  R Pictet  A J Geddes
Institution:Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Leeds, United Kingdom.
Abstract:Previous crystallographic studies of the antibacterial trimethoprim in complexes with bacterial and avian dihydrofolate reductases have shown substantial differences in the mode of binding, providing plausible explanations for the origin of the remarkable species selectivity of this inhibitor (Matthews, D. A., Bolin, J. T., Burridge, J. M., Filman, D. J., Volz, K. W., Kaufman, B. T., Beddell, C. R., Champness, J. N., Stammers, D. K., and Kraut, J. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 381-391; Matthews, D. A., Bolin, J. T., Burridge, J. M., Filman, D. J., Volz, K. W., and Kraut, J. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 392-399). A major species difference between the active sites is that the only carboxylate present is always Glu in vertebrates and Asp in bacteria. Crystallographic studies of the wild-type and E30D mutant of the enzyme from mouse now reveal that in both cases trimethoprim is bound in an identical fashion to that observed with the bacterial enzyme, and there is no obvious single explanation for the origin of the 10(5)-fold selectivity of trimethoprim binding. In an earlier study of a mouse wild-type enzyme using more limited data it was proposed that trimethoprim bound in the avian mode (Stammers, D. K., Champness, J. N., Beddell, C. R., Dann, J. G., Eliopoulos, E. E., Geddes, A. J., Ogg, D., and North, A. C. T. (1987) FEBS Lett. 218, 178-184), but a re-examination indicates that the occupancy of the active site by trimethoprim is less than had been thought, and we are currently unable to make an unambiguous interpretation of the electron density maps and cannot confirm the avian mode of binding in those crystals.
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