While a deep understanding of the fungal and mammalian multi-enzyme type I fatty-acid synthases (FAS I) has been achieved in recent years, the bacterial FAS I family, which is narrowly distributed within the Actinomycetales genera Mycobacterium, Corynebacterium and Nocardia, is still poorly understood. This is of particular relevance for two reasons: (i) although homologous to fungal FAS I, cryo-electron microscopic studies have shown that bacterial FAS I has unique structural and functional properties, and (ii) M. tuberculosis FAS I is a drug target for the therapeutic treatment of tuberculosis (TB) and therefore is of extraordinary importance as a drug target. Crystals of FAS I from C. efficiens, a homologue of M. tuberculosis FAS I, were produced and diffracted X-rays to about 4.5Å resolution.
CITATION STYLE
Enderle, M., Mccarthy, A., Paithankar, K. S., & Grininger, M. (2015). Crystallization and X-ray diffraction studies of a complete bacterial fatty-acid synthase type I. Acta Crystallographica Section:F Structural Biology Communications, 71, 1401–1407. https://doi.org/10.1107/S2053230X15018336
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