Structures of Bacterial MraY and Human GPT Provide Insights into Rational Antibiotic Design.
The widespread emergence of antibiotic resistance in pathogens necessitates the development of antibacterial agents inhibiting underexplored targets in bacterial metabolism. One such target is phospho-MurNAc-pentapeptide translocase (MraY), an essential integral membrane enzyme that catalyzes the first committed step of peptidoglycan biosynthesis. MraY has long been considered a promising candidate for antibiotic development in part because it is the target of five classes of naturally occurring nucleoside inhibitors with potent in vivo and in vitro antibacterial activity. Although these inhibitors each have a nucleoside moiety, they vary dramatically in their core structures, and they have different activity properties. Until recently, the structural basis of MraY inhibition was poorly understood. Several recent structures of MraY and its human paralog, GlcNAc-1-P-transferase, have provided insights into MraY inhibition that are consistent with known inhibitor activity data and can inform rational drug design for this important antibiotic target.
Duke Scholars
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- Transferases (Other Substituted Phosphate Groups)
- Transferases
- Structure-Activity Relationship
- Protein Conformation
- Models, Molecular
- Humans
- Drug Design
- Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
- Bacterial Proteins
- Bacteria
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- Transferases (Other Substituted Phosphate Groups)
- Transferases
- Structure-Activity Relationship
- Protein Conformation
- Models, Molecular
- Humans
- Drug Design
- Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
- Bacterial Proteins
- Bacteria