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1.
The R-state structures of the ATP and CTP complexes of aspartate carbamoyltransferase ligated with phosphonoacetamide and malonate have been determined at 2.8-A resolution and neutral pH. These structures were solved by the method of molecular replacement and were refined to crystallographic residuals between 0.167 and 0.182. The triphosphate, the ribose, and the purine and pyrimidine moieties of ATP and CTP interact with similar regions of the allosteric domain of the regulatory dimer. ATP and CTP relatively increase and decrease the size of the allosteric site in the vicinity of the base, respectively. For both CTP and ATP at pH 7, the gamma-phosphates are bound to His20 and are also near Lys94, while the alpha-phosphates interact exclusively with Lys94. The 2'-hydroxyls of both CTP and ATP are near the amino group of Lys60. The pyrimidine ring of CTP makes specific hydrogen bonds at the allosteric site: the NH2 group donates hydrogen bonds to the main-chain carbonyls of Ile12 and Tyr89 and the pyrimidine ring carbonyl oxygen accepts a hydrogen bond from the amino group of Lys60; the nitrogen at position 3 in the pyrimidine ring is hydrogen bonded to a main-chain NH group of Ile12. The purine ring of ATP also makes numerous interactions with residues at the allosteric site: the purine NH2 (analogous to the amino group of CTP) donates a hydrogen bond to the main-chain carbonyl oxygen of Ile12, the N3 nitrogen interacts with the amino group of Lys60, and the N1 nitrogen hydrogen bonds to the NH group of Ile12. The binding of CTP and ATP to the allosteric site in the presence of phosphonoacetamide and malonate does not dramatically alter the structure of the allosteric binding site or of the allosteric domain. Nonetheless, in the CTP-ligated structure, the average separation between the catalytic trimers decreases by approximately 0.5 A, indicating a small shift of the quaternary structure toward the T state. In the CTP- and ATP-ligated R-state structures, the binding and occupancy of phosphonoacetamide and malonate are similar and the structures of the active sites are similar at the current resolution of 2.8 A.  相似文献   

2.
The crystal structure of Escherichia coli aspartate carbamoyltransferase complexed with adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) has been solved by molecular replacement and has been refined to a crystallographic residual of 0.17 at 2.6-A resolution by using the computer program X-PLOR. The unit cell dimensions of this crystal form are a = b = 122.2 A and c = 143.3 A and the space group is P321. Although the c-axis unit cell dimension is approximately 1 A longer than the corresponding dimension of the CTP-ligated P321 crystal form (c = 142.2 A), the ATP-ligated enzyme adopts a T-like quaternary structure. The base moiety of ATP interacts with residues Glu10, Ile12, and Lys60 while the ribose is near Asp19 and Lys60; the triphosphate entity is bound to Lys94, although His20 and Arg96 are nearby. We observe a higher occupancy for ATP in the allosteric site of the R1 regulatory chain in comparison to the occupancy of the R6 allosteric site. These crystallographically independent sites are related by a molecular 2-fold axis. There are other violations of the noncrystallographic symmetry that are similar to those observed in the refined CTP-ligated aspartate carbamoyltransferase structure. These infringements on the molecular symmetry might be the result of intermolecular interactions in the crystal. To ensure the most meaningful comparison with the ATP-ligated structure, we refined the previously reported CTP-bound and unligated structures to crystallographic residuals between 0.17 and 0.18 using X-PLOR. These X-PLOR refined structures are not significantly different from the initial structures that had been crystallographically refined by a restrained least-squares method. After making all possible comparisons between the CTP- and ATP-ligated and the unligated T-state structures, we find that the most significant differences are located at the allosteric sites and in small changes in the quaternary structures. At the allosteric site, the binding of CTP and ATP successively enlarges the nucleotide binding cavity, particularly in the vicinity of the base. The changes in the quaternary structure can be characterized by an increase in the separation of the catalytic trimers by approximately 0.5 A as ATP binds to the unligated T structure. On the basis of these structural studies, we discuss the relationships between the conformational differences in the allosteric site and the small changes in the quaternary structure within the T form to the possible mechanisms for CTP inhibition and ATP activation.  相似文献   

3.
Atomic models representing the electron density of two crystalline forms of aspartate carbamoyltransferase from Escherichia coli are reported here. The unliganded form (R32 crystal symmetry) and the CTP-liganded form (P321 crystal symmetry) have been refined independently at resolutions of 3.0 å and 2.8 Å, respectively, each to a crystallographic R-factor of 27%. The molecular models include at least 95% of the theoretical number of atoms for the aspartate Carbamoyltransferase molecule based on chemical sequence information. We provide details of the refinement process for the two structures, and an evaluation of the accuracy of the molecular models.For the most part, the regulatory and catalytic chains of the unliganded enzyme and the CTP-liganded form are in similar conformations. Large conformational differences in the CTP and native forms exist, however, specifically in the region of CTP binding to the regulatory chain. In addition, a segment of ten amino acid residues, which includes Lys83 and Lys84 of the catalytic chain, is disordered in the CTP-liganded form, in contrast to the native structure, where the same residues have refined well into density.Each catalytic monomer of aspartate carbamoyltransferase is in contact with three catalytic chains and two regulatory monomers. Each regulatory monomer borders on one other regulatory chain and two catalytic chains. The catalytic trimera are in contact in the hexamer; residues important to homotropic effects and catalysis (Tyr165 and Tyr232) are integral parts of the interface. We present a thorough survey of interface regions, cataloging polar interactions between sidechains throughout the molecule.We discuss, in context with the present structures, the chemical modifications and mutations of the enzyme. Highlighted specifically are Cys47, Tyr165 and Tyr232, Lys83, Lys84, Trp209 and Trp279 and Gly128, residues of demonstrated importance to the catalytic of regulatory function or aspartate carbamoyltransferase. The spatial arrangement of “active site” residues argues for a catalytic pocket shared between two monomers within catalytic subunit.  相似文献   

4.
The X-ray structure of a new crystal form of chicken heart muscle citrate synthase, grown from solutions containing citrate and coenzyme A or L-malate and acetyl coenzyme A, has been determined by molecular replacement at 2.8-A resolution. The space group is P4(3) with a = 58.9 A and c = 259.2 A and contains an entire dimer of molecular weight 100,000 in the asymmetric unit. Both "closed" conformation chicken heart and "open" conformation pig heart citrate synthase models (Brookhaven Protein Data Bank designations 3CTS and 1CTS) were used in the molecular replacement solution, with crystallographic refinement being initiated with the latter. The conventional crystallographic R factor of the final refined model is 19.6% for the data between 6- and 2.8-A resolution. The model has an rms deviation from ideal values of 0.034 A for bond lengths and of 3.6 degrees for bond angles. The conformation of the enzyme is essentially identical with that of a previously determined "open" form of pig heart muscle citrate synthase which crystallizes in a different space group, with one monomer in the asymmetric unit, from either phosphate or citrate solution. The crystalline environment of each subunit of the chicken enzyme is different, yet the conformation is the same in each. The open conformation is therefore not an artifact of crystal packing or crystallization conditions and is not species dependent. Both "open" and "closed" crystal forms of the chicken heart enzyme grow from the same drop, showing that both conformations of the enzyme are present at equilibrium in solution containing reaction products or substrate analogues.  相似文献   

5.
One of the many interactions important for stabilizing the T state of aspartate carbamoyltransferase occurs between residues Tyr240 and Asp271 within one catalytic chain. The functional importance of this polar interaction was documented by site-directed mutagenesis in which the tyrosine was replaced by a phenylalanine [Middleton, S. A., & Kantrowitz, E. R. (1986) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 83, 5866-5870]. In the Tyr240----Phe mutant, the aspartate concentration required to achieve half-maximum velocity is reduced to 4.7 from 11.9 mM for the native enzyme. Here, we report an X-ray crystallographic study of the Tyr240----Phe enzyme at 2.5-A resolution. While employing crystallization conditions identical with those used to grow cytidine triphosphate ligated T-state crystals of the native enzyme, we obtain crystals of the mutant enzyme that are isomorphous to those of the native enzyme. Refinement of the mutant structure to an R factor of 0.219 (only eight solvent molecules included) and subsequent comparison to the native T-state structure indicate that the quaternary, tertiary, and secondary structures of the mutant are similar to those for the native T-state enzyme. However, the conformation of Phe240 in one of the two crystallographically independent catalytic chains contained in the asymmetric unit is significantly different from the conformation of Tyr240 in the native T-state enzyme and similar to the conformation of Tyr240 as determined from the R-state structure [Ke, H.-M., Lipscomb, W. N., Cho, Y. J., & Honzatko, R. B. (1988) J. Mol. Biol. (in press)], thereby indicating that the mutant has made a conformational change toward the R state, localized at the site of the mutation in one of the catalytic chains.  相似文献   

6.
Atomic coordinates obtained from the crystal structures of unliganded and liganded aspartate carbamoyltransferase at pH 5.8 yield calculated low angle scattering curves in substantial agreement with experimental curves obtained by Moody, Vachette and Foote at pH 8.3. Thus the major conformational changes produced upon binding of six molecules of ligand, N-phosphonacetyl-L-aspartate (PALA) are very similar at pH 8.3 where the enzyme shows activity and regulation, as at pH 5.8 where the enzyme is inactive.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Aspartate carbamoyltransferase (ATCase) is a model enzyme for understanding allosteric effects. The dodecameric complex exists in two main states (T and R) that differ substantially in their quaternary structure and their affinity for various ligands. Many hypotheses have resulted from the structure of the Escherichia coli ATCase, but so far other crystal structures to test these have been lacking. Here, we present the tertiary and quaternary structure of the T state ATCase of the hyperthermophilic archaeon Sulfolobus acidocaldarius (SaATC(T)), determined by X-ray crystallography to 2.6A resolution. The quaternary structure differs from the E.coli ATCase, by having altered interfaces between the catalytic (C) and regulatory (R) subunits, and the presence of a novel C1-R2 type interface. Conformational differences in the 240 s loop region of the C chain and the C-terminal region of the R chain affect intersubunit and interdomain interfaces implicated previously in the allosteric behavior of E.coli ATCase. The allosteric-zinc binding domain interface is strengthened at the expense of a weakened R1-C4 type interface. The increased hydrophobicity of the C1-R1 type interface may stabilize the quaternary structure. Catalytic trimers of the S.acidocaldarius ATCase are unstable due to a drastic weakening of the C1-C2 interface. The hyperthermophilic ATCase presents an interesting example of how an allosteric enzyme can adapt to higher temperatures. The structural rearrangement of this thermophilic ATCase may well promote its thermal stability at the expense of changes in the allosteric behavior.  相似文献   

9.
The crystal structure of aspartate aminotransferase of Escherichia coli was determined by X-ray structure analysis at 2.8 A resolution. The structure was solved by the molecular replacement method and refined to an R-factor of 0.27, and it was found that the overall structure of AspAT of E. coli is similar to that of those of higher animals.  相似文献   

10.
We report the crystal structure of an enolase from Enterococcus hirae, which is the first report of a structure determination among gram-positive bacteria. We isolated the enolase gene and determined the base sequence. The amino acid sequence deduced from the DNA sequence suggests that this enolase is composed of 431 amino acids. The amino acid sequence is very similar to those of enolases from eukaryotic and prokaryotic organisms, being 65% and 50% identical to enolases from Escherichia coli and yeast, respectively. The enolase prepared from E. hirae lysate yielded crystals containing one dimer per asymmetric unit. X-ray diffraction patterns were obtained at 2.8 A resolution on a SPring-8 synchrotron radiation source. Crystals belong to space group I4 with unit cell dimensions of a = b = 153.5 A, c = 90.7 A. The E. hirae, yeast, E. coli and lobster enolase structures are very similar. The E. hirae enolase takes an "Open" conformation. The regions in the structure that differ most from other enolases are loops L4 (132-140) and L3 (244-265). Considering the positions of these loops relative to the active site, they seem to have no direct involvement in function. Our findings show that the three dimensional structure of an important enzyme in the glycolytic pathway is evolutionarily conserved among eukaryotes and prokaryotes, including gram-positive bacteria.  相似文献   

11.
The crystal structure of recombinant rabbit interferon-gamma was solved by the multiple isomorphous replacement technique at 2.7-A resolution and refined to a crystallographic R-factor of 26.2%. The interferon crystallizes with one-half of the functional dimer in the asymmetric unit, with the two polypeptide chains of the dimer related by a crystallographic 2-fold symmetry axis. The structure is predominantly alpha-helical with extensive interdigitation of the alpha-helical segments of the two polypeptide chains.  相似文献   

12.
Crystals of the complex of bovine alpha-thrombin with recombinant hirudin variant 1 have space group C222(1) with cell constants a = 59.11, b = 102.62, and c = 143.26 A. The orientation and position of the thrombin component was determined by molecular replacement and the hirudin molecule was fit in 2 magnitude of Fo - magnitude of Fc electron density maps. The structure was refined by restrained least squares and simulated annealing to R = 0.161 at 2.8-A resolution. The binding of hirudin to thrombin is generally similar to that observed in the crystals of human thrombin-hirudin. Several differences in the interactions of the COOH-terminal polypeptide of hirudin, specifically of residues Asp-55h, Phe-56h, Glu-57h, and Glu-58h, and a few differences in the interactions of the hirudin core, specifically of residues Asp-5h, Ser-19h, and Asn-20h, with thrombin from human thrombin-hirudin suggest that there is some flexibility in the binding of these 2 molecules. Most of the residues in the 9 subsites that bind fibrinopeptide A7-16 to thrombin also interact with the NH2-terminal domain of hirudin. The S1 subsite is a notable exception in that only 1 of its 6 residues, namely Ser-214, interacts with hirudin. The only difference between human and bovine thrombins that appears to influence the binding of hirudin is the replacement of Lys-149E by an acidic glutamate in the bovine enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
Ribonuclease T1 was purified from an Escherichia coli overproducing strain and co-crystallized with adenosine 2'-monophosphate (2'-AMP) by microdialysis against 50% (v/v) 2-methyl-2,4-pentanediol in 20 mM sodium acetate, 2 mM calcium acetate, pH 4.2. The crystals have orthorhombic space group P2(1)2(1)2(1), with cell dimensions a = 48.93(1), b = 46.57(4), c = 41.04(2) A; Z = 4 and V = 93520 A3. The crystal structure was determined on the basis of the isomorphous structure of uncomplexed RNase T1 (Martinez-Oyanedel et al. (1991) submitted for publication) and refined by least squares methods using stereochemical restraints. The refinement was based on Fhkl of 7,445 reflections with Fo greater than or equal to 1 sigma (Fo) in the resolution range of 10-1.8 A, and converged at a crystallographic R factor of 0.149. The phosphate group of 2'-AMP is tightly hydrogen-bonded to the side chains of the active site residues Tyr38, His40, Glu58, Arg77, and His92, comparable with vanadate binding in the respective complex (Kostrewa, D., Choe, H.-W., Heinemann, U., and Saenger, W. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 7592-7600) and different from the complex with guanosine 2'-monophosphate (Arni, R., Heinemann, U., Tokuoka, R., and Saenger, W. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 15358-15368) where the phosphate does not interact with Arg77 and His92. The adenosine moiety is not located in the guanosine recognition site but stacked on Gly74 carbonyl and His92 imidazole, which serve as a subsite, as shown previously (Lenz, A., Cordes, F., Heinemann, U., and Saenger, W. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 7661-7667); in addition, there are hydrogen bonds adenine N6H . . . O Gly74 (minor component of three-center hydrogen bond) and adenosine O5' . . . O delta Asn36. These binding interactions readily explain why RNase T1 has some affinity for 2'-AMP. The molecular structure of RNase T1 is only marginally affected by 2'-AMP binding. Its "empty" guanosine-binding site features a flipped Asn43-Asn44 peptide bond and the side chains of Tyr45, Glu46 adopt conformations typical for RNase T1 not involved in guanosine binding. The side chains of amino acids Leu26, Ser35, Asp49, Val78 are disordered. The disorder of Val78 is of interest since this amino acid is located in a hydrophobic cavity, and the disorder appears to be correlated with an "empty" guanosine-binding site. The two Asp15 carboxylate oxygens and six water molecules coordinate a Ca2+ ion 8-fold in the form of a square antiprism.  相似文献   

14.
The structure of R-phycoerythrin (R-PE) from the red alga Griffithsia monilis was solved at 1.90-A resolution by molecular replacement, using the atomic coordinates of cyanobacterial phycocyanin from Fremyella diplosiphon as a model. The crystallographic R factor for the final model is 17.5% (Rfree 22.7%) for reflections in the range 100-1.90 A. The model consists of an (alphabeta)2 dimer with an internal noncrystallographic dyad and a fragment of the gamma-polypeptide. The alpha-polypeptide (164 amino acid residues) has two covalently bound phycoerythrobilins at positions alpha82 and alpha139. The beta-polypeptide (177 residues) has two phycoerythrobilins bound to residues beta82 and beta158 and one phycourobilin covalently attached to rings A and D at residues beta50 and beta61, respectively. The electron density of the gamma-polypeptide is mostly averaged out by threefold crystallographic symmetry, but a dipeptide (Gly-Tyr) and one single Tyr could be modeled. These two tyrosine residues of the gamma-polypeptide are in close proximity to the phycoerythrobilins at position beta82 of two symmetry-related beta-polypeptides and are related by the same noncrystallographic dyad as the (alphabeta)2 dimer. Possible energy transfer pathways are discussed briefly.  相似文献   

15.
Crystal structure of Escherichia coli CheY refined at 1.7-A resolution   总被引:19,自引:0,他引:19  
The three-dimensional structure of wild-type CheY from Escherichia coli has been refined by stereochemically restrained least squares minimization to a crystallographic R-factor of 15.1% at 1.7-A resolution. The structure contains 1165 atoms, including all atoms of the protein, 147 water molecules, and three sulfate ions. The final model has root mean square deviations of 0.018 and 0.049 A from idealized bond lengths and angle distances, respectively. Seven amino acid side chains have been modeled in dual conformations. CheY folds as a compact (beta/alpha)5 globular protein, with the phosphorylation region contained in a cavity on one face of the molecule. This active site area is bordered by the carboxyl termini of the three central beta-strands, by alpha 1, and by the loop connecting beta 5 to alpha 5. The Lys-109 side chain of this loop extends into the active site by virtue of its cis peptide bond conformation preceding Pro-110. The epsilon-amino group of Lys-109 is in close bonding contact with the carboxyl group of Asp-57, the residue that is phosphorylated in the activation process of CheY. The details of the hydrogen bonding network in the phosphorylation region indicate that structural rearrangements must accompany the phosphorylation of Asp-57.  相似文献   

16.
A Volbeda  A Lahm  F Sakiyama    D Suck 《The EMBO journal》1991,10(7):1607-1618
P1 nuclease from Penicillium citrinum is a zinc dependent glyco-enzyme consisting of 270 amino acid residues which cleaves single-stranded RNA and DNA into 5'-mononucleotides. The X-ray structure of a tetragonal crystal form of the enzyme with two molecules per asymmetric unit has been solved at 3.3 and refined at 2.8 A resolution to a crystallographic R-factor of 21.6%. The current model consists of 269 amino acid residues, three Zn ions and two N-acetyl glucosamines per subunit. The enzyme is folded very similarly to phospholipase C from Bacillus cereus, with 56% of the structure displaying an alpha-helical conformation. The three Zn ions are located at the bottom of a cleft and appear to be rather inaccessible for any phosphate group in double-stranded RNA or DNA substrates. A crystal soaking experiment with a dinucleotide gives clear evidence for two mononucleotide binding sites separated by approximately 20 A. One site shows binding of the phosphate group to one of the zinc ions. At both sites there is a hydrophobic binding pocket for the base, but no direct interaction between the protein and the deoxyribose. A cleavage mechanism is proposed involving nucleophilic attack by a Zn activated water molecule.  相似文献   

17.
Crystal structure of yeast cytochrome c peroxidase refined at 1.7-A resolution   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
The crystal structure of cytochrome c peroxidase (EC 1.11.1.5) has been refined to an R factor of 0.20 computed for all reflections to 1.7 A. The refined molecular model includes 263 bound water molecules and allows for x-ray scattering by amorphous solvent. The mean positional error in atomic coordinates is estimated to lie between 0.12 and 0.21 A. Two factors are identified which may account for the ability of the enzyme to stabilize high-oxidation states of the heme iron during catalysis: 1) the proximal histidine forms a hydrogen bond with a buried aspartic acid side chain, Asp-235; and 2) the heme environment is more polar than in the cytochromes c or globins, owing to the presence of the partially buried side-chain of Arg-48 and five water molecules bound in close proximity to the heme. Two of these occupy the presumed peroxide-binding site. Two candidates are likely for the side chain that is oxidized to a free radical during formation of Compound I: 1) Trp-51, which rests 3.3 A above the heme plane in close proximity (2.7 A) to the sixth coordination position; and 2) Met-172, which is 3.7 A from the heme. Nucleophilic stabilization of the methionyl cation radical may be possible via Asp-235. His-181 is found to lie coplanar with the heme in a niche between the two propionates near the suspected cytochrome c-binding site. A network of hydrogen bonds involving this histidine may provide a preferred pathway for electron transfer between hemes.  相似文献   

18.
We have used x-ray crystallography to determine the structures of sperm whale myoglobin (Mb) in four different ligation states (unligated, ferric aquomet, oxygenated, and carbonmonoxygenated) to a resolution of better than 1.2 A. Data collection and analysis were performed in as much the same way as possible to reduce model bias in differences between structures. The structural differences among the ligation states are much smaller than previously estimated, with differences of <0.25 A root-mean-square deviation among all atoms. One structural parameter previously thought to vary among the ligation states, the proximal histidine (His-93) azimuthal angle, is nearly identical in all the ferrous complexes, although the tilt of the proximal histidine is different in the unligated form. There are significant differences, however, in the heme geometry, in the position of the heme in the pocket, and in the distal histidine (His-64) conformations. In the CO complex the majority conformation of ligand is at an angle of 18 +/- 3 degrees with respect to the heme plane, with a geometry similar to that seen in encumbered model compounds; this angle is significantly smaller than reported previously by crystallographic studies on monoclinic Mb crystals, but still significantly larger than observed by photoselection. The distal histidine in unligated Mb and in the dioxygenated complex is best described as having two conformations. Two similar conformations are observed in MbCO, in addition to another conformation that has been seen previously in low-pH structures where His-64 is doubly protonated. We suggest that these conformations of the distal histidine correspond to the different conformational substates of MbCO and MbO(2) seen in vibrational spectra. Full-matrix refinement provides uncertainty estimates of important structural parameters. Anisotropic refinement yields information about correlated disorder of atoms; we find that the proximal (F) helix and heme move approximately as rigid bodies, but that the distal (E) helix does not.  相似文献   

19.
High affinity binding of Ca(2+) to alpha-lactalbumin (LA) stabilizes the native structure and is required for the efficient generation of native protein with correct disulfide bonds from the reduced denatured state. A progressive increase in affinity of LA conformers for Ca(2+) as they develop increasingly native structures can account for the tendency of the apo form to assume a molten globule state and the large acceleration of folding by Ca(2+). To investigate the effect of calcium on structure of bovine LA, x-ray structures have been determined for crystals of the apo and holo forms at 2.2-A resolution. In both crystal forms, which were grown at high ionic strength, the protein is in a similar global native conformation consisting of alpha-helical and beta-subdomains separated by a cleft. Even though alternative cations and Ca(2+) liganding solvent molecules are absent, removal of Ca(2+) has only minor effects on the structure of the metal-binding site and a structural change was observed in the cleft on the opposite face of the molecule adjoining Tyr(103) of the helical lobe and Gln(54) of the beta-lobe. Changes include increased separation of the lobes, loss of a buried solvent molecule near the Ca(2+)-binding site, and the replacement of inter- and intra-lobe H-bonds of Tyr(103) by interactions with new immobilized water molecules. The more open cleft structure in the apo protein appears to be an effect of calcium binding transmitted via a change in orientation of helix H3 relative to the beta-lobe to the inter-lobe interface. Calcium is well known to promote the folding of LA. The results from the comparison of apo and holo structures of LA provide high resolution structural evidence that the acceleration of folding by Ca(2+) is mediated by an effect on interactions between the two subdomains.  相似文献   

20.
This article reports the first X-ray structure of the soluble form of a c-type cytochrome isolated from a Gram-positive bacterium. Bacillus pasteurii cytochrome c(553), characterized by a low reduction potential and by a low sequence homology with cytochromes from Gram-negative bacteria or eukaryotes, is a useful case study for understanding the structure-function relationships for this class of electron-transfer proteins. Diffraction data on a single crystal of cytochrome c(553) were obtained using synchrotron radiation at 100 K. The structure was determined at 0.97-A resolution using ab initio phasing and independently at 1.70 A in an MAD experiment. In both experiments, the structure solution exploited the presence of a single Fe atom as anomalous scatterer in the protein. For the 0.97-A data, the phasing was based on a single data set. This is the most precise structure of a heme protein to date. The crystallized cytochrome c(553) contains only 71 of the 92 residues expected from the intact protein sequence, lacking the first 21 amino acids at the N-terminus. This feature is consistent with previous evidence that this tail, responsible for anchoring the protein to the cytoplasm membrane, is easily cleaved off during the purification procedure. The heme prosthetic group in B. pasteurii cytochrome c(553) is surrounded by three alpha-helices in a compact arrangement. The largely exposed c-type heme group features a His-Met axial coordination of the Fe(III) ion. The protein is characterized by a very asymmetric charge distribution, with the exposed heme edge located on a surface patch devoid of net charges. A structural search of a representative set of protein structures reveals that B. pasteurii cytochrome c(553) is most similar to Pseudomonas cytochromes c(551), followed by cytochromes c(6), Desulfovibrio cytochrome c(553), cytochromes c(552) from thermophiles, and cytochromes c from eukaryotes. Notwithstanding a low sequence homology, a structure-based alignment of these cytochromes shows conservation of three helical regions, with different additional secondary structure motifs characterizing each protein. In B. pasteurii cytochrome c(553), these motifs are represented by the shortest interhelix connecting fragments observed for this group of proteins. The possible relationships between heme solvent accessibility and the electrochemical reduction potential are discussed.  相似文献   

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