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      Functional reconstitution of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis long-chain acyl-CoA carboxylase from multiple acyl-CoA subunits.

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          Abstract

          Mycobacterium tuberculosis produces a large number of structurally diverse lipids that have been implicated in the pathogenicity, persistence and antibiotic resistance of this organism. Most building blocks involved in the biosynthesis of all these lipids are generated by acyl-CoA carboxylases whose subunit composition and physiological roles have not yet been clearly established. Inconclusive data in the literature refer to the exact protein composition and substrate specificity of the enzyme complex that produces the long-chain α-carboxy-acyl-CoAs, which are substrates involved in the last step of condensation mediated by the polyketide synthase 13 to synthesize mature mycolic acids. Here we have successfully reconstituted the long-chain acyl-CoA carboxylase (LCC) complex from its purified components, the α subunit (AccA3), the ε subunit (AccE5) and the two β subunits (AccD4 and AccD5), and demonstrated that the four subunits are essential for its activity. Furthermore, we also showed by substrate competition experiments and the use of a specific inhibitor that the AccD5 subunit's role in the carboxylation of the long acyl-CoAs, as part of the LCC complex, was structural rather than catalytic. Moreover, AccD5 was also able to carboxylate its natural substrates, acetyl-CoA and propionyl-CoA, in the context of the LCC enzyme complex. Thus, the supercomplex formed by these four subunits has the potential to generate the main substrates, malonyl-CoA, methylmalonyl-CoA and α-carboxy-C24-26 -CoA, used as condensing units for the biosynthesis of all the lipids present in this pathogen.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          FEBS J.
          The FEBS journal
          Wiley
          1742-4658
          1742-464X
          April 2017
          : 284
          : 7
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Laboratory of Physiology and Genetics of Actinomycetes, Facultad de Ciencias Bioquímicas y Farmacéuticas, Instituto de Biología Molecular y Celular de Rosario (IBR-CONICET), Universidad Nacional de Rosario, Argentina.
          [2 ] Département Tuberculose et Biologie des Infections, Institut de Pharmacologie et de Biologie Structurale (IPBS), CNRS, Toulouse, France.
          [3 ] Université de Toulouse, France.
          Article
          NIHMS854182
          10.1111/febs.14046
          5393044
          28222482
          f4c7e8a0-08c3-44bd-af85-a0c33a459812
          History

          lipid biosynthesis,mycolic acids,acyl-CoA carboxylase, Mycobacterium tuberculosis

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