NAD+observational2005

Structural rearrangement accompanying NAD+ synthesis within a bacterial DNA ligase crystal.

Structure (London, England : 1993)

confidence

Key findings

Structural/crystallographic study of NAD+ synthesis and recognition by bacterial DNA ligase; no clinical or biological endpoints reported.

View source on PubMed (PMID 15296738) ↗

Sample size
N/A
Population
Bacterial enzyme (Enterococcus faecalis DNA ligase), crystallographic study
Dosing
N/A
Duration
N/A
Route
N/A
Blinding
not_reported
Controls
none
Drug class
coenzyme
Full abstract

DNA ligase is an enzyme important for DNA repair and replication. Eukaryotic genomes encode ligases requiring ATP as the cofactor; bacterial genomes encode NAD(+)-dependent ligase. This difference in substrate specificities and the essentiality of NAD(+)-dependent ligase for bacterial survival make NAD(+)-dependent ligase a good target for designing highly specific anti-infectives. Any such structure-guided effort would require the knowledge of the precise mechanism of NAD+ recognition by the enzyme. We report the principles of NAD+ recognition by presenting the synthesis of NAD+ from nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN) and AMP, catalyzed by Enterococcus faecalis ligase within the crystal lattice. Unprecedented conformational change, required to reorient the two subdomains of the protein for the condensation to occur and to recognize NAD+, is captured in two structures obtained using the same protein crystal. Structural data and sequence analysis presented here confirms and extends prior functional studies of the ligase adenylation reaction.

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