Title of article
Active site labeling of the gentamicin resistance enzyme AAC(6′)-APH(2″) by the lipid kinase inhibitor wortmannin Original Research Article
Author/Authors
David D. Boehr، نويسنده , , William S. Lane، نويسنده , , Gerard D. Wright، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages
10
From page
791
To page
800
Abstract
Abstract
Background: Aminoglycoside antibiotic resistance is largely the result of the production of enzymes that covalently modify the drugs including kinases (APHs) with structural and functional similarity to protein and lipid kinases. One of the most important aminoglycoside resistance enzymes is AAC(6′)-APH(2″), a bifunctional enzyme with both aminoglycoside acetyltransferase and kinase activities. Knowledge of enzyme active site structure is important in deciphering the molecular mechanism of antibiotic resistance and here we explored active site labeling techniques to study AAC(6′)-APH(2″) structure and function.
Results: AAC(6′)-APH(2″) was irreversibly inactivated by wortmannin, a potent phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase inhibitor, through the covalent modification of a conserved lysine in the ATP binding pocket. 5′-[p-(Fluorosulfonyl)benzoyl]adenosine, an electrophilic ATP analogue and known inactivator of other APH enzymes such as APH(3′)-IIIa, did not inactivate AAC(6′)-APH(2″), and reciprocally, wortmannin did not inactivate APH(3′)-IIIa.
Conclusions: These distinct active site label sensitivities point to important differences in aminoglycoside kinase active site structures and suggest that design of broad range, ATP binding site-directed inhibitors against APHs will be difficult. Nonetheless, given the sensitivity of APH enzymes to both protein and lipid kinase inhibitors, potent lead inhibitors of this important resistance enzyme are likely to be found among the libraries of compounds directed against other pharmacologically important kinases.
Article Outline
Keywords
* antibiotic resistance , * aminoglycoside , * Active site label
Journal title
Chemistry and Biology
Serial Year
2001
Journal title
Chemistry and Biology
Record number
1158396
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