DXS, the first enzyme of the pathway, is
feedback inhibited by the products IPP and DMAPP. DXS is active as a homo-
dimer and the precise mechanism of enzyme inhibition has been debated in the field. It has been proposed that IPP/DMAPP are competing the
co-factor TPP. A more recent study suggested that IPP/DMAPP trigger monomerisation and subsequent degradation of the enzyme, via interaction with a monomer interaction site that differs from the
active site of the
enzyme.
DXP reductoisomerase (also known as: DXR, DOXP reductoisomerase, IspC, MEP synthase), is a key enzyme in the MEP pathway. It can be inhibited by the
natural product fosmidomycin, which is under study as a starting point to develop a candidate antibacterial or antimalarial drug. The intermediate,
HMB-PP, is a natural activator of human
Vγ9/Vδ2 T cells, the major γδ T cell population in peripheral blood, and cells that "play a crucial role in the immune response to microbial pathogens". • IspH inhibitors: non-mevalonate Metabolic pathway that is essential for most bacteria but absent in humans, making it an ideal target for antibiotic development. This pathway, called methyl-D-erythritol phosphate (MEP) or non-mevalonate pathway, is responsible for biosynthesis of isoprenoids—molecules required for cell survival in most pathogenic bacteria and hence will be helpful in most usually antibacterial resistant bacteria. == Metabolic engineering of the MEP/Non-mevalonate pathway ==