Mark S. B. McAlister
University College London
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Featured researches published by Mark S. B. McAlister.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005
Helen N. Murphy; Graham R. Stewart; Vladimir V. Mischenko; Alexander S. Apt; Richard Harris; Mark S. B. McAlister; Paul C. Driscoll; Douglas B. Young; Brian D. Robertson
The disaccharide trehalose is the major free sugar in the cytoplasm of mycobacteria; it is a constituent of cell wall glycolipids, and it plays a role in mycolic acid transport during cell wall biogenesis. The pleiotropic role of trehalose in the biology of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and its absence from mammalian cells suggests that its biosynthesis may provide a useful target for novel drugs. However, there are three potential pathways for trehalose biosynthesis in M. tuberculosis, and the aim of the present study was to introduce mutations into each of the pathways to determine whether or not they are functionally redundant. The results show that the OtsAB pathway, which generates trehalose from glucose and glucose-6-phosphate, is the dominant pathway required for M. tuberculosis growth in laboratory culture and for virulence in a mouse model. Of the two otsB homologues annotated in the genome sequence of M. tuberculosis, only OtsB2 (Rv3372) has a functional role in the pathway. OtsB2, trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatase, is strictly essential for growth and provides a tractable target for high throughput screening. Inactivation of the TreYZ pathway, which can generate trehalose from α-1,4-linked glucose polymers, had no effect on the growth of M. tuberculosis in vitro or in mice. Deletion of the treS gene altered the late stages of pathogenesis of M. tuberculosis in mice, significantly increasing the time to death in a chronic infection model. Because the TreS enzyme catalyzes the interconversion of trehalose and maltose, the mouse phenotype could reflect either a requirement for synthesis of additional trehalose or, conversely, a requirement for breakdown of stored trehalose to liberate free glucose.
FEBS Journal | 1998
Mark S. B. McAlister; Marion H. Brown; Antony C. Willis; Pauline M. Rudd; David J. Harvey; Robin T. Aplin; David M. Shotton; Raymond A. Dwek; A. Neil Barclay; Paul C. Driscoll
Biochemistry | 2000
Ho Ann Chen; Mark Pfuhl; Mark S. B. McAlister; Paul C. Driscoll
Biochemistry | 2002
Halina Garavini; Kirsi Riento; John P. Phelan; Mark S. B. McAlister; Anne J. Ridley; Nicholas H. Keep
Protein Engineering | 1998
Mark S. B. McAlister; Ben Davis; Mark Pfuhl; Paul C. Driscoll
Archive | 2002
Mark S. B. McAlister; Renos Savva; Laurence H. Pearl; Chrisostomos Prodromou; Paul C. Driscoll
Journal of Biomolecular NMR | 2001
Richard E. Harris; Mark S. B. McAlister; Andrew Sankar; John P. Phelan; Stephen J. Moss; Nicholas H. Keep; Paul C. Driscoll
Archive | 2002
Mark S. B. McAlister; Renos Savva; Laurence Pearl; Chrisostomos Prodromou; Paul C. Driscoll
Archive | 2002
Mark S. B. McAlister; Renos Savva; Laurence Pearl; Chrisostomos Prodromou; Paul C. Driscoll
Archive | 2002
Mark S. B. McAlister; Renos Savva; Laurence Pearl; Chrisostomos Prodromou; Paul C. Driscoll