Abstract
Microbial communities are self-controlled by repertoires of lethal agents, the antibiotics. In their turn, these antibiotics are regulated by bioscavengers that are selected in the course of evolution. Kinase-mediated phosphorylation represents one of the general strategies for the emergence of antibiotic resistance. A new subfamily of AmiN-like kinases, isolated from the Siberian bear microbiome, inactivates antibiotic amicoumacin by phosphorylation. The nanomolar substrate affinity defines AmiN as a phosphotransferase with a unique catalytic efficiency proximal to the diffusion limit. Crystallographic analysis and multiscale simulations revealed a catalytically perfect mechanism providing phosphorylation exclusively in the case of a closed active site that counteracts substrate promiscuity. AmiN kinase is a member of the previously unknown subfamily representing the first evidence of a specialized phosphotransferase bioscavenger.
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CITATION STYLE
Terekhov, S. S., Mokrushina, Y. A., Nazarov, A. S., Zlobin, A., Zalevsky, A., Bourenkov, G., … Gabibov, A. G. (2020). A kinase bioscavenger provides antibiotic resistance by extremely tight substrate binding. Science Advances, 6(26). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aaz9861
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