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7RZL

Crystal structure of putative NAD(P)H-flavin oxidoreductase from Haemophilus influenzae R2846 in complex with 4-nitrophenol

Summary for 7RZL
Entry DOI10.2210/pdb7rzl/pdb
Related7LDQ
DescriptorNAD(P)H-dependent oxidoreductase, P-NITROPHENOL, 1,2-ETHANEDIOL, ... (8 entities in total)
Functional Keywordsoxidoreductase, structural genomics, center for structural genomics of infectious diseases, csgid
Biological sourceHaemophilus influenzae R2846
More
Total number of polymer chains2
Total formula weight53508.07
Authors
Maltseva, N.,Kim, Y.,Endres, M.,Crofts, T.,Joachimiak, A.,Center for Structural Genomics of Infectious Diseases (CSGID) (deposition date: 2021-08-27, release date: 2021-09-29, Last modification date: 2024-07-17)
Primary citationMullowney, M.W.,Maltseva, N.I.,Endres, M.,Kim, Y.,Joachimiak, A.,Crofts, T.S.
Functional and Structural Characterization of Diverse NfsB Chloramphenicol Reductase Enzymes from Human Pathogens.
Microbiol Spectr, 10:e0013922-e0013922, 2022
Cited by
PubMed Abstract: Phylogenetically diverse bacteria can carry out chloramphenicol reduction, but only a single enzyme has been described that efficiently catalyzes this reaction, the NfsB nitroreductase from Haemophilus influenzae strain KW20. Here, we tested the hypothesis that some NfsB homologs function as housekeeping enzymes with the potential to become chloramphenicol resistance enzymes. We found that expression of H. influenzae and spp. genes, but not Pasteurella multocida , allows Escherichia coli to resist chloramphenicol by nitroreduction. Mass spectrometric analysis confirmed that purified H. influenzae and N. meningitides NfsB enzymes reduce chloramphenicol to amino-chloramphenicol, while kinetics analyses supported the hypothesis that chloramphenicol reduction is a secondary activity. We combined these findings with atomic resolution structures of multiple chloramphenicol-reducing NfsB enzymes to identify potential key substrate-binding pocket residues. Our work expands the chloramphenicol reductase family and provides mechanistic insights into how a housekeeping enzyme might confer antibiotic resistance. The question of how new enzyme activities evolve is of great biological interest and, in the context of antibiotic resistance, of great medical importance. Here, we have tested the hypothesis that new antibiotic resistance mechanisms may evolve from promiscuous housekeeping enzymes that have antibiotic modification side activities. Previous work identified a Haemophilus influenzae nitroreductase housekeeping enzyme that has the ability to give Escherichia coli resistance to the antibiotic chloramphenicol by nitroreduction. Herein, we extend this work to enzymes from other Haemophilus and strains to discover that expression of chloramphenicol reductases is sufficient to confer chloramphenicol resistance to Es. coli, confirming that chloramphenicol reductase activity is widespread across this nitroreductase family. By solving the high-resolution crystal structures of active chloramphenicol reductases, we identified residues important for this activity. Our work supports the hypothesis that housekeeping proteins possessing multiple activities can evolve into antibiotic resistance enzymes.
PubMed: 35195438
DOI: 10.1128/spectrum.00139-22
PDB entries with the same primary citation
Experimental method
X-RAY DIFFRACTION (1.45 Å)
Structure validation

231029

건을2025-02-05부터공개중

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