4.6 Article

The Key Roles of Mycobacterium tuberculosis FadD23 C-terminal Domain in Catalytic Mechanisms

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2023.1090534

Keywords

sulfolipid-1; fatty acid adenylating enzyme; crystal structure; enzymatic activity; catalytic mechanism

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The crystal structures of FadD23 bound to ATP or hexadecanoyl adenylate were determined, and the role of FadD23 in the SL-1 synthesis pathway was investigated. The study revealed the impact of mutations in the active site of FadD23 on enzymatic activity, as well as the importance of the C-terminal domain in the catalytic mechanism.
Sulfolipid-1 (SL-1) is located in the Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tb) cell wall, and is essential for pathogen virulence and intracellular growth. Multiple proteins (e.g., Pks2, FadD23, PapA1, and MmpL8) in the SL-1 synthesis pathway can be treated as drug targets, but, to date, their structures have not been solved. The crystal structures of FadD23 bound to ATP or hexadecanoyl adenylate was determined in this study. We have also investigated long-chain saturated fatty acids as biological substrates of FadD23 through structural, biological, and chemical analyses. The mutation at the active site of FadD23 greatly influences enzymatic activity. Meanwhile, the FadD23 N-terminal domain alone cannot bind palmitic acid without C-terminal domain facilitation since it is almost inactive after removing the C-terminal domain. FadD23 is the first protein in the SL-1 synthesis pathway whose structure has been solved. These results reveal the importance of the C-terminal domain in the catalytic mechanism.

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