| Literature DB >> 23150954 |
Gabriela Flores-Ramirez1, Stefan Janecek, Ján A Miernyk, Ludovit Skultety.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Coxiella burnetii is Gram-negative bacterium responsible for the zoonosis Q-fever. While it has an obligate intracellular growth habit, it is able to persist for extended periods outside of a host cell and can resist environmental conditions that would be lethal to most prokaryotes. It is these extracellular bacteria that are the infectious stage encountered by eukaryotic hosts. The intracellular form has evolved to grow and replicate within acidified parasitophorous vacuoles. The outer coat of C. burnetii comprises a complex lipopolysaccharide (LPS) component that includes the unique methylated-6-deoxyhexose, virenose. Although potentially important as a biomarker for C. burnetii, the pathway for its biosynthesis remains obscure.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23150954 PMCID: PMC3539893 DOI: 10.1186/1477-5956-10-67
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proteome Sci ISSN: 1477-5956 Impact factor: 2.480
Figure 1The proposed pathways of C. burnetii for virenose biosynthesis. The pathway might begin with either fructose-6-phosphate (1) glucose-6-phosphate (2) or mannose-6-phosphate (3). The hexose-6-phosphates are then converted to either glucose-1-phosphate (4) or manose-1-phosphate (5) respectively by a dual-specific α-D-phosphohexomutase. Next, thymidylyltransferase or guanylyltransferase generates dTDP-glucose (6) or GDP-mannose (7), respectively. The activated sugars are transformed to the common intermediates in the biosynthesis of deoxysugars dTDP-4-keto-6-deoxy-D-glucose (8) or GDP-4-keto-6-deoxy-D-mannose (9). The carbohydrates are then methylated at C3 by the product of the TylCIII gene yielding the corresponding intermediates (10, 11). Finally, the methylated TDP intermediate is reduced by a 4-ketoreductase to form TDP-D-virenose (12). In the GDP route the intermediate GDP-3-methyl-4-keto-6-deoxy-D-idose (11) is transformed by GDP-4-keto-6-deoxy-D-mannose epimerase/reductase to GDP-L-virenose (13) or it can be converted to GDP-D-virenose (15) by the activities of a 4-ketoreductase plus a 2-C’-epimerase.