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Kinetics and structural features of dimeric glutamine-dependent bacterial NAD+ synthetases suggest evolutionary adaptation to available metabolites.


ABSTRACT: NADH (NAD+) and its reduced form NADH serve as cofactors for a variety of oxidoreductases that participate in many metabolic pathways. NAD+ also is used as substrate by ADP-ribosyl transferases and by sirtuins. NAD+ biosynthesis is one of the most fundamental biochemical pathways in nature, and the ubiquitous NAD+ synthetase (NadE) catalyzes the final step in this biosynthetic route. Two different classes of NadE have been described to date: dimeric single-domain ammonium-dependent NadENH3 and octameric glutamine-dependent NadEGln, and the presence of multiple NadE isoforms is relatively common in prokaryotes. Here, we identified a novel dimeric group of NadEGln in bacteria. Substrate preferences and structural analyses suggested that dimeric NadEGln enzymes may constitute evolutionary intermediates between dimeric NadENH3 and octameric NadEGln The characterization of additional NadE isoforms in the diazotrophic bacterium Azospirillum brasilense along with the determination of intracellular glutamine levels in response to an ammonium shock led us to propose a model in which these different NadE isoforms became active accordingly to the availability of nitrogen. These data may explain the selective pressures that support the coexistence of multiple isoforms of NadE in some prokaryotes.

SUBMITTER: Santos ARS 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5950007 | biostudies-literature | 2018 May

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Kinetics and structural features of dimeric glutamine-dependent bacterial NAD<sup>+</sup> synthetases suggest evolutionary adaptation to available metabolites.

Santos Adrian Richard Schenberger ARS   Gerhardt Edileusa Cristina Marques ECM   Moure Vivian Rotuno VR   Pedrosa Fábio Oliveira FO   Souza Emanuel Maltempi EM   Diamanti Riccardo R   Högbom Martin M   Huergo Luciano Fernandes LF  

The Journal of biological chemistry 20180326 19


NADH (NAD<sup>+</sup>) and its reduced form NADH serve as cofactors for a variety of oxidoreductases that participate in many metabolic pathways. NAD<sup>+</sup> also is used as substrate by ADP-ribosyl transferases and by sirtuins. NAD<sup>+</sup> biosynthesis is one of the most fundamental biochemical pathways in nature, and the ubiquitous NAD<sup>+</sup> synthetase (NadE) catalyzes the final step in this biosynthetic route. Two different classes of NadE have been described to date: dimeric si  ...[more]

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