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J Biol Chem, Vol. 273, Issue 33, 21282-21290, August 14, 1998
From the Tuberculosis Research Section, Laboratory of Intracellular
Parasites, Rocky Mountain Laboratories, NIAID, NIH,
Hamilton, Montana 59840
A closely related family of enzymes from
Mycobacterium tuberculosis has been shown by heterologous
expression to catalyze the modification of mycolic acids through the
addition of a methyl (or methylene) group derived from
S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM). Overproduction
of all six of these enzymes in Escherichia coli and
subsequent in vitro reactions with heat-inactivated
acceptor fractions derived from Mycobacterium smegmatis in
the presence of [methyl-3H]SAM demonstrated
that the immediate substrate to which methyl group addition occurs was
a family of very long-chain fatty acids. Inhibitors of methyl transfer,
such as S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine and
sinefungin, were shown to inhibit this reaction but had no effect on
whole cells of either M. smegmatis or M. tuberculosis. Purified mycolic acids from M. tuberculosis were pyrolyzed, and the resulting meroaldehyde was
oxidized and methylated to produce full-length methyl meromycolates.
These esters were shown to comigrate with a fraction of the acceptor
from the in vitro reactions, suggesting that methyl group
addition occurs up to the level of the meromycolate. Protease and other
treatments destroyed the activity of the acceptor fraction, which was
also found to be extremely sensitive to basic pH. Antibody to the acyl
carrier protein AcpM, which has recently been shown to be the carrier
of full-length meromycolate produced by a unique type II fatty acid
synthase system, inhibited the cell-free methyl(en)ation of these
acids. These results suggest that mycolate modification reactions occur
parallel with the synthesis of the AcpM-bound meromycolate chain.
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