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      Coenzyme A: a protective thiol in bacterial antioxidant defence

      1
      Biochemical Society Transactions
      Portland Press Ltd.

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          Abstract

          Coenzyme A (CoA) is an indispensable cofactor in all living organisms. It is synthesized in an evolutionarily conserved pathway by enzymatic conjugation of cysteine, pantothenate (Vitamin B5), and ATP. This unique chemical structure allows CoA to employ its highly reactive thiol group for diverse biochemical reactions. The involvement of the CoA thiol group in the production of metabolically active CoA thioesters (e.g. acetyl CoA, malonyl CoA, and HMG CoA) and activation of carbonyl-containing compounds has been extensively studied since the discovery of this cofactor in the middle of the last century. We are, however, far behind in understanding the role of CoA as a low-molecular-weight thiol in redox regulation. This review summarizes our current knowledge of CoA function in redox regulation and thiol protection under oxidative stress in bacteria. In this context, I discuss recent findings on a novel mode of redox regulation involving covalent modification of cellular proteins by CoA, termed protein CoAlation.

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          Most cited references44

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          Reconciling the chemistry and biology of reactive oxygen species.

          There is a vast literature on the generation and effects of reactive oxygen species in biological systems, both in relation to damage they cause and their involvement in cell regulatory and signaling pathways. The biological chemistry of different oxidants is becoming well understood, but it is often unclear how this translates into cellular mechanisms where redox changes have been demonstrated. This review addresses this gap. It examines how target selectivity and antioxidant effectiveness vary for different oxidants. Kinetic considerations of reactivity are used to assess likely targets in cells and how reactions might be influenced by restricted diffusion and compartmentalization. It also highlights areas where greater understanding is required on the fate of oxidants generated by cellular NADPH oxidases and on the identification of oxidant sensors in cell signaling.
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            The molecular mechanisms and physiological consequences of oxidative stress: lessons from a model bacterium.

            Oxic environments are hazardous. Molecular oxygen adventitiously abstracts electrons from many redox enzymes, continuously forming intracellular superoxide and hydrogen peroxide. These species can destroy the activities of metalloenzymes and the integrity of DNA, forcing organisms to protect themselves with scavenging enzymes and repair systems. Nevertheless, elevated levels of oxidants quickly poison bacteria, and both microbial competitors and hostile eukaryotic hosts exploit this vulnerability by assaulting these bacteria with peroxides or superoxide-forming antibiotics. In response, bacteria activate elegant adaptive strategies. In this Review, I summarize our current knowledge of oxidative stress in Escherichia coli, the model organism for which our understanding of damage and defence is most well developed.
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              Absolute Metabolite Concentrations and Implied Enzyme Active Site Occupancy in Escherichia coli

              Absolute metabolite concentrations are critical to a quantitative understanding of cellular metabolism, as concentrations impact both the free energies and rates of metabolic reactions. Here we use liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry to quantify more than 100 metabolite concentrations in aerobic, exponentially growing E. coli with glucose, glycerol, or acetate as the carbon source. The total observed intracellular metabolite pool is approximately 300 mM. A small number of metabolites dominate the metabolome on a molar basis, with glutamate most abundant. Metabolite concentration exceeds Km for most substrate-enzyme pairs. An exception is lower glycolysis, where concentrations of intermediates are near the Km of their consuming enzymes and all reactions are near equilibrium. This may facilitate efficient flux reversibility given thermodynamic and osmotic constraints. The data and analyses presented here highlight the ability to identify organizing metabolic principles from systems-level absolute metabolite concentration data.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Biochemical Society Transactions
                Portland Press Ltd.
                0300-5127
                1470-8752
                February 28 2019
                February 19 2019
                February 28 2019
                February 19 2019
                : 47
                : 1
                : 469-476
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Structural and Molecular Biology, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, U.K.
                Article
                10.1042/BST20180415
                30783014
                8468a2f5-4862-4f3e-ab85-37e0c73ff705
                © 2019
                History

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