Balcewich Misty D, Stubbs Keith A, He Yuan, James Terrence W, Davies Gideon J, Vocadlo David J, Mark Brian L
Department of Microbiology, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
Protein Sci. 2009 Jul;18(7):1541-51. doi: 10.1002/pro.137.
NagZ is an exo-N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase, found within Gram-negative bacteria, that acts in the peptidoglycan recycling pathway to cleave N-acetylglucosamine residues off peptidoglycan fragments. This activity is required for resistance to cephalosporins mediated by inducible AmpC beta-lactamase. NagZ uses a catalytic mechanism involving a covalent glycosyl enzyme intermediate, unlike that of the human exo-N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidases: O-GlcNAcase and the beta-hexosaminidase isoenzymes. These latter enzymes, which remove GlcNAc from glycoconjugates, use a neighboring-group catalytic mechanism that proceeds through an oxazoline intermediate. Exploiting these mechanistic differences we previously developed 2-N-acyl derivatives of O-(2-acetamido-2-deoxy-D-glucopyranosylidene)amino-N-phenylcarbamate (PUGNAc), which selectively inhibits NagZ over the functionally related human enzymes and attenuate antibiotic resistance in Gram-negatives that harbor inducible AmpC. To understand the structural basis for the selectivity of these inhibitors for NagZ, we have determined its crystallographic structure in complex with N-valeryl-PUGNAc, the most selective known inhibitor of NagZ over both the human beta-hexosaminidases and O-GlcNAcase. The selectivity stems from the five-carbon acyl chain of N-valeryl-PUGNAc, which we found ordered within the enzyme active site. In contrast, a structure determination of a human O-GlcNAcase homologue bound to a related inhibitor N-butyryl-PUGNAc, which bears a four-carbon chain and is selective for both NagZ and O-GlcNAcase over the human beta-hexosamnidases, reveals that this inhibitor induces several conformational changes in the active site of this O-GlcNAcase homologue. A comparison of these complexes, and with the human beta-hexosaminidases, reveals how selectivity for NagZ can be engineered by altering the 2-N-acyl substituent of PUGNAc to develop inhibitors that repress AmpC mediated beta-lactam resistance.
NagZ是一种外切N-乙酰-β-氨基葡萄糖苷酶,存在于革兰氏阴性菌中,在肽聚糖循环途径中发挥作用,从肽聚糖片段上裂解下N-乙酰葡糖胺残基。这种活性是对由诱导型AmpCβ-内酰胺酶介导的头孢菌素产生抗性所必需的。与人类外切N-乙酰-β-氨基葡萄糖苷酶:O-连接的N-乙酰葡糖胺酶和β-己糖胺酶同工酶不同,NagZ采用涉及共价糖基酶中间体的催化机制。后两种酶从糖缀合物中去除GlcNAc,采用通过恶唑啉中间体进行的邻基催化机制。利用这些机制差异,我们先前开发了O-(2-乙酰氨基-2-脱氧-D-吡喃葡萄糖亚基)氨基-N-苯基氨基甲酸酯(PUGNAc)的2-N-酰基衍生物,其对NagZ的选择性高于功能相关的人类酶,并减弱了携带诱导型AmpC的革兰氏阴性菌中的抗生素抗性。为了了解这些抑制剂对NagZ选择性的结构基础,我们确定了其与N-戊酰基-PUGNAc形成复合物的晶体结构,N-戊酰基-PUGNAc是已知对NagZ选择性最高的抑制剂,对人类β-己糖胺酶和O-连接的N-乙酰葡糖胺酶均有抑制作用。选择性源于N-戊酰基-PUGNAc的五碳酰基链,我们发现其在酶活性位点内有序排列。相比之下,人O-连接的N-乙酰葡糖胺酶同系物与相关抑制剂N-丁酰基-PUGNAc结合的结构测定显示,该抑制剂在该O-连接的N-乙酰葡糖胺酶同系物的活性位点诱导了几种构象变化。对这些复合物以及与人类β-己糖胺酶的比较揭示了如何通过改变PUGNAc的2-N-酰基取代基来设计对NagZ的选择性,从而开发出抑制AmpC介导的β-内酰胺抗性的抑制剂。