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Arylamine N-acetyltransferases (NATs; E.C 2.3.1.5) N-acetylate arylhydralazine and arylamine substrates using acetyl coenzyme A. Human NAT2 acetylates and inactivates the antituberculosis drug, isoniazid (INH), and is polymorphic. We previously demonstrated that there is a homologue of human NAT2 in Mycobacterium tuberculosis, whose product N-acetylates INH in vitro. We now demonstrate that the nat gene is expressed in M. tuberculosis and M. bovis Bacille Calmette-Guerin (BCG), using reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction and Western blotting. The NAT protein is active in M. bovis BCG in vivo, as detected by the presence of N-acetyl INH in M. bovis BCG lysates grown in INH. Sequence analysis of the M. tuberculosis nat coding region reveals a single nucleotide polymorphism in 18% of a random cohort of M. tuberculosis clinical isolates, conferring a G to R change. The recombinant mutant protein appears less stable than the wild type, and has an apparent affinity for INH of 10-fold less than the wild type. Modelling the change in M. tuberculosis NAT shows that the G to R change is close to the active site, and supports the experimental findings. Minimum inhibitory concentration data suggest that this polymorphism in nat is linked to low-level changes in the INH susceptibility of M. tuberculosis clinical isolates.

Citation

A M Upton, A Mushtaq, T C Victor, S L Sampson, J Sandy, D M Smith, P V van Helden, E Sim. Arylamine N-acetyltransferase of Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a polymorphic enzyme and a site of isoniazid metabolism. Molecular microbiology. 2001 Oct;42(2):309-17

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PMID: 11703656

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