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Crystal structure of reduced MsAcg, a putative nitroreductase from Mycobacterium smegmatis and a close homologue of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Acg.

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posted on 2017-01-05, 09:27 authored by F. X. Chauviac, M. Bommer, J. Yan, G. Parkin, T. Daviter, P. Lowden, Emma L. Raven, K. Thalassinos, N. H. Keep
This paper presents the structure of MsAcg (MSMEG_5246), a Mycobacterium smegmatis homologue of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Acg (Rv2032) in its reduced form at 1.6 Å resolution using x-ray crystallography. Rv2032 is one of the most induced genes under the hypoxic model of tuberculosis dormancy. The Acg family turns out to be unusual flavin mononucleotide (FMN)-binding proteins that have probably arisen by gene duplication and fusion from a classical homodimeric nitroreductase such that the monomeric protein resembles a classical nitroreductase dimer but with one active site deleted and the other active site covered by a unique lid. The FMN cofactor is not reduced by either NADH or NADPH, but the chemically reduced enzyme is capable of reduction of nitro substrates, albeit at no kinetic advantage over free FMN. The reduced enzyme is rapidly oxidized by oxygen but without any evidence for a radical state commonly seen in oxygen-sensitive nitroreductases. The presence of the unique lid domain, the lack of reduction by NAD(P)H, and the slow rate of reaction of the chemically reduced protein raises a possible alternative function of Acg proteins in FMN storage or sequestration from other biochemical pathways as part of the bacteria's adaptation to a dormancy state.

History

Citation

Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2012, 287 (53), pp. 44372-44383

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Chemistry

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Journal of Biological Chemistry

Publisher

American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

issn

0021-9258

eissn

1083-351X

Available date

2017-01-05

Publisher version

http://www.jbc.org/content/287/53/44372

Notes

The atomic coordinates and structure factors (code 2ymv) have been deposited in the Protein Data Bank (http://wwpdb.org/).

Language

en

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