126 research outputs found

    Mycobacterium tuberculosis Rv3802c Encodes a Phospholipase/Thioesterase and Is Inhibited by the Antimycobacterial Agent Tetrahydrolipstatin

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    The cell wall of M. tuberculosis is central to its success as a pathogen. Mycolic acids are key components of this cell wall. The genes involved in joining the α and mero mycolates are located in a cluster, beginning with Rv3799c and extending at least until Rv3804c. The role of each enzyme encoded by these five genes is fairly well understood, except for Rv3802c. Rv3802 is one of seven putative cutinases encoded by the genome of M. tuberculosis. In phytopathogens, cutinases hydrolyze the waxy layer of plants, cutin. In a strictly mammalian pathogen, such as M. tuberculosis, it is likely that these proteins perform a different function. Of the seven, we chose to focus on Rv3802c because of its location in a mycolic acid synthesis gene cluster, its putative essentiality, its ubiquitous presence in actinomycetes, and its conservation in the minimal genome of Mycobacterium leprae. We expressed Rv3802 in Escherichia coli and purified the enzymatically active form. We probed its activities and inhibitors characterizing those relevant to its possible role in mycolic acid biosynthesis. In addition to its reported phospholipase A activity, Rv3802 has significant thioesterase activity, and it is inhibited by tetrahydrolipstatin (THL). THL is a described anti-tuberculous compound with an unknown mechanism, but it reportedly targets cell wall synthesis. Taken together, these data circumstantially support a role for Rv3802 in mycolic acid synthesis and, as the cell wall is integral to M. tuberculosis pathogenesis, identification of a novel cell wall enzyme and its inhibition has therapeutic and diagnostic implications

    Two-Photon-Induced Selective Decarboxylation of Aspartic Acids D85 and D212 in Bacteriorhodopsin

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    The interest in microbial opsins stems from their photophysical properties, which are superior to most organic dyes. Microbial rhodopsins like bacteriorhodopsin (BR) from Halobacterium salinarum have an astonishingly high cross-section for two-photon-absorption (TPA), which is of great interest for technological applications such as data storage. Irradiation of BR with intense laser pulses at 532 nm leads to formation of a bathochromic photoproduct, which is further converted to a photochemical species absorbing in the UV range. As demonstrated earlier, the photochemical conversions are induced by resonant TPA. However, the molecular basis of these conversions remained unresolved. In this work we use mass spectroscopy to demonstrate that TPA of BR leads to selective decarboxylation of two aspartic acids in the vicinity of the retinal chromphore. These photochemical conversions are the basis of permanent two-photon data storage in BR and are of critical importance for application of microbial opsins in optogenetics

    Hinge-Type Dimerization of Proteins by a Tetracysteine Peptide of High Pairing Specificity

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    Dimeric disulfide-linked peptides are formed by the regioselective oxidative folding of thiol precursors containing the CX3CX2CX3C tetracysteine motif. Here, we investigate the general applicability of this peptide as a dimerization motif for different proteins. By recombinant DNA technology, the peptide CHWECRGCRLVC was loaded with proteins, and functional homodimers were obtained upon oxidative folding. Attached to the N-terminus of the dodecapeptide, the prokaryotic enzyme limonene epoxide hydrolase (LEH) completely forms a covalent antiparallel dimer. In a diatom expression system, the monoclonal antibody CL4 mAb is released in its functional form when its natural CPPC central parallel hinge is exchanged for the designed tetra-Cys hinge motif. To improve our understanding of the regioselectivity of tetra-disulfide formation, we provoked the formation of heterodimeric hinge peptides by mixing two different tetra-Cys peptides and characterizing the heterodimer by mass spectrometry and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy

    Evidence for acyl-iron ligation in the active site of [Fe]-hydrogenase provided by mass spectrometry and infrared spectroscopy

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    [Fe]-hydrogenase catalyzes the reversible heterolytic cleavage of H(2) and stereo-specific hydride transfer to the substrate methenyltetrahydromethanopterin in methanogenic archaea. This enzyme contains a unique iron guanylylpyridinol (FeGP) cofactor as a prosthetic group. It has recently been proposed-on the basis of crystal structural analyses of the [Fe]-hydrogenase holoenzyme-that the FeGP cofactor contains an acyl-iron ligation, the first one reported in a biological system. We report here that the cofactor can be reversibly extracted with acids; its exact mass has been determined by electrospray ionization Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass-spectrometry. The measured mass of the intact cofactor and its gas-phase fragments are consistent with the proposed structure. The mass of the light decomposition products of the cofactor support the presence of acyl-iron ligation. Attenuated total reflection infrared spectroscopy of the FeGP cofactor revealed a band near wave number 1700 cm(-1), which was assigned to the C=O (double bond) stretching mode of the acyl-iron ligand
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