Biochemical and Structural Analysis of the Bacterial Enzyme Succinyl-Diaminopimelate Desuccinylase (DapE) from Acinetobacter baumannii .
Emma H KelleyGeorge MinasovKatherine KonczakLudmilla ShuvalovaJoseph S BrunzelleShantanu ShuklaMegan BeulkeTeerana ThabthimthongKenneth W OlsenNicole L InnissKarla J F SatchellDaniel P BeckerPublished in: ACS omega (2024)
There is an urgent need for new antibiotics given the rise of antibiotic resistance, and succinyl-diaminopimelate desuccinylase (DapE, E.C. 3.5.1.18) has emerged as a promising bacterial enzyme target. DapE from Haemophilus influenzae ( Hi DapE) has been studied and inhibitors identified, but it is essential to explore DapE from different species to assess selective versus broad-spectrum therapeutics. We have determined the structure of DapE from the ESKAPE pathogen Acinetobacter baumannii ( Ab DapE) and studied inhibition by known inhibitors of Hi DapE. Ab DapE is inhibited by captopril and sulfate comparable to Hi DapE, but Ab DapE was not significantly inhibited by a known indoline sulfonamide Hi DapE inhibitor. Captopril and sulfate both stabilize Hi DapE by increasing the thermal melting temperature ( T m ) in thermal shift assays. By contrast, sulfate decreases the stability of the Ab DapE enzyme, whereas captopril increases the stability. Further, we report two crystal structures of selenomethionine-substituted Ab DapE in the closed conformation, one with Ab DapE in complex with succinate derived from enzymatic hydrolysis of N 6 -methyl-l,l-SDAP substrate and acetate (PDB code 7T1Q, 2.25 Å resolution), and a crystal structure of Ab DapE with bound succinate along with l-(S)-lactate, a product of degradation of citric acid from the crystallization buffer during X-ray irradiation (PDB code 8F8O, 2.10 Å resolution).