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Literature summary for 2.3.1.122 extracted from

  • Warrier, T.; Tropis, M.; Werngren, J.; Diehl, A.; Gengenbacher, M.; Schlegel, B.; Schade, M.; Oschkinat, H.; Daffe, M.; Hoffner, S.; Eddine, A.N.; Kaufmann, S.H.
    Antigen 85C inhibition restricts Mycobacterium tuberculosis growth through disruption of cord factor biosynthesis (2012), Antimicrob. Agents Chemother., 56, 1735-1743.
    View publication on PubMedView publication on EuropePMC

Cloned(Commentary)

Cloned (Comment) Organism
recombinant expression as C-terminally His-tagged enzyme Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Inhibitors

Inhibitors Comment Organism Structure
2-amino-6-propyl-4,5,6,7-tetrahydro-1-benzothiophene-3-carbonitrile i.e. I3-AG85, enzyme inhibition leads to accumulation of trehalose monomycolate and disruption of the bacterial envelope, I3-AG85 also inhibits Mycobacterium tuberculosis survival in infected primary macrophages. Binding of I3-AG85 to Ag85C is similar to its binding to the artificial substrate octylthioglucoside, overview Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Localization

Localization Comment Organism GeneOntology No. Textmining

Organism

Organism UniProt Comment Textmining
Mycobacterium tuberculosis P9WQN9 and clinical isolates MT103 and MYC1554, dru-resistant Ag85C mutants
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Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv P9WQN9 and clinical isolates MT103 and MYC1554, dru-resistant Ag85C mutants
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Synonyms

Synonyms Comment Organism
ag85C
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Mycobacterium tuberculosis
mycoloyl transferase
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Mycobacterium tuberculosis

General Information

General Information Comment Organism
malfunction inhibition of Ag85 protein family enzymes through substrate analogs hinders growth of mycobacteria and inhibition of Ag85C leads to accumulation of trehalose monomycolate Mycobacterium tuberculosis
physiological function the mycoloyl transferase activity of antigen 85 (Ag85) protein family, consisting of Ag85A, -B, and -C, generates trehalose dimycolate, an envelope lipid essential for Mycobacterium tuberculosis virulence, and cell wall arabinogalactan-linked mycolic acids Mycobacterium tuberculosis