Cargando…

Structural Characterization of the Reaction and Substrate Specificity Mechanisms of Pathogenic Fungal Acetyl-CoA Synthetases

[Image: see text] Acetyl CoA synthetases (ACSs) are Acyl-CoA/NRPS/Luciferase (ANL) superfamily enzymes that couple acetate with CoA to generate acetyl CoA, a key component of central carbon metabolism in eukaryotes and prokaryotes. Normal mammalian cells are not dependent on ACSs, while tumor cells,...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Jezewski, Andrew J., Alden, Katy M., Esan, Taiwo E., DeBouver, Nicholas D., Abendroth, Jan, Bullen, Jameson C., Calhoun, Brandy M., Potts, Kristy T., Murante, Daniel M., Hagen, Timothy J., Fox, David, Krysan, Damian J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2021
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8383264/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34369755
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acschembio.1c00484
_version_ 1783741703081951232
author Jezewski, Andrew J.
Alden, Katy M.
Esan, Taiwo E.
DeBouver, Nicholas D.
Abendroth, Jan
Bullen, Jameson C.
Calhoun, Brandy M.
Potts, Kristy T.
Murante, Daniel M.
Hagen, Timothy J.
Fox, David
Krysan, Damian J.
author_facet Jezewski, Andrew J.
Alden, Katy M.
Esan, Taiwo E.
DeBouver, Nicholas D.
Abendroth, Jan
Bullen, Jameson C.
Calhoun, Brandy M.
Potts, Kristy T.
Murante, Daniel M.
Hagen, Timothy J.
Fox, David
Krysan, Damian J.
author_sort Jezewski, Andrew J.
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Acetyl CoA synthetases (ACSs) are Acyl-CoA/NRPS/Luciferase (ANL) superfamily enzymes that couple acetate with CoA to generate acetyl CoA, a key component of central carbon metabolism in eukaryotes and prokaryotes. Normal mammalian cells are not dependent on ACSs, while tumor cells, fungi, and parasites rely on acetate as a precursor for acetyl CoA. Consequently, ACSs have emerged as a potential drug target. As part of a program to develop antifungal ACS inhibitors, we characterized fungal ACSs from five diverse human fungal pathogens using biochemical and structural studies. ACSs catalyze a two-step reaction involving adenylation of acetate followed by thioesterification with CoA. Our structural studies captured each step of these two half-reactions including the acetyl-adenylate intermediate of the first half-reaction in both the adenylation conformation and the thioesterification conformation and thus provide a detailed picture of the reaction mechanism. We also used a systematic series of increasingly larger alkyl adenosine esters as chemical probes to characterize the structural basis of the exquisite ACS specificity for acetate over larger carboxylic acid substrates. Consistent with previous biochemical and genetic data for other enzymes, structures of fungal ACSs with these probes bound show that a key tryptophan residue limits the size of the alkyl binding site and forces larger alkyl chains to adopt high energy conformers, disfavoring their efficient binding. Together, our analysis provides highly detailed structural models for both the reaction mechanism and substrate specificity that should be useful in designing selective inhibitors of eukaryotic ACSs as potential anticancer, antifungal, and antiparasitic drugs.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8383264
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher American Chemical Society
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-83832642021-08-31 Structural Characterization of the Reaction and Substrate Specificity Mechanisms of Pathogenic Fungal Acetyl-CoA Synthetases Jezewski, Andrew J. Alden, Katy M. Esan, Taiwo E. DeBouver, Nicholas D. Abendroth, Jan Bullen, Jameson C. Calhoun, Brandy M. Potts, Kristy T. Murante, Daniel M. Hagen, Timothy J. Fox, David Krysan, Damian J. ACS Chem Biol [Image: see text] Acetyl CoA synthetases (ACSs) are Acyl-CoA/NRPS/Luciferase (ANL) superfamily enzymes that couple acetate with CoA to generate acetyl CoA, a key component of central carbon metabolism in eukaryotes and prokaryotes. Normal mammalian cells are not dependent on ACSs, while tumor cells, fungi, and parasites rely on acetate as a precursor for acetyl CoA. Consequently, ACSs have emerged as a potential drug target. As part of a program to develop antifungal ACS inhibitors, we characterized fungal ACSs from five diverse human fungal pathogens using biochemical and structural studies. ACSs catalyze a two-step reaction involving adenylation of acetate followed by thioesterification with CoA. Our structural studies captured each step of these two half-reactions including the acetyl-adenylate intermediate of the first half-reaction in both the adenylation conformation and the thioesterification conformation and thus provide a detailed picture of the reaction mechanism. We also used a systematic series of increasingly larger alkyl adenosine esters as chemical probes to characterize the structural basis of the exquisite ACS specificity for acetate over larger carboxylic acid substrates. Consistent with previous biochemical and genetic data for other enzymes, structures of fungal ACSs with these probes bound show that a key tryptophan residue limits the size of the alkyl binding site and forces larger alkyl chains to adopt high energy conformers, disfavoring their efficient binding. Together, our analysis provides highly detailed structural models for both the reaction mechanism and substrate specificity that should be useful in designing selective inhibitors of eukaryotic ACSs as potential anticancer, antifungal, and antiparasitic drugs. American Chemical Society 2021-08-09 2021-08-20 /pmc/articles/PMC8383264/ /pubmed/34369755 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acschembio.1c00484 Text en © 2021 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Jezewski, Andrew J.
Alden, Katy M.
Esan, Taiwo E.
DeBouver, Nicholas D.
Abendroth, Jan
Bullen, Jameson C.
Calhoun, Brandy M.
Potts, Kristy T.
Murante, Daniel M.
Hagen, Timothy J.
Fox, David
Krysan, Damian J.
Structural Characterization of the Reaction and Substrate Specificity Mechanisms of Pathogenic Fungal Acetyl-CoA Synthetases
title Structural Characterization of the Reaction and Substrate Specificity Mechanisms of Pathogenic Fungal Acetyl-CoA Synthetases
title_full Structural Characterization of the Reaction and Substrate Specificity Mechanisms of Pathogenic Fungal Acetyl-CoA Synthetases
title_fullStr Structural Characterization of the Reaction and Substrate Specificity Mechanisms of Pathogenic Fungal Acetyl-CoA Synthetases
title_full_unstemmed Structural Characterization of the Reaction and Substrate Specificity Mechanisms of Pathogenic Fungal Acetyl-CoA Synthetases
title_short Structural Characterization of the Reaction and Substrate Specificity Mechanisms of Pathogenic Fungal Acetyl-CoA Synthetases
title_sort structural characterization of the reaction and substrate specificity mechanisms of pathogenic fungal acetyl-coa synthetases
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8383264/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34369755
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acschembio.1c00484
work_keys_str_mv AT jezewskiandrewj structuralcharacterizationofthereactionandsubstratespecificitymechanismsofpathogenicfungalacetylcoasynthetases
AT aldenkatym structuralcharacterizationofthereactionandsubstratespecificitymechanismsofpathogenicfungalacetylcoasynthetases
AT esantaiwoe structuralcharacterizationofthereactionandsubstratespecificitymechanismsofpathogenicfungalacetylcoasynthetases
AT debouvernicholasd structuralcharacterizationofthereactionandsubstratespecificitymechanismsofpathogenicfungalacetylcoasynthetases
AT abendrothjan structuralcharacterizationofthereactionandsubstratespecificitymechanismsofpathogenicfungalacetylcoasynthetases
AT bullenjamesonc structuralcharacterizationofthereactionandsubstratespecificitymechanismsofpathogenicfungalacetylcoasynthetases
AT calhounbrandym structuralcharacterizationofthereactionandsubstratespecificitymechanismsofpathogenicfungalacetylcoasynthetases
AT pottskristyt structuralcharacterizationofthereactionandsubstratespecificitymechanismsofpathogenicfungalacetylcoasynthetases
AT murantedanielm structuralcharacterizationofthereactionandsubstratespecificitymechanismsofpathogenicfungalacetylcoasynthetases
AT hagentimothyj structuralcharacterizationofthereactionandsubstratespecificitymechanismsofpathogenicfungalacetylcoasynthetases
AT foxdavid structuralcharacterizationofthereactionandsubstratespecificitymechanismsofpathogenicfungalacetylcoasynthetases
AT krysandamianj structuralcharacterizationofthereactionandsubstratespecificitymechanismsofpathogenicfungalacetylcoasynthetases