Structural
Basis of Ligand Binding to UDP-Galactopyranose
Mutase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis Using Substrate
and Tetrafluorinated Substrate Analogues
posted on 2015-01-28, 00:00authored byKarin
E. van Straaten, Jijin R. A. Kuttiyatveetil, Charlotte M. Sevrain, Sydney A. Villaume, Jesús Jiménez-Barbero, Bruno Linclau, Stéphane P. Vincent, David A. R. Sanders
UDP-Galactopyranose mutase (UGM)
is a flavin-containing enzyme
that catalyzes the reversible conversion of UDP-galactopyranose (UDP-Galp) to UDP-galactofuranose (UDP-Galf) and
plays a key role in the biosynthesis of the mycobacterial cell wall
galactofuran. A soluble, active form of UGM from Mycobacterium
tuberculosis (MtUGM) was obtained from a
dual His6-MBP-tagged MtUGM construct.
We present the first complex structures of MtUGM
with bound substrate UDP-Galp (both oxidized flavin
and reduced flavin). In addition, we have determined the complex structures
of MtUGM with inhibitors (UDP and the dideoxy-tetrafluorinated
analogues of both UDP-Galp (UDP-F4-Galp) and UDP-Galf (UDP-F4-Galf)), which represent the first complex structures of UGM
with an analogue in the furanose form, as well as the first structures
of dideoxy-tetrafluorinated sugar analogues bound to a protein. These
structures provide detailed insight into ligand recognition by MtUGM and show an overall binding mode similar to those
reported for other prokaryotic UGMs. The binding of the ligand induces
conformational changes in the enzyme, allowing ligand binding and
active-site closure. In addition, the complex structure of MtUGM with UDP-F4-Galf reveals
the first detailed insight into how the furanose moiety binds to UGM.
In particular, this study confirmed that the furanoside adopts a high-energy
conformation (4E) within the catalytic
pocket. Moreover, these investigations provide structural insights
into the enhanced binding of the dideoxy-tetrafluorinated sugars compared
to unmodified analogues. These results will help in the design of
carbohydrate mimetics and drug development, and show the enormous
possibilities for the use of polyfluorination in the design of carbohydrate
mimetics.