Acyl carrier protein is a cellular target for the antibacterial action of the pantothenamide class of pantothenate antimetabolites

82Citations
Citations of this article
57Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Pantothenate is the precursor of the essential cofactor coenzyme A (CoA). Pantothenate kinase (CoaA) catalyzes the first and regulatory step in the CoA biosynthetic pathway. The pantothenate analogs N-pentylpantothenamide and N-heptylpantothenamide possess antibiotic activity against Escherichia coli. Both compounds are substrates for E. coli CoaA and competitively inhibit the phosphorylation of pantothenate. The phosphorylated pantothenamides are further converted to CoA analogs, which were previously predicted to act as inhibitors of CoA-dependent enzymes. Here we show that the mechanism for the toxicity of the pantothenamides is due to the inhibition of fatty acid biosynthesis through the formation and accumulation of the inactive acyl carrier protein (ACP), which was easily observed as a faster migrating protein using conformationally sensitive gel electrophoresis. E. coli treated with the pantothenamides lost the ability to incorporate [1-14C]acetate to its membrane lipids, indicative of the inhibition of fatty acid synthesis. Cellular CoA was maintained at the level sufficient for bacterial protein synthesis. Electrospray ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry confirmed that the inactive ACP was the product of the transfer of the inactive phosphopantothenamide moiety of the CoA analog to apo-ACP, forming the ACP analog that lacks the sulfhydryl group for the attachment of acyl chains for fatty acid synthesis. Inactive ACP accumulated in pantothenamide-treated cells because of the active hydrolysis of regular ACP and the slow turnover of the inactive prosthetic group. Thus, the pantothenamides are pro-antibiotics that inhibit fatty acid synthesis and bacterial growth because of the covalent modification of ACP.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Zhang, Y. M., Frank, M. W., Virga, K. G., Lee, R. E., Rock, C. O., & Jackowski, S. (2004). Acyl carrier protein is a cellular target for the antibacterial action of the pantothenamide class of pantothenate antimetabolites. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 279(49), 50969–50975. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M409607200

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free