InhA, the enoyl reductase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis, catalyzes the NADH-dependent reduction of trans-2-enoyl-ACPs. In the present work, Raman spectroscopy has been used to identify catalytically relevant changes in the conformation of the nicotinamide ring that occur when NADH binds to InhA. For 4(S)-NADD, there is an 11 cm-1 decrease in the wavenumber of the C4-D stretching band (nuC-D) and a 50% decrease in the width of this band upon binding to InhA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe bacterial exotoxins, cholera toxin (CT), pertussis toxin (PT), and diphtheria toxin (DT), interfere with specific host proteins to cause tissue damage for their respective infections. The common toxic mechanism for these agents is mono-ADP-ribosylation of specific amino acids in G(s)(alpha), G(i)(alpha), and eEF-2 proteins, respectively, by the catalytic A chains of the toxins (CTA, PTA, and DTA). In the absence of acceptor proteins, these toxins also act as NAD(+)-N-ribosyl hydrolases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBacterial protein toxins are the most powerful human poisons known, exhibiting an LD(50) of 0.1-1 ng kg(-)(1). A major subset of such toxins is the NAD(+)-dependent ADP-ribosylating exotoxins, which include pertussis, cholera, and diphtheria toxin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnoyl-CoA hydratase catalyzes the hydration of trans-2-crotonyl-CoA to 3(S)- and 3(R)-hydroxybutyryl-CoA with a stereoselectivity (3(S)/3(R)) of 400,000 to 1. Importantly, Raman spectroscopy reveals that both the s-cis and s-trans conformers of the substrate analog hexadienoyl-CoA are bound to the enzyme, but that only the s-cis conformer is polarized. This selective polarization is an example of ground state strain, indicating the existence of catalytically relevant ground state destabilization arising from the selective complementarity of the enzyme toward the transition state rather than the ground state.
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