4.4 Article

Mechanism and Inhibition of the FabV Enoyl-ACP Reductase from Burkholderia mallei

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 49, Issue 6, Pages 1281-1289

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/bi902001a

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [AI44639]

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Enoyl-ACP reductases catalyze the Final step in the elongation cycle of the bacterial fatty acid biosynthesis (FAS-II) pathway. At present, four distinct enoyl-ACP reductases have been identified, which are the products of the fabI, fabL, fabK, and fabV genes. The FabV enoyl-ACP reductase is the most recent member of this enzyme class and was originally identified in Vibrio cholerae by Cronan and co-workers [Massengo-Tiasse, R. P., and Cronan, J. E. (2008) Vibrio cholerae FabV defines a new class of enoyl-acyl carrier protein reductase. J. Biol. Chem. 283, 1308-1316]. In this Work, a detailed kinetic analysis of the mechanism of the FabV enzyme from Burkholderia mallei (bmFabV) has been undertaken, which reveals that bmFabV catalyzes a sequential bi-bi mechanism with NADH binding first and NAD(+) dissociating last. The enzyme is a member of the short chain dehydrogenase/reductase superfamily in which the catalytic tyrosine (Y235) and lysine (K244) residues are organized in the consensus Tyr-(Xaa)(8)-Lys motif. The role of these active site residues has been investigated using site-directed mutagenesis which has shown that both Y235 and K244 are involved in acid-base chemistry during substrate reduction. Sequence alignment and site-directed mutagenesis also identify a second lysine in the active site (K245) that has an important role in binding of the enoyl substrate. Because of interests in developing inhibitors of bmFabV, a detailed analysis of the inhibition of the enzyme by triclosan has been conducted showing that triclosan is a competitive inhibitor with respect to NADH and an uncompetitive inhibitor with respect to the substrate 2-dodecenoyl-CoA (K-i = 0.4 mu M). fit combination with fluorescence binding experiments, We conclude that triclosan binds to the enzyme-NAD(+) product complex which is in rapid and reversible equilibrium with other intermediates oil the reaction pathway.

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