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Enterobactin: an archetype for microbial iron transport.


ABSTRACT: Bacteria have aggressive acquisition processes for iron, an essential nutrient. Siderophores are small iron chelators that facilitate cellular iron transport. The siderophore enterobactin is a triscatechol derivative of a cyclic triserine lactone. Studies of the chemistry, regulation, synthesis, recognition, and transport of enterobactin make it perhaps the best understood of the siderophore-mediated iron uptake systems, displaying a lot of function packed into this small molecule. However, recent surprises include the isolation of corynebactin, a closely related trithreonine triscatechol derivative lactone first found in Gram-positive bacteria, and the crystal structure of a ferric enterobactin complex of a protein identified as an antibacterial component of the human innate immune system.

SUBMITTER: Raymond KN 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC152965 | biostudies-literature | 2003 Apr

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Enterobactin: an archetype for microbial iron transport.

Raymond Kenneth N KN   Dertz Emily A EA   Kim Sanggoo S SS  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20030324 7


Bacteria have aggressive acquisition processes for iron, an essential nutrient. Siderophores are small iron chelators that facilitate cellular iron transport. The siderophore enterobactin is a triscatechol derivative of a cyclic triserine lactone. Studies of the chemistry, regulation, synthesis, recognition, and transport of enterobactin make it perhaps the best understood of the siderophore-mediated iron uptake systems, displaying a lot of function packed into this small molecule. However, rece  ...[more]

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