Crystal Structure and Mechanistic Molecular Modeling
Studies of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Diterpene Cyclase
Rv3377c
Posted on 2020-11-13 - 03:45
Terpenes
make up the largest class of natural products, with extensive
chemical and structural diversity. Diterpenes, mostly isolated from
plants and rarely prokaryotes, exhibit a variety of important biological
activities and valuable applications, including providing antitumor
and antibiotic pharmaceuticals. These natural products are constructed
by terpene synthases, a class of enzymes that catalyze one of the
most complex chemical reactions in biology: converting simple acyclic
oligo-isoprenyl diphosphate substrates to complex polycyclic products
via carbocation intermediates. Here we obtained the second ever crystal
structure of a class II diterpene synthase from bacteria, tuberculosinol
pyrophosphate synthase (i.e., Halimadienyl diphosphate synthase, MtHPS,
or Rv3377c) from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb). This enzyme transforms (E,E,E)-geranylgeranyl
diphosphate into tuberculosinol pyrophosphate (Halimadienyl diphosphate).
Rv3377c is part of the Mtb diterpene pathway along
with Rv3378c, which converts tuberculosinol pyrophosphate to 1-tuberculosinyl
adenosine (1-TbAd). This pathway was shown to exist only in virulent Mycobacterium species, but not in closely related avirulent
species, and was proposed to be involved in phagolysosome maturation
arrest. To gain further insight into the reaction pathway and the
mechanistically relevant enzyme substrate binding orientation, electronic
structure calculation and docking studies of reaction intermediates
were carried out. Results reveal a plausible binding mode of the substrate
that can provide the information to guide future drug design and anti-infective
therapies of this biosynthetic pathway.
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Zhang, Yue; Prach, Lisa M.; O’Brien, Terrence E.; DiMaio, Frank; Prigozhin, Daniil M.; Corn, Jacob E.; et al. (1753). Crystal Structure and Mechanistic Molecular Modeling
Studies of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Diterpene Cyclase
Rv3377c. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.0c00762