dihydropteroate and 5-6-7-8-tetrahydrofolic-acid

dihydropteroate has been researched along with 5-6-7-8-tetrahydrofolic-acid* in 4 studies

Other Studies

4 other study(ies) available for dihydropteroate and 5-6-7-8-tetrahydrofolic-acid

ArticleYear
Characterisation of the bifunctional dihydrofolate synthase-folylpolyglutamate synthase from Plasmodium falciparum; a potential novel target for antimalarial antifolate inhibition.
    Molecular and biochemical parasitology, 2010, Volume: 172, Issue:1

    Unusually for a eukaryote, the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum expresses dihydrofolate synthase (DHFS) and folylpolyglutamate synthase (FPGS) as a single bifunctional protein. The two activities contribute to the essential pathway of folate biosynthesis and modification. The DHFS activity of recombinant PfDHFS-FPGS exhibited non-standard kinetics at high co-substrate (glutamate and ATP) concentrations, being partially inhibited by increasing concentrations of its principal substrate, dihydropteroate (DHP). Binding of DHP to the catalytic and inhibitory sites exhibited dissociation constants of 0.50microM and 1.25microM, respectively. DHFS activity measured under lower co-substrate concentrations, where data fitted the Michaelis-Menten equation, yielded apparent K(m) values of 0.88microM for DHP, 22.8microM for ATP and 5.97microM for glutamate. Of the substrates tested in FPGS assays, only tetrahydrofolate (THF) was efficiently converted to polyglutamylated forms, exhibiting standard kinetics with an apparent K(m) of 0.96microM; dihydrofolate, folate and the folate analogue methotrexate (MTX) were negligibly processed, emphasising the importance of the oxidation state of the pterin moiety. Moreover, MTX inhibited neither DHFS nor FPGS, even at high concentrations. Conversely, two phosphinate analogues of 7,8-dihydrofolate that mimic tetrahedral intermediates formed during DHFS- and FPGS-catalysed glutamylation were powerfully inhibitory. The K(i) value of an aryl phosphinate analogue against DHFS was 0.14microM and for an alkyl phosphinate against FPGS 0.091microM, with each inhibitor showing a high degree of specificity. This, combined with the absence of DHFS activity in humans, suggests PfDHFS-FPGS might represent a potential new drug target in the previously validated folate pathway of P. falciparum.

    Topics: Adenosine Triphosphate; Enzyme Inhibitors; Folic Acid; Glutamic Acid; Kinetics; Methotrexate; Peptide Synthases; Plasmodium falciparum; Protozoan Proteins; Pterins; Substrate Specificity; Tetrahydrofolates

2010
Mutagenesis of folylpolyglutamate synthetase indicates that dihydropteroate and tetrahydrofolate bind to the same site.
    Biochemistry, 2008, Feb-26, Volume: 47, Issue:8

    The folylpolyglutamate synthetase (FPGS) enzyme of Escherichia coli differs from that of Lactobacillus casei in having dihydrofolate synthetase activity, which catalyzes the production of dihydrofolate from dihydropteroate. The present study undertook mutagenesis to identify structural elements that are directly responsible for the functional differences between the two enzymes. The amino terminal domain (residues 1-287) of the E. coli FPGS was found to bind tetrahydrofolate and dihydropteroate with the same affinity as the intact enzyme. The domain-swap chimera proteins between the E. coli and the L. casei enzymes possess both folate or pteroate binding properties and enzymatic activities of their amino terminal portion, suggesting that the N-terminal domain determines the folate substrate specificity. Recent structural studies have identified two unique folate binding sites, the omega loop in L. casei FPGS and the dihydropteroate binding loop in the E. coli enzyme. Mutants with swapped omega loops retained the activities and folate or pteroate binding properties of the rest of the enzyme. Mutating L. casei FPGS to contain an E. coli FPGS dihydropteroate binding loop did not alter its substrate specificity to using dihydropteroate as a substrate. The mutant D154A, a residue specific for the dihydropteroate binding site in E. coli FPGS, and D151A, the corresponding mutant in the L. casei enzyme, were both defective in using tetrahydrofolate as their substrate, suggesting that the binding site corresponding to the E. coli pteroate binding site is also the tetrahydrofolate binding site for both enzymes. Tetrahydrofolate diglutamate was a slightly less effective substrate than the monoglutamate with the wild-type enzyme but was a 40-fold more effective substrate with the D151A mutant. This suggests that the 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate binding site identified in the L. casei ternary structure may bind diglutamate and polyglutamate folate derivatives.

    Topics: Binding Sites; Escherichia coli; Lacticaseibacillus casei; Models, Molecular; Mutagenesis, Site-Directed; Mutant Proteins; Peptide Synthases; Protein Structure, Secondary; Protein Structure, Tertiary; Pterins; Recombinant Proteins; Substrate Specificity; Tetrahydrofolates

2008
One-carbon metabolism in plants. Regulation of tetrahydrofolate synthesis during germination and seedling development.
    Plant physiology, 2003, Volume: 131, Issue:3

    Tetrahydrofolate (THF) is a central cofactor for one-carbon transfer reactions in all living organisms. In this study, we analyzed the expression of dihydropterin pyrophosphokinase-dihydropteroate synthase (HPPK-DHPS) in pea (Pisum sativum) organs during development, and so the capacity to synthesize dihydropteroate, an intermediate in the de novo THF biosynthetic pathway. During seedling development, all of the examined organs/tissues contain THF coenzymes, collectively termed folate, and express the HPPK-DHPS enzyme. This suggests that each organ/tissue is autonomous for the synthesis of THF. During germination, folate accumulates in cotyledons and embryos, but high amounts of HPPK-DHPS are only observed in embryos. During organ differentiation, folate is synthesized preferentially in highly dividing tissues and in photosynthetic leaves. This is associated with high levels of the HPPK-DHPS mRNA and protein, and a pool of folate 3- to 5-fold higher than in the rest of the plant. In germinating embryos and in meristematic tissues, the high capacity to synthesize and accumulate folate correlates with the general resumption of cell metabolism and the high requirement for nucleotide synthesis, major cellular processes involving folate coenzymes. The particular status of folate synthesis in leaves is related to light. Thus, when illuminated, etiolated leaves gradually accumulate the HPPK-DHPS enzyme and folate. This suggests that folate synthesis plays an important role in the transition from heterotrophic to photoautotrophic growth. Analysis of the intracellular distribution of folate in green and etiolated leaves indicates that the coenzymes accumulate mainly in the cytosol, where they can supply the high demand for methyl groups.

    Topics: Carbon; Cell Differentiation; Coenzymes; Cotyledon; Folic Acid; Germination; Light; Meristem; Multienzyme Complexes; Pigments, Biological; Pisum sativum; Plant Leaves; Plant Roots; Plant Stems; Pterins; Seeds; Tetrahydrofolates

2003
Biosynthesis of tetrahydrofolate. Stereochemistry of dihydroneopterin aldolase.
    The Journal of biological chemistry, 2002, Aug-09, Volume: 277, Issue:32

    7,8-Dihydroneopterin aldolase catalyzes the formation of the tetrahydrofolate precursor, 6-hydroxymethyl-7,8-dihydropterin, and is a potential target for antimicrobial and anti-parasite chemotherapy. The last step of the enzyme-catalyzed reaction is believed to involve the protonation of an enol type intermediate. In order to study the stereochemical course of that reaction step, [1',2',3',6,7-13C5]dihydroneopterin was treated with aldolase in deuterated buffer. The resulting, partially deuterated [6alpha,6,7-13C3]6-hydroxymethyl-7,8-dihydropterin was converted to partially deuterated 6-(R)-[6,7,9,11-13C4]5,10-methylenetetrahydropteroate by a sequence of three enzyme-catalyzed reactions followed by treatment with [13C]formaldehyde. The product was analyzed by multinuclear NMR spectroscopy. The data show that the carbinol group of enzymatically formed 6-hydroxymethyl-dihydropterin contained 2H predominantly in the pro-S position.

    Topics: Aldehyde-Lyases; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; Dihydropteroate Synthase; Diphosphotransferases; Fructose-Bisphosphate Aldolase; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Models, Chemical; Plasmids; Pterins; Recombinant Proteins; Stereoisomerism; Tetrahydrofolates

2002