Biosynthesis and recycling of nicotinamide cofactors in mycobacterium tuberculosis. An essential role for NAD in nonreplicating bacilli.
J Biol Chem. 2008 Jul 11; 283(28):19329-41
J Biol Chem. 2008 Jul 11; 283(28):19329-41
Squire Booker, The Pennsylvania State University, PA, USA. F1000 Chemical Biology
27 Oct 2008 | New Finding, Novel Drug Target, Refutation
I found this article exciting because it corrects a long-held hypothesis that Mycobacterium tuberculosis can only synthesize nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) de novo, and not use the classic salvage pathways that are available to numerous other organisms. In this work, it was shown that M. tuberculosis upregulates genes involved in a salvage pathway under conditions of hypoxia as well as during in vivo growth in its host, allowing it to make use of host-derived NAD or NAD precursors.
This work concludes that M. tuberculosis can synthesize NAD both via a de novo mechanism or via the scavenging of host-derived precursors, and that the best targets for the design of antituberculosis agents that inhibit NAD biosynthesis are the enzymes that are common to both pathways, such as nicotinic acid mononucleotide adenylyltransferase and NAD synthetase.
Booker S: "I found this article exciting because it corrects a long-held hypothesis that Mycobacterium tuberculosis can..." Evaluation of: [Boshoff HI et al. Biosynthesis and recycling of nicotinamide cofactors in mycobacterium tuberculosis. An essential role for NAD in nonreplicating bacilli. J Biol Chem. 2008 Jul 11; 283(28):19329-41; doi: 10.1074/jbc.M800694200]. Faculty of 1000, 27 Oct 2008. F1000.com/1123125#eval580250
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Booker S: 2008. F1000.com/1123125#eval580250
Faculty of 1000 evaluations, dissents and comments for [Boshoff HI et al. Biosynthesis and recycling of nicotinamide cofactors in mycobacterium tuberculosis. An essential role for NAD in nonreplicating bacilli. J Biol Chem. 2008 Jul 11; 283(28):19329-41; doi: 10.1074/jbc.M800694200]. Faculty of 1000, 27 Oct 2008. F1000.com/1123125
Short form
Faculty of 1000: 2008. F1000.com/1123125
Despite the presence of genes that apparently encode NAD salvage-specific enzymes in its genome, it has been previously thought that Mycobacterium tuberculosis can only synthesize NAD de novo. Transcriptional analysis of the de novo synthesis and putative salvage pathway genes revealed an up-regulation of the salvage pathway genes in vivo and in vitro under conditions of hypoxia. [14C]Nicotinamide incorporation assays in M. tuberculosis isolated directly from the lungs of infected mice or from infected macrophages revealed that incorporation of exogenous nicotinamide was very efficient in in vivo-adapted cells, in contrast to cells grown aerobically in vitro. Two putative nicotinic acid phosphoribosyltransferases, PncB1 (Rv1330c) and PncB2 (Rv0573c), were examined by a combination of in vitro enzymatic activity assays and allelic exchange studies. These studies revealed that both play a role in cofactor salvage. Mutants in the de novo pathway died upon removal of exogenous nicotinamide during active replication in vitro. Cell death is induced by both cofactor starvation and disruption of cellular redox homeostasis as electron transport is impaired by limiting NAD. Inhibitors of NAD synthetase, an essential enzyme common to both recycling and de novo synthesis pathways, displayed the same bactericidal effect as sudden NAD starvation of the de novo pathway mutant in both actively growing and nonreplicating M. tuberculosis. These studies demonstrate the plasticity of the organism in maintaining NAD levels and establish that the two enzymes of the universal pathway are attractive chemotherapeutic targets for active as well as latent tuberculosis.
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M800694200
PMID: 18490451
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