
The 1.25 Å resolution structure of phosphoribosyl‐ATP pyrophosphohydrolase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Author(s) -
JavidMajd Farah,
Yang Dong,
Ioerger Thomas R.,
Sacchettini James C.
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
acta crystallographica section d
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1399-0047
DOI - 10.1107/s0907444908007105
Subject(s) - biochemistry , active site , pyrophosphatase , protein subunit , biology , cofactor , nucleoside triphosphate , enzyme , nucleotide , chemistry , gene
Phosphoribosyl‐ATP pyrophosphohydrolase is the second enzyme in the histidine‐biosynthetic pathway, irreversibly hydrolyzing phosphoribosyl‐ATP to phosphoribosyl‐AMP and pyrophosphate. It is encoded by the hisE gene, which is present as a separate gene in many bacteria and archaea but is fused to hisI in other bacteria, fungi and plants. Because of its essentiality for growth in vitro , HisE is a potential drug target for tuberculosis. The crystal structures of two native (uncomplexed) forms of HisE from Mycobacterium tuberculosis have been determined to resolutions of 1.25 and 1.79 Å. The structure of the apoenzyme reveals that the protein is composed of five α‐helices with connecting loops and is a member of the α‐helical nucleoside‐triphosphate pyrophosphatase superfamily. The biological unit of the protein is a homodimer, with an active site on each subunit composed of residues exclusively from that subunit. A comparison with the Campylobacter jejuni dUTPase active site allowed the identification of putative metal‐ and substrate‐binding sites in HisE, including four conserved glutamate and glutamine residues in the sequence that are consistent with a motif for pyrophosphohydrolase activity. However, significant differences between family members are observed in the loop region between α‐helices H1 and H3. The crystal structure of M. tuberculosis HisE provides insights into possible mechanisms of substrate binding and the diversity of the nucleoside‐triphosphate pyrophosphatase superfamily.