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© Ahmed Haouz
Cristaux d'une protéine de Mycobacterium tuberculosis produits dans le cadre du Grand Programme Horizontal sur la Tuberculose à l'Institut Pasteur. La caractérisation structurale de protéines mycobactériennes aide à une meilleure compréhension de la physiologie et de la pathogénicité des mycobactéries et fournit un point de départ pour la conception de nouveaux agents antibactériens.
Publication : Journal of structural biology

Structural studies suggest a peptidoglycan hydrolase function for the Mycobacterium tuberculosis Tat-secreted protein Rv2525c.

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in Journal of structural biology - 24 Sep 2014

Bellinzoni M, Haouz A, Miras I, Magnet S, André-Leroux G, Mukherjee R, Shepard W, Cole ST, Alzari PM,

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 25260828

Link to DOI – 10.1016/j.jsb.2014.09.003S1047-8477(14)00189-0

J Struct Biol 2014 Nov; 188(2): 156-64

Among the few proteins shown to be secreted by the Tat system in Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Rv2525c is of particular interest, since its gene is conserved in the minimal genome of Mycobacterium leprae. Previous evidence linked this protein to cell wall metabolism and sensitivity to β-lactams. We describe here the crystal structure of Rv2525c that shows a TIM barrel-like fold characteristic of glycoside hydrolases of the GH25 family, which includes prokaryotic and phage-encoded peptidoglycan hydrolases. Structural comparison with other members of this family combined with substrate docking suggest that, although the ‘neighbouring group’ catalytic mechanism proposed for this family still appears as the most plausible, the identity of residues involved in catalysis in GH25 hydrolases might need to be revised.