Future Pharmacology (Mar 2023)

Single Turnover of Transient of Reactants Supports a Complex Interplay of Conformational States in the Mode of Action of <i>Mycobacterium tuberculosis</i> Enoyl Reductase

  • Leonardo Kras Borges Martinelli,
  • Mariane Rotta,
  • Cristiano Valim Bizarro,
  • Pablo Machado,
  • Luiz Augusto Basso

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/futurepharmacol3020023
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 2
pp. 379 – 391

Abstract

Read online

The enoyl reductase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MtInhA) was shown to be a major target for isoniazid, the most prescribed first-line anti-tuberculosis agent. The MtInhA (EC 1.3.1.9) protein catalyzes the hydride transfer from the 4S hydrogen of β-NADH to carbon-3 of long-chain 2-trans-enoyl thioester substrates (enoyl-ACP or enoyl-CoA) to yield NAD+ and acyl-ACP or acyl-CoA products. The latter are the long carbon chains of the meromycolate branch of mycolic acids, which are high-molecular-weight α-alkyl, β-hydroxy fatty acids of the mycobacterial cell wall. Here, stopped-flow measurements under single-turnover experimental conditions are presented for the study of the transient of reactants. Single-turnover experiments at various enzyme active sites were carried out. These studies suggested isomerization of the MtInhA:NADH binary complex in pre-incubation and positive cooperativity that depends on the number of enzyme active sites occupied by the 2-trans-dodecenoyl-CoA (DD-CoA) substrate. Stopped-flow results for burst analysis indicate that product release does not contribute to the rate-limiting step of the MtInhA-catalyzed chemical reaction. The bearings that the results presented herein have on function-based anti-tuberculosis drug design are discussed.

Keywords