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Katy Bixby
Structure of 4-Diphosphocytidyl-2-C-Methylerythritol Synthetase Involved
in Mevalonate-Independent Isoprenoid Biosynthesis
Date: October 14
Time: Noon to 1
Place: BSBE 4-101
The YgbP protein of Escherichia coli encodes the enzyme
4-diphosphocytidyl-2-C-methylerythritol (CDP-ME) synthetase, a
member of the cytidyltransferase family of enzymes. CDP-ME is an
intermediate in the mevalonate-independent pathway for isoprenoid
biosynthesis in a number of prokaryotic organisms, algae, the plant
plastids and the malaria parasite. Because vertebrates synthesize
isoprenoid precursors using a mevalonate pathway, CDP-ME
synthetase and other enzymes of the mevalonate-independent
pathway for isoprenoid production represent attractive targets for the
structure-based design of selective antibacterial, herbicidal and
antimalarial drugs.
The high-resolution
structures of E. coli CDP-ME
synthetase in the apo form and complexed with both CTP-Mg2+ and
CDP-ME-Mg2+ reveal the stereochemical principles underlying both
substrate and product recognition as well as catalysis in CDP-ME
synthetase. Moreover, these complexes represent the first experimental
structures for any cytidyltransferase with both substrates and
products bound.
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