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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Characterization of Mycobacterium smegmatis expressing the Mycobacterium tuberculosis fatty acid synthase I (fas1) gene.

Unlike most other bacteria, mycobacteria make fatty acids with the multidomain enzyme eukaryote-like fatty acid synthase I (FASI). Previous studies have demonstrated that the tuberculosis drug pyrazinamide and 5-chloro-pyrazinamide target FASI activity. Biochemical studies have revealed that in addition to C(16:0), Mycobacterium tuberculosis FASI synthesizes C(26:0) fatty acid, while the Mycobacterium smegmatis enzyme makes C(24:0) fatty acid. In order to express M. tuberculosis FASI in a rapidly growing Mycobacterium and to characterize the M. tuberculosis FASI in vivo, we constructed an M. smegmatis Deltafas1 strain which contained the M. tuberculosis fas1 homologue. The M. smegmatis Deltafas1 (attB::M. tuberculosis fas1) strain grew more slowly than the parental M. smegmatis strain and was more susceptible to 5-chloro-pyrazinamide. Surprisingly, while the M. smegmatis Deltafas1 (attB::M. tuberculosis fas1) strain produced C(26:0), it predominantly produced C(24:0). These results suggest that the fatty acid elongation that produces C(24:0) or C(26:0) in vivo is due to a complex interaction among FASI, FabH, and FASII and possibly other systems and is not solely due to FASI elongation, as previously suggested by in vitro studies.[1]

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