Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.373, No.1, 8-13, 2008
Active site of mycobacterial dUTPase: Structural characteristics and a built-in sensor
dUTPases are essential to eliminate dUTP for DNA integrity and provide dUMP for thymidylate biosynthesis. Mycobacterium tuberculosis apparently lacks any other thymidylate biosynthesis pathway, therefore dUTPase is a promising antituberculotic drug target. Crystal structure of the mycobacterial enzyme in complex with the isosteric substrate analog, alpha,beta-imido-dUTP and Mg2+ at 1.5 angstrom resolution was determined that visualizes the full-length C-terminus, previously not localized. Interactions of a conserved motif important in catalysis, the Mycobacterium-specific five-residue-loop insert and C-terminal tetrapeptide could now be described in detail. Stacking of C-terminal histidine upon the uracil moiety prompted replacement with tryptophan. The resulting sensitive fluorescent sensor enables fast screening for binding of potential inhibitors to the active site. K-d for alpha,beta-imido-dUTP binding to mycobacterial dUTPase is determined to be 10-fold less than for human dUTPase, which is to be considered in drug optimization. A robust continuous activity assay for kinetic screening is proposed. (C) 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Keywords:tuberculosis;Mycobacterium tuberculosis;dUTPase;tryptophan sensor;pyrophosphate assay;inhibitor screening;fluorescence spectroscopy;enzyme kinetics;uracil