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      Linkage between toxin production and purine biosynthesis in Clostridium difficile.

      Journal of Medical Microbiology
      Amino Acid Sequence, Anti-Bacterial Agents, pharmacology, Azaserine, Bacterial Proteins, biosynthesis, chemistry, genetics, Bacterial Toxins, Biotin, metabolism, Carbon-Nitrogen Ligases with Glutamine as Amide-N-Donor, Clostridium difficile, drug effects, Cytotoxins, Enterotoxins, Escherichia coli Proteins, Glycine, analogs & derivatives, Humans, Ligases, Molecular Sequence Data, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Purines, Ribonucleotides, Sequence Homology, Sulfamethoxazole

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          Abstract

          The production of toxins A and B by Clostridium difficile was greatly enhanced under biotin-limited conditions, in which a 140-kDa protein was expressed strongly. Gene cloning revealed that this protein was a homologue of formylglycinamidine ribonucleotide synthetase (FGAM synthetase, EC 6.3.5.3), which is known as PurL in Escherichia coli and catalyses the fourth step of the de novo purine biosynthesis pathway. This enzyme consisted of a single polypeptide, although FGAM synthetases of gram-positive bacteria usually consist of two subunits. Inhibition of the enzymic activity of C. difficile PurL by O-diazoacetyl-L-serine (azaserine) resulted in enhanced toxin B production even in biotin-sufficient conditions. In contrast, blockade of the preceding step of the PurL catalysing step by sulfamethoxazole inhibited toxin B production almost completely. These results suggest that accumulation of formylglycinamide ribonucleotide (FGAR), a substrate of FGAM synthetase, enhances toxin production by C difficile and depletion of FGAR reduces toxin production.

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