Abstract

We have isolated and purified to homogeneity an alpha,alpha'-trehalose 6-monomycolate:alpha,alpha'-trehalose mycolyltransferase (trehalose mycolyltransferase) from Mycobacterium smegmatis that catalyzes the exchange of a mycolyl group between trehalose, trehalose 6-monomycolate (TM), and trehalose 6,6'-dimycolate (TD). This enzyme was prominent in M. smegmatis and it catalyzed the following reactions. TM + [14C]trehalose in equilibrium [14C]TM + trehalose [14C]TM + TM in equilibrium [14C]TD + trehalose This enzyme was purified by (i) ammonium sulfate fractionation, (ii) QAE-Sephadex A-50 column chromatography, (iii) gel filtration on a Sephadex G-75 column, and (iv) SP-Sephadex C-50 column chromatography. The purified protein yielded a single band on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and its molecular weight was estimated to be 25,000. This enzyme was a glycoprotein, had no cofactor requirement, and was highly specific for alpha,alpha'-trehalose as the mycolate acceptor. It was less specific for the acyl donor group since the palmitoyl group in trehalose 6-monopalmitate was easily exchangeable. There was no TM acylhydrolase activity in the purified enzyme, suggesting that it is probably associated with the anabolic pathway of mycolic acid metabolism. We postulate the formation of a mycolyl-enzyme intermediate in this reaction. Such an intermediate could play a central role in the transfer of mycolic acid to form the prominent cell wall components of mycobacterial TD and possibly murein-arabinogalactan-mycolate.

Highlights

  • Mycobacteriumsmegmatis that catalyzestheexcobacterial cell wall have beenstudied extensively dueto their change of a mycolyl group between trehalose, trehaloseinteresting immunoadjuvantproperties

  • Very little is known about how mycolic acids and mycolatecontaining lipids are synthesized inmycobacteria

  • We have identified the donor tboe TM andhave fractionation, (ii) QAE-Sephadex A-50 column chromatography, (iii) gel filtration on aSephadexG-75 column, and (iv) SP-Sephadex

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Summary

RESULTS

Absence ofAcylhydrolase Activitiyn TrehaloseMycolyltrans- a profile identical to that of the added TM donor (data not ferase Enzyme-The possibility existed that the trehalose shown)W. hen organically synthesized TM (provided by mycolyltransferase activity might be secondary to theprimary Mayer Goren) was used in a similar experiment, [14C]TMwas acylhydrolase activity where TM is hydrolyzed to yield tre- formed, confirming that both the donor lipid and thelabeled halose and free mycolic acid. This would ascribe a catabolic product of this reaction are TM (Fig. 6).

DISCUSSION
Findings
S 0 1 d t 1 0 na n dP urification
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