Abstract
Nitroreductases activate nitroaromatic antibiotics and cancer prodrugs to cytotoxic hydroxylamines and reduce quinones to quinols. Using steady-state and stopped-flow kinetics, we show that the Escherichia coli nitroreductase NfsA is 20–50 fold more active with NADPH than with NADH and that product release may be rate-limiting. The crystal structure of NfsA with NADP+ shows that a mobile loop forms a phosphate-binding pocket. The nicotinamide ring and nicotinamide ribose are mobile, as confirmed in molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. We present a model of NADPH bound to NfsA. Only one NADP+ is seen bound to the NfsA dimers, and MD simulations show that binding of a second NADP(H) cofactor is unfavourable, suggesting that NfsA and other members of this protein superfamily may have a half-of-sites mechanism.
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White, S. A., Christofferson, A. J., Grainger, A. I., Day, M. A., Jarrom, D., Graziano, A. E., … Hyde, E. I. (2022). The 3D-structure, kinetics and dynamics of the E. coli nitroreductase NfsA with NADP+ provide glimpses of its catalytic mechanism. FEBS Letters, 596(18), 2425–2440. https://doi.org/10.1002/1873-3468.14413
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