A large conserved family of small-molecule carboxyl methyltransferases identified from microorganisms

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Abstract

Small-molecule carboxyl methyltransferases (CbMTs) constitute a small proportion of the reported methyltransferases, but they have received extensive attention due to their important physiological functions. Most of the small-molecule CbMTs isolated to date originate from plants and are members of the SABATH family. In this study, we identified a type of CbMT (OPCMT) from a group of Mycobacteria, which has a distinct catalytic mechanism from the SABATH methyltransferases. The enzyme contains a large hydrophobic substrate-binding pocket (~400 Å3) and utilizes two conserved residues, Thr20 and Try194, to retain the substrate in a favorable orientation for catalytic transmethylation. The OPCMT_like MTs have a broad substrate scope and can accept diverse carboxylic acids enabling efficient production of methyl esters. They are widely (more than 10,000) distributed in microorganisms, including several well-known pathogens, whereas no related genes are found in humans. In vivo experiments implied that the OPCMT_like MTs was indispensable for M. neoaurum, suggesting that these proteins have important physiological functions.

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Lin, Z., Hu, Z., Zhou, L., Liu, B., Huang, X., Deng, Z., & Qu, X. (2023). A large conserved family of small-molecule carboxyl methyltransferases identified from microorganisms. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 120(20). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2301389120

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