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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (
immunodeficiency
)
71,517
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Covalent attachment of myristic acid (C14:0) to the amino-terminal glycine residue of a variety of eukaryotic cellular and viral proteins can have a profound influence on their biological properties. The enzyme that catalyzes this modification, myristoyl-CoA-protein N-myristoyltransferase (NMT), has been identified as a potential target for antiviral and antifungal therapy. Its reaction mechanism is ordered Bi Bi with myristoyl-CoA binding occurring before binding of peptide and CoA release preceding release of myristoylpeptide. Perturbations in the binding of its acyl-CoA substrate would therefore be expected to have an important influence on catalysis. We have synthesized 56 analogs of myristic acid (C14:0) to further characterize the acyl-CoA binding site of Saccharomyces cerevisiae NMT. The activity of fatty acid analogs was assessed using a coupled in vitro assay system that employed the reportedly nonspecific Pseudomonas
acyl-CoA synthetase
, purified S. cerevisiae NMT, and octapeptide substrates derived from residues 2-9 of the catalytic subunit of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase and the Pr55gag polyprotein precursor of human
immunodeficiency
virus I (HIV-I). Analysis of ketocarbonyl-, ester-, and amide-containing myristic acid analogs (the latter in two isomeric arrangements, the acylamino acid (-CO-NH-) and the amide (-NH-CO)) indicated that the enzyme's binding site is able to accommodate a dipolar protrusion from C4 through C13. This includes the region of the acyl chain occurring near C5-C6 (numbered from carboxyl) that appears to be bound in a bent conformation of 140-150 degrees. The activities of NMT's acyl-CoA substrates decrease with increasing polarity. This relationship was particularly apparent from an analysis of a series of analogs in which the hydrocarbon chain was terminated by (i) an azido group or (ii) one of three nitrogen heterocycles (imidazole, triazole, and tetrazole) alkylated at either nitrogen or carbon. This inverse relationship between polarity and activity was confirmed after comparison of the activities of the closely related ester- or amide-containing tetradecanoyl-CoA derivatives. Members from all of the analog series were surveyed to determine whether they could inhibit replication of human
immunodeficiency
virus I (HIV-I), a retrovirus that depends upon N-myristoylation of its Pr55gag for propagation. 12-Azidododecanoic acid was the most active analog tested, producing a 60-90% inhibition of viral production in both acutely and chronically infected T-lymphocyte cell lines at a concentration of 10-50 microM without associated cellular toxicity.
...
PMID:Substrate specificity of Saccharomyces cerevisiae myristoyl-CoA: protein N-myristoyltransferase. Analysis of fatty acid analogs containing carbonyl groups, nitrogen heteroatoms, and nitrogen heterocycles in an in vitro enzyme assay and subsequent identification of inhibitors of human immunodeficiency virus I replication. 155 67
We have explored the acyl-CoA substrate specificity of Saccharomyces cerevisiae myristoyl-CoA:protein N-myristoyltransferase (NMT) by synthesizing 81 fatty acid analogs and surveying their activity in a coupled in vitro assay containing Pseudomonas
acyl-CoA synthetase
and Escherichia coli-derived yeast NMT. Single oxygen or sulfur substitution for C-3 through C-13 is well tolerated by both enzymes. Detailed kinetic analyses suggest that the acyl-CoA and peptide-binding sites of NMT are relatively insensitive to placement of single group 6B heteroatoms. By contrast, di-oxygen-substituted analogs were very poor substrates, producing dramatic reductions in the affinity of NMTs peptide-binding site for a synthetic octapeptide substrate derived from the NH2-terminal sequence of a known N-myristoylprotein, the gag poly-protein precursor of human
immunodeficiency
virus 1 (HIV-1). This observation provides an example of binding site cooperativity in NMT. Replacement of one oxygen with sulfur at either the 6, 9, or 12 position of dioxatetradecanoic acids results in a general increase in peptide catalytic efficiency (Vmax/Km). An analysis of five fatty acids from octanoic to dodecanoic having terminal phenyl groups indicated that the best substrate was 10-phenyldecanoic acid even though Corey-Pauling-Koltun molecular models indicate that it has a length equivalent to that of tridecanoic acid. Six analogs having an equivalent length of 13 carbon atoms were subsequently prepared in which the phenyl group was systematically moved one methylene group closer to carboxyl. Movement of the phenyl just one carbon closer to carboxyl (producing 9-(p-methylphenyl) nonanoic acid) decreases peptide catalytic efficiency (Vmax/Km) severalfold compared to 10-phenyldecanoic acid. 10-(4-Tolyl)decanoic acid has the same relative positions of phenyl and carboxyl as 10-phenyldecanoic acid even though a methyl group is present on the phenyl ring. It produces peptide Km and Vmax values that are the same as 10-phenyldecanoic acid. Substitution of either oxygen or sulfur for a methylene group fails to override the effects noted when the phenyl group position is altered in the C-14 equivalent fatty acid series. Several fatty acids of differing chain lengths with cyclohexyl-, 2-furyl, and 2-thienyl groups at their omega termnius had activity profiles that paralleled those of the comparable phenyl-substituted compounds. Myristic acid analogs with triple bonds (beginning at positions 2 through 13), cis-double bonds (positions 3 through 13) and trans-double bond isomers (E5, E6, and E7) were also tested.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:The substrate specificity of Saccharomyces cerevisiae myristoyl-CoA:protein N-myristoyltransferase. Analysis of myristic acid analogs containing oxygen, sulfur, double bonds, triple bonds, and/or an aromatic residue. 202 98
Saccharomyces cerevisiae myristoyl-CoA:protein N-myristoyltransferase (Nmt1p) is a monomeric enzyme that is essential for vegetative growth. Nmt1p catalyzes the co-translational transfer of myristate from CoA to the amino-terminal Gly of cellular proteins in an ordered Bi Bi reaction mechanism that initially involves binding of myristoyl-CoA to the apoenzyme. Forty one fatty acid analogs were synthesized to define features in the acyl chain of myristoyl-CoA which are important determinants of its recognition by Nmt1p's acyl-CoA binding site as well as to help us deduce the structure of the binding site itself. These analogs included dicarboxylic acids, omega-nitrocarboxylic acids, analogs equivalent in length to C13:0-C15:0 which contain electronegative halogens at their omega-termini, hydroxytetradecanoic acids with hydrogen replaced by OH from C3 to C13, and azidophenyl-containing fatty acids with the linear azide unit attached either meta or para to phenyl and with variations in the length of their methylene chains. These compounds were converted to their CoA derivatives using Pseudomonas
acyl-CoA synthetase
and then surveyed as substrates for purified Nmt1p in an in vitro assay system that included an octapeptide derived from residues 1-8 of the human
immunodeficiency
virus Pr55gag polyprotein precursor. The results suggest that the myristoyl-CoA binding site contains a conical-shaped "receptor" that interacts with the omega-terminus of the bound acyl chain of acyl-CoAs. The acuteness of this cone determines the enzyme's capacity to accommodate steric bulk at the omega-terminus as well as Nmt1p's sensitivity to the distance between the eclipsed C5-C6 bond of a bound acyl chain and its omega-terminus. The activity profile of the various analog-CoAs also indicates that the enzyme's myristoyl-CoA binding site can accommodate fatty acid analogs with marked increases in polarity at their omega-terminus (compared to C14:0) as long as their chain length is equivalent to that of myristate.
...
PMID:The substrate specificity of Saccharomyces cerevisiae myristoyl-CoA: protein N-myristoyltransferase. Polar probes of the enzyme's myristoyl-CoA recognition site. 810 19
Myristoylation of human
immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) Gag protein is essential for virus particle budding. Two reactions are involved; activation of free myristate to myristoyl-CoA and transfer of the myristoyl residue to the Gag N-terminal glycine. We have investigated the effects of triacsin C, an inhibitor of long chain
acyl-CoA synthetase
, on release of HIV Gag virus-like particle (VLP) produced using the recombinant baculovirus system. First, inhibition of acyl-CoA formation by triacsin C was confirmed using the membrane fractions of insect Sf9 cells as an enzyme source. Second, when HIV Gag protein was expressed in the presence of triacsin C (0-48 microM), Gag myristoylation was inhibited in a dose-dependent manner. Budding of Gag VLP, however, did not follow similar inhibition kinetics but appeared unaffected up to 24 microM, yet was completely abolished at 48 microM when the myristoylation of Gag protein was also completely inhibited. The "all-or-none" inhibition of Gag VLP budding suggests that although inhibition of
acyl-CoA synthetase
blocks the production of myristoylated Gag protein, only complete inhibition of Gag myristoylation prevents VLP budding. Thus, relatively few myristoylated Gag molecules are sufficient for plasma membrane targeting and VLP budding.
...
PMID:Complete inhibition of human immunodeficiency virus Gag myristoylation is necessary for inhibition of particle budding. 857 68