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Biochemical evidence for relaxed substrate specificity of Nα-acetyltransferase (Rv3420c/rimI) of Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

IR@IMTECH: CSIR-Institute of Microbial Technology, Chandigarh

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Title Biochemical evidence for relaxed substrate specificity of Nα-acetyltransferase (Rv3420c/rimI) of Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
 
Creator Pathak, Deepika
Bhat, Aadil Hussain
Sapehia, Vandana
Rai, Jagdish
Rao, Alka
 
Subject QR Microbiology
 
Description Nα-acetylation is a naturally occurring irreversible modification of N-termini of proteins catalyzed by Nα-acetyltransferases (NATs). Although present in all three domains of life, it is little understood in bacteria. The functional grouping of NATs into six types NatA - NatF, in eukaryotes is based on subunit requirements and stringent substrate specificities. Bacterial orthologs are phylogenetically divergent from eukaryotic NATs, and only a couple of them are characterized biochemically. Accordingly, not much is known about their substrate specificities. Rv3420c of Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a NAT ortholog coding for RimI(Mtb). Using in vitro peptide-based enzyme assays and mass-spectrometry methods, we provide evidence that RimI(Mtb) is a protein Nα-acetyltransferase of relaxed substrate specificity mimicking substrate specificities of eukaryotic NatA, NatC and most competently that of NatE. Also, hitherto unknown acetylation of residues namely, Asp, Glu, Tyr and Leu by a bacterial NAT (RimI(Mtb)) is elucidated, in vitro. Based on in vivo acetylation status, in vitro assay results and genetic context, a plausible cellular substrate for RimI(Mtb) is proposed.
 
Publisher NPG
 
Date 2016
 
Type Article
PeerReviewed
 
Format application/pdf
 
Identifier http://crdd.osdd.net/open/1895/1/65.pdf
Pathak, Deepika and Bhat, Aadil Hussain and Sapehia, Vandana and Rai, Jagdish and Rao, Alka (2016) Biochemical evidence for relaxed substrate specificity of Nα-acetyltransferase (Rv3420c/rimI) of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Scientific reports, 6. p. 28892. ISSN 2045-2322
 
Relation http://www.nature.com/articles/srep28892
http://crdd.osdd.net/open/1895/