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Functional co-evolutionary study of glucosamine-6-phosphate synthase in mycoses causing fungi

Invasive fungal opportunistic infections or mycoses have been on the rise with increase in the number of immuno-compromised patients accounting for associated high morbidity and mortality rates. The antifungal drugs are not completely effective due to increased resistance and varied susceptibility o...

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Autores principales: Banerjee, Kamalika, Gupta, Utkarsh, Gupta, Sanjay, Sharma, Sanjeev Kumar, Jain, Chakresh Kumar
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Biomedical Informatics 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3163925/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21904431
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author Banerjee, Kamalika
Gupta, Utkarsh
Gupta, Sanjay
Sharma, Sanjeev Kumar
Jain, Chakresh Kumar
author_facet Banerjee, Kamalika
Gupta, Utkarsh
Gupta, Sanjay
Sharma, Sanjeev Kumar
Jain, Chakresh Kumar
author_sort Banerjee, Kamalika
collection PubMed
description Invasive fungal opportunistic infections or mycoses have been on the rise with increase in the number of immuno-compromised patients accounting for associated high morbidity and mortality rates. The antifungal drugs are not completely effective due to increased resistance and varied susceptibility of fungi. Hence, the functional diversification study of novel targets has to be carried out. The enzyme glucosamine-6-phosphate synthase [EC 2.6.1.16], a novel drug target, catalyzes the rate-limiting step of the fungal cell-wall biosynthetic pathway, comprising four conserved domains, two glutaminase and sugar-isomerising (SIS) domains with active site. The amino acids within these domains tend to mutate simultaneously and exert mutual selective forces which might result in untoward fungal adaptations that are fixed through random genetic drift over time. The current study is an attempt to investigate such ‘non-independent’ coevolving residues which play critical functional and structural role in the protein. Residues with Shannon entropy ≦1 (calculated by the Protein Variability Server) were considered and subsequently, positional correlations were estimated by InterMap3D 1.3 server. It was observed that majority of coevolving pairs of first SIS domain involved interactions with hydrophobic leucine and found to be spatially coupled in 3-dimensional structure of the enzyme. The coevolving groups of Aspergillus niger and Rhizopus oryzae species might play a role in drug resistance. Such coevolutionary analysis is important for understanding the receptor-ligand interactions and effective drug designing.
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spelling pubmed-31639252011-09-08 Functional co-evolutionary study of glucosamine-6-phosphate synthase in mycoses causing fungi Banerjee, Kamalika Gupta, Utkarsh Gupta, Sanjay Sharma, Sanjeev Kumar Jain, Chakresh Kumar Bioinformation Hypothesis Invasive fungal opportunistic infections or mycoses have been on the rise with increase in the number of immuno-compromised patients accounting for associated high morbidity and mortality rates. The antifungal drugs are not completely effective due to increased resistance and varied susceptibility of fungi. Hence, the functional diversification study of novel targets has to be carried out. The enzyme glucosamine-6-phosphate synthase [EC 2.6.1.16], a novel drug target, catalyzes the rate-limiting step of the fungal cell-wall biosynthetic pathway, comprising four conserved domains, two glutaminase and sugar-isomerising (SIS) domains with active site. The amino acids within these domains tend to mutate simultaneously and exert mutual selective forces which might result in untoward fungal adaptations that are fixed through random genetic drift over time. The current study is an attempt to investigate such ‘non-independent’ coevolving residues which play critical functional and structural role in the protein. Residues with Shannon entropy ≦1 (calculated by the Protein Variability Server) were considered and subsequently, positional correlations were estimated by InterMap3D 1.3 server. It was observed that majority of coevolving pairs of first SIS domain involved interactions with hydrophobic leucine and found to be spatially coupled in 3-dimensional structure of the enzyme. The coevolving groups of Aspergillus niger and Rhizopus oryzae species might play a role in drug resistance. Such coevolutionary analysis is important for understanding the receptor-ligand interactions and effective drug designing. Biomedical Informatics 2011-08-20 /pmc/articles/PMC3163925/ /pubmed/21904431 Text en © 2011 Biomedical Informatics This is an open-access article, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, for non-commercial purposes, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Hypothesis
Banerjee, Kamalika
Gupta, Utkarsh
Gupta, Sanjay
Sharma, Sanjeev Kumar
Jain, Chakresh Kumar
Functional co-evolutionary study of glucosamine-6-phosphate synthase in mycoses causing fungi
title Functional co-evolutionary study of glucosamine-6-phosphate synthase in mycoses causing fungi
title_full Functional co-evolutionary study of glucosamine-6-phosphate synthase in mycoses causing fungi
title_fullStr Functional co-evolutionary study of glucosamine-6-phosphate synthase in mycoses causing fungi
title_full_unstemmed Functional co-evolutionary study of glucosamine-6-phosphate synthase in mycoses causing fungi
title_short Functional co-evolutionary study of glucosamine-6-phosphate synthase in mycoses causing fungi
title_sort functional co-evolutionary study of glucosamine-6-phosphate synthase in mycoses causing fungi
topic Hypothesis
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3163925/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21904431
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