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1.
Glutamate synthase (GltS) is a complex iron-sulfur flavoprotein that catalyzes the reductive transfer of L-glutamine amide group to the C2 carbon of 2-oxoglutarate yielding two molecules of L-glutamate. Molecular dynamics calculations in explicit solvent were carried out to gain insight into the conformational flexibility of GltS and into the role played by the enzyme substrates in regulating the catalytic cycle. We have modelled the free (unliganded) form of Azospirillum brasilense GltS alpha subunit and the structure of the reduced enzyme in complex with the L-glutamine and 2-oxoglutarate substrates starting from the crystallographically determined coordinates of the GltS alpha subunit in complex with L-methionine sulphone and 2-oxoglutarate. The present 4-ns molecular dynamics calculations reveal that the GltS glutaminase site may exist in a catalytically inactive conformation unable to bind glutamine, and in a catalytically competent conformation, which is stabilized by the glutamine substrate. Substrates binding also induce (1) closure of the loop formed by residues 263-271 with partial shielding of the glutaminase site from solvent, and (2) widening of the ammonia tunnel entrance at the glutaminase end to allow for ammonia diffusion toward the synthase site. The Q-loop of glutamate synthase, which acts as an active site lid in other amidotransferases, seems to maintain an open conformation. Finally, binding of L-methionine sulfone, a glutamine analog that mimics the tetrahedral transient species occurring during its hydrolysis, causes a coordinated rigid-body motion of segments of the glutaminase domain that results in the inactive conformation observed in the crystal structure of GltS alpha subunit.  相似文献   

2.
The complex iron-sulfur flavoprotein glutamate synthase (GltS) plays a prominent role in ammonia assimilation in bacteria, yeasts, and plants. GltS catalyzes the formation of two molecules of l-glutamate from 2-oxoglutarate and l-glutamine via intramolecular channeling of ammonia. GltS has the impressive ability of synchronizing its distinct catalytic centers to avoid wasteful consumption of l-glutamine. We have determined the crystal structure of the ferredoxin-dependent GltS in several ligation and redox states. The structures reveal the crucial elements in the synchronization between the glutaminase site and the 2-iminoglutarate reduction site. The structural data combined with the catalytic properties of GltS indicate that binding of ferredoxin and 2-oxoglutarate to the FMN-binding domain of GltS induce a conformational change in the loop connecting the two catalytic centers. The rearrangement induces a shift in the catalytic elements of the amidotransferase domain, such that it becomes activated. This machinery, over a distance of more than 30 A, controls the ability of the enzyme to bind and hydrolyze the ammonia-donating substrate l-glutamine.  相似文献   

3.
Azospirillum brasilense glutamate synthase (GltS) is a complex iron-sulfur flavoprotein whose catalytically active alphabeta protomer (alpha subunit, 162kDa; beta subunit, 52.3 kDa) contains one FAD, one FMN, one [3Fe-4S](0,+1), and two [4Fe-4S](+1,+2) clusters. The structure of the alpha subunit has been determined providing information on the mechanism of ammonia transfer from L-glutamine to 2-oxoglutarate through a 30 A-long intramolecular tunnel. On the contrary, details of the electron transfer pathway from NADPH to the postulated 2-iminoglutarate intermediate through the enzyme flavin co-factors and [Fe-S] clusters are largely indirect. To identify the location and role of each one of the GltS [4Fe-4S] clusters, we individually substituted the four cysteinyl residues forming the first of two conserved C-rich regions at the N-terminus of GltS beta subunit with alanyl residues. The engineered genes encoding the beta subunit variants (and derivatives carrying C-terminal His6-tags) were co-expressed with the wild-type alpha subunit gene. In all cases the C/A substitutions prevented alpha and beta subunits association to yield the GltS alphabeta protomer. This result is consistent with the fact that these residues are responsible for the formation of glutamate synthase [4Fe-4S](+1,+2) clusters within the N-terminal region of the beta subunit, and that these clusters are implicated not only in electron transfer between the GltS flavins, but also in alphabeta heterodimer formation by structuring an N-terminal [Fe-S] beta subunit interface subdomain, as suggested by the three-dimensional structure of dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase, an enzyme containing an N-terminal beta subunit-like domain.  相似文献   

4.
Azospirillum brasilense glutamate synthase (GltS) is the prototype of bacterial NADPH-dependent enzymes, a class of complex iron-sulfur flavoproteins essential in ammonia assimilation processes. The catalytically active GltS alpha beta holoenzyme and its isolated alpha and beta subunits (162 and 52 kDa, respectively) were analyzed using synchrotron radiation x-ray solution scattering. The GltS alpha subunit and alpha beta holoenzyme were found to be tetrameric in solution, whereas the beta subunit was a mixture of monomers and dimers. Ab initio low resolution shapes restored from the scattering data suggested that the arrangement of alpha subunits in the (alpha beta)4 holoenzyme is similar to that in the tetrameric alpha 4 complex and that beta subunits occupy the periphery of the holoenzyme. The structure of alpha 4 was further modeled using the available crystallographic coordinates of the monomeric alpha subunit assuming P222 symmetry. To model the entire alpha beta holoenzyme, a putative alpha beta protomer was constructed from the coordinates of the alpha subunit and those of the N-terminal region of porcine dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase, which is similar to the beta subunit. Rigid body refinement yielded a model of GltS with an arrangement of alpha subunits similar to that in alpha 4, but displaying contacts also between beta subunits belonging to adjacent protomers. The holoenzyme model allows for independent catalytic activity of the alpha beta protomers, which is consistent with the available biochemical evidence.  相似文献   

5.
Glutamate synthase (GltS) is, with glutamine synthetase, the key enzyme of ammonia assimilation in bacteria, microorganisms and plants. GltS isoforms result from the assembly and co-evolution of conserved functional domains. They share a common mechanism of reductive glutamine-dependent glutamate synthesis from 2-oxoglutarate, which takes place within the alpha subunit ( approximately 150 kDa) of the NADPH-dependent bacterial enzyme and the corresponding polypeptides of other GltS forms, and involves: (i) an Ntn-type amidotransferase domain and (ii) a flavin mononucleotide-containing (beta/alpha)(8) barrel synthase domain connected by (iii) a approximately 30 A-long intramolecular ammonia tunnel. The synthase domain harbors the [3Fe/4S](0,+1) cluster of the enzyme, which participates in the electron transfer process from the physiological reductant: reduced ferredoxin in the plant-type enzyme or NAD(P)H in the bacterial and the non-photosynthetic eukaryotic form. The NAD(P)H-dependent GltS requires a tightly bound flavin adenine dinucleotide-dependent reductase (beta subunit, approximately 50 kDa), also determining the presence of two low-potential [4Fe-4S](+1,+2) clusters. Structural, functional and computational data available on GltS and related enzymes show how the enzyme may control and coordinate the reactions taking place at the glutaminase and synthase sites by sensing substrate binding and cofactor redox state.  相似文献   

6.
INTRODUCTION: The complex iron-sulfur flavoprotein glutamate synthase catalyses the reductive synthesis of L-glutamate from 2-oxoglutarate and L-glutamine, a reaction in the plant and bacterial pathway for ammonia assimilation. The enzyme functions through three distinct active centers carrying out L-glutamine hydrolysis, conversion of 2-oxoglutarate into L-glutamate, and electron uptake from an electron donor. RESULTS: The 3.0 A crystal structure of the dimeric 324 kDa core protein of a bacterial glutamate synthase was solved by the MAD method, using the very weak anomalous signal of the two 3Fe-4S clusters present in the asymmetric unit. The 1,472 amino acids of the monomer fold into a four-domain architecture. The two catalytic domains have canonical Ntn-amidotransferase and FMN binding (beta/alpha)8 barrel folds, respectively. The other two domains have an unusual "cut (beta/alpha)8 barrel" topology and an unexpected novel beta-helix structure. Channeling of the ammonia intermediate is brought about by an internal tunnel of 31 A length, which runs from the site of L-glutamine hydrolysis to the site of L-glutamate synthesis. CONCLUSIONS: The outstanding property of glutamate synthase is the ability to coordinate the activity of its various functional sites to avoid wasteful consumption of L-glutamine. The structure reveals two polypeptide segments that connect the catalytic centers and embed the ammonia tunnel, thus being ideally suited to function in interdomain signaling. Depending on the enzyme redox and ligation states, these signal-transducing elements may affect the active site geometry and control ammonia diffusion through a gating mechanism.  相似文献   

7.
The properties of the recombinant ferredoxin-dependent glutamate synthase of Synechocystis PCC6803 were determined by means of kinetic and spectroscopic approaches in comparison to those exhibited by the bacterial NADPH-dependent enzyme form. The ferredoxin-dependent enzyme was found to be similar to the bacterial glutamate synthase alpha subunit with respect to cofactor content (one FMN cofactor and one [3Fe-4S] cluster per enzyme subunit), overall absorbance properties, and reactivity of the FMN N(5) position with sulfite, as expected from the similar primary structure of ferredoxin-dependent glutamate synthase and of the bacterial NADPH-dependent glutamate synthase alpha subunit. The ferredoxin- and NADPH-dependent enzymes were found to differ with respect to the apparent midpoint potential values of the FMN cofactor and of the [3Fe-4S] cluster, which are less negative in the ferredoxin-dependent enzyme form. This feature is, at least in part, responsible for the efficient oxidation of L-glutamate catalyzed by this enzyme form, but not by the bacterial NADPH-dependent counterpart. At variance with earlier reports on ferredoxin-dependent glutamate synthase, in the Synechocystis enzyme the [3Fe-4S] cluster is not equipotential with the flavin cofactor. The present studies also demonstrated that binding of reduced ferredoxin to ferredoxin-dependent glutamate synthase is essential in order to activate reaction steps such as glutamine binding, hydrolysis, or ammonia transfer from the glutamine amidotransferase site to the glutamate synthase site of the enzyme. Thus, ferredoxin-dependent glutamate synthase seems to control and coordinate catalytic activities taking place at its subsites by regulating the reactions of the glutamine amidotransferase site. Association with reduced ferredoxin appears to be necessary, but not sufficient, to trigger the required activating conformational changes.  相似文献   

8.
DNA coding for the ferredoxin-dependent glutamate synthase (EC1.4.7.1) of spinach chloroplasts has been cloned and sequenced. It consists of 5015 bp and starts with the codon for the N-terminal cysteine of the mature protein. Ferredoxin-dependent glutamate synthase is one of the key enzymes in the early stages of ammonia assimilation in plants, algae and cyanobacteria. In addition to the ferredoxin-dependent enzyme, there are two other forms of glutamate synthase, one of which uses NADH as the electron donor and a second that uses NADPH. Although all three forms catalyze the reductive transamidation of the amido nitrogen from glutamine to 2-oxoglutarate to form two molecules of glutamate, ferredoxin-dependent glutamate synthases differ from the NADH and NADPH-dependent forms in subunit composition and amino acid sequence. The recent availability of sequence data for glutamate synthases from spinach and from two archael species has produced a clearer and more detailed picture of the evolution of this key enzyme in nitrogen metabolism and the origins of the two subunit/domain structure of the enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
Vanoni MA  Curti B 《IUBMB life》2008,60(5):287-300
Glutamate synthases play with glutamine synthetase an essential role in nitrogen assimilation processes in microorganisms, plants, and lower animals by catalyzing the net synthesis of one molecule of L-glutamate from L-glutamine and 2-oxoglutarate. They exhibit a modular architecture with a common subunit or region, which is responsible for the L-glutamine-dependent glutamate synthesis from 2-oxoglutarate. Here, a PurF- (Type II- or Ntn-) type amidotransferase domain is coupled to the synthase domain, a (beta/alpha)8 barrel containing FMN and one [3Fe-4S]0,+1 cluster, through a approximately 30 angstroms-long intramolecular tunnel for the transfer of ammonia between the sites. In bacterial and eukaryotic GltS, reducing equivalents are provided by reduced pyridine nucleotides thanks to the stable association with a second subunit or region, which acts as a FAD-dependent NAD(P)H oxidoreductase and is responsible for the formation of the two low potential [4Fe-4S]+1,+2 clusters of the enzyme. In photosynthetic cells, reduced ferredoxin is the physiological reductant. This review focus on the mechanism of cross-activation of the synthase and glutaminase reactions in response to the bound substrates and the redox state of the enzyme cofactors, as well as on recent information on the structure of the alphabeta protomer of the NADPH-dependent enzyme, which sheds light on the intramolecular electron transfer pathway between the flavin cofactors.  相似文献   

10.
Dossena L  Curti B  Vanoni MA 《Biochemistry》2007,46(15):4473-4485
Crystal structures of glutamate synthase suggested that a conserved glutamyl residue of the synthase domain (E1013 of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 ferredoxin-dependent glutamate synthase, FdGltS) may play a key role in activating glutamine binding and hydrolysis and ammonia transfer to the synthase site in this amidotransferase, in response to the ligation and redox state of the synthase site. The E1013D, N, and A, variants of FdGltS were overproduced in Escherichia coli cells, purified, and characterized. The amino acyl substitutions had no effect on the reactivity of the synthase site nor on the interaction with ferredoxin. On the contrary, a dramatic decrease of activity was observed with the D (approximately 100-fold), N and A (approximately 10,000-fold) variants, mainly due to an effect on the maximum velocity of the reaction. The E1013D variant showed coupling between glutamine hydrolysis at the glutaminase site and 2-oxoglutarate-dependent L-glutamate synthesis at the synthase site, but a sigmoid dependence of initial velocity on L-glutamine concentration. The E1013N variant exhibited hyperbolic kinetics, but the velocity of glutamine hydrolysis was twice that of glutamate synthesis from 2-oxoglutarate at the synthase site. These results are consistent with the proposed role of E1013 in signaling the presence of 2-oxoglutarate (and reducing equivalents) at the synthase site to the glutaminase site in order to activate it and to promote ammonia transfer to the synthase site through the ammonia tunnel. The sigmoid dependence of the initial velocity of the glutamate synthase reaction of the E1013D mutant on glutamine concentration provides evidence for a participation of glutamine in the activation of glutamate synthase during the catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

11.
The family of giant multienzyme complexes metabolizing pyruvate, 2-oxoglutarate, branched-chain 2-oxo acids or acetoin contains several of the largest and most sophisticated protein assemblies known, with molecular masses between 4 and 10 million Da. The principal enzyme components, E1, E2 and E3, are present in numerous copies and utilize multiple cofactors to catalyze a directed sequence of reactions via substrate channeling. The crystal structure of a heterotetrameric (alpha2beta2) E1, 2-oxoisovalerate dehydrogenase from Pseudomonas putida, reveals a tightly packed arrangement of the four subunits with the beta2-dimer held between the jaws of a 'vise' formed by the alpha2-dimer. A long hydrophobic channel, suitable to accommodate the E2 lipoyl-lysine arm, leads to the active site, which contains the cofactor thiamin diphosphate (ThDP) and an inhibitor-derived covalent modification of a histidine side chain. The E1 structure, together with previous structural information on E2 and E3, completes the picture of the shared architectural features of these enormous macromolecular assemblies.  相似文献   

12.
The pathway of nitrogen assimilation in plants   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The major route of nitrogen assimilation has been considered for many years to occur via the reductive amination of α-oxoglutarate, catalysed by glutamate dehydrogenase. However, recent work has shown that in most bacteria an alternative route via glutamine synthetase and glutamine: 2-oxoglutarate aminotransferase (glutamate synthase) operates under conditions of ammonia limitation. Subsequently the presence of a ferredoxin-dependent glutamate synthase in green leaves and green and blue-green algae, and a NAD(P)H and ferredoxin-dependent enzyme in roots and other non-green plant tissues, has suggested that this route may also function in most members of the plant kingdom. The only exceptions are probably the majority of the fungi, where so far most organisms studied do not appear to contain glutamate synthase. Besides the presence of the necessary enzymes there is other evidence to support the contention that the assimilation of ammonia into amino acids occurs via glutamine synthetase and glutamate synthase, and that it is unlikely that glutamate dehydrogenase plays a major role in nitrogen assimilation in bacteria or higher plants except in circumstances of ammonia excess.  相似文献   

13.
Sucrose-phosphatase (SPP) catalyzes the final step in the pathway of sucrose biosynthesis in both plants and cyanobacteria, and the SPPs from these two groups of organisms are closely related. We have crystallized the enzyme from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp PCC 6803 and determined its crystal structure alone and in complex with various ligands. The protein consists of a core domain containing the catalytic site and a smaller cap domain that contains a glucose binding site. Two flexible hinge loops link the two domains, forming a structure that resembles a pair of sugar tongs. The glucose binding site plays a major role in determining the enzyme's remarkable substrate specificity and is also important for its inhibition by sucrose and glucose. It is proposed that the catalytic reaction is initiated by nucleophilic attack on the substrate by Asp9 and involves formation of a covalent phospho-Asp9-enzyme intermediate. From modeling based on the SPP structure, we predict that the noncatalytic SPP-like domain of the Synechocystis sucrose-phosphate synthase could bind sucrose-6(F)-phosphate and propose that this domain might be involved in metabolite channeling between the last two enzymes in the pathway of sucrose synthesis.  相似文献   

14.
Glutamate synthases are complex iron–sulfur flavoproteins that participate in the essential ammonia assimilation pathway in microorganisms and plants. The recent determination of the 3-dimensional structures of the α subunit of the NADPH-dependent glutamate synthase form and of the ferredoxin-dependent enzyme of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 provides a framework for the interpretation of the functional properties of these enzymes, and highlights protein segments most likely involved in control and coordination of the partial catalytic activities of glutamate synthases, which take place at sites distant from each other in space. In this review, we focus on the current knowledge on structure–function relationships in glutamate synthases, and we discuss open questions on the mechanisms of control of the enzyme reaction and of electron transfer among the enzyme flavin cofactors and iron–sulfur clusters.  相似文献   

15.
Azospirillum brasilense glutamate synthase is a complex iron-sulfur flavoprotein that catalyses the NADPH-dependent reductive transfer of glutamine amide group to the C(2) carbon of 2-oxoglutarate to yield L-glutamate. Its catalytically active alphabeta protomer is composed of two dissimilar subunits (alpha subunit, 164.2 kDa; beta subunit, 52.3 kDa) and contains one FAD (at Site 1, the pyridine nucleotide site within the beta subunit), one FMN (at Site 2, the 2-oxoglutarate/L-glutamate site in the alpha subunit) and three different iron-sulfur clusters (one 3Fe-4S center on the alpha subunit and two 4Fe-4S clusters of unknown location). A plasmid harboring the gltD and gltB genes, the genes encoding the glutamate synthase beta and alpha subunits, respectively, each one under the control of the T7/lac promoter of pET11a was found to be suitable for the overproduction of glutamate synthase holoenzyme in Escherichia coli BL21(DE3) cells. Recombinant A. brasilense glutamate synthase could be purified to homogeneity from overproducing E. coli cells by ion exchange chromatography, gel filtration and affinity chromatography on a 2',5' ADP-Sepharose 4B column. The purified enzyme was indistinguishable from that prepared from Azospirillum cells with respect to cofactor content, N-terminal sequence of the subunits, aggregation state, kinetic and spectroscopic properties. The study of the recombinant holoenzyme allowed us to establish that the tendency of glutamate synthase to form a stable (alphabeta)4 tetramer at high protein concentrations is a property unique to the holoenzyme, as the isolated beta subunit does not oligomerize, while the isolated glutamate synthase alpha subunit only forms dimers at high protein concentrations. Furthermore, the steady-state kinetic analysis of the glutamate synthase reaction was extended to the study of the effect of adenosine-containing nucleotides. Compounds such as cAMP, AMP, ADP and ATP have no effect on the enzyme activity, while the 2'-phosphorylated analogs of AMP and NADP(H) analogs act as inhibitors of the reaction, competitive with NADPH. Thus, it can be ruled out that glutamate synthase reaction is subjected to allosteric modulation by adenosine containing (di)nucleotides, which may bind to the putative ADP-binding site at the C-terminus of the alpha subunit. At the same time, the strict requirement of a 2'-phosphate group in the pyridine nucleotide for binding to glutamate synthase (GltS) was established. Finally, by comparing the inhibition constants exhibited by a series of NADP+ analogs, the contribution to the binding energy of the various parts of the pyridine nucleotide has been determined along with the effect of substituents on the 3 position of the pyridine ring. With the exception of thio-NADP+, which binds the tightest to GltS, it appears that the size of the substituent is the factor that affects the most the interaction between the NADP(H) analog and the enzyme.  相似文献   

16.
Methylaspartate ammonia lyase (MAL) catalyzes the magnesium-dependent reversible alpha,beta-elimination of ammonia from L-threo-(2S,3S)-3-methylaspartic acid to mesaconic acid. The 1.3 A MAD crystal structure of the dimeric Citrobacter amalonaticus MAL shows that each subunit comprises two domains, one of which adopts the classical TIM barrel fold, with the active site at the C-terminal end of the barrel. Despite very low sequence similarity, the structure of MAL is closely related to those of representative members of the enolase superfamily, indicating that the mechanism of MAL involves the initial abstraction of a proton alpha to the 3-carboxyl of (2S,3S)-3-methylasparic acid to yield an enolic intermediate. This analysis resolves the conflict that had linked MAL to the histidine and phenylalanine ammonia lyase family of enzymes.  相似文献   

17.
The photoproduction of NADPH in photosynthetic organisms requires the successive or concomitant interaction of at least three proteins: photosystem I (PSI), ferredoxin (Fd) and ferredoxin:NADP(+) oxidoreductase (FNR). These proteins and their surrounding medium have been carefully analysed in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803. A high value of 550mg/ml was determined for the overall solute content of the cell soluble compartment. PSI and Fd are present at similar concentrations, around 500μM, whereas the FNR associated to phycobilisome is about 4 fold less concentrated. Membrane densities of FNR and trimeric PSI have been estimated to 2000 and 2550 per μm(2), respectively. An artificial confinement of Fd to PSI was designed using fused constructs between Fd and PsaE, a peripheral and stroma located PSI subunit. The best covalent system in terms of photocatalysed NADPH synthesis can be equivalent to the free system in a dilute medium. In a macrosolute crowded medium (375mg/ml), this optimized PSI/Fd covalent complex exhibited a huge superiority compared to the free system. This is a likely consequence of restrained diffusion constraints due to the vicinity of two out of the three protein partners. In vivo, Fd is the free partner, but the constant proximity between PSI and the phycobilisome associated FNR creates a similar situation, with two closely associated partners. This organization seems well adapted for an efficient in vivo production of the stable and fast diffusing NADPH.  相似文献   

18.
Huang X  Raushel FM 《Biochemistry》2000,39(12):3240-3247
The heterodimeric carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (CPS) from Escherichia coli catalyzes the formation of carbamoyl phosphate from bicarbonate, glutamine, and two molecules of ATP. The enzyme catalyzes the hydrolysis of glutamine within the small amidotransferase subunit and then transfers ammonia to the two active sites within the large subunit. These three active sites are connected via an intermolecular tunnel, which has been located within the X-ray crystal structure of CPS from E. coli. It has been proposed that the ammonia intermediate diffuses through this molecular tunnel from the binding site for glutamine within the small subunit to the phosphorylation site for bicarbonate within the large subunit. To provide experimental support for the functional significance of this molecular tunnel, residues that define the interior walls of the "ammonia tunnel" within the small subunit were targeted for site-directed mutagenesis. These structural modifications were intended to either block or impede the passage of ammonia toward the large subunit. Two mutant proteins (G359Y and G359F) display kinetic properties consistent with a constriction or blockage of the ammonia tunnel. With both mutants, the glutaminase and bicarbonate-dependent ATPase reactions have become uncoupled from one another. However, these mutant enzymes are fully functional when external ammonia is utilized as the nitrogen source but are unable to use glutamine for the synthesis of carbamoyl-P. These results suggest the existence of an alternate route to the bicarbonate phosphorylation site when ammonia is provided as an external nitrogen source.  相似文献   

19.
Tryptophan synthase: the workings of a channeling nanomachine   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Substrate channeling between enzymes has an important role in cellular metabolism by compartmentalizing cytoplasmic synthetic processes. The bacterial tryptophan synthases are multienzyme nanomachines that catalyze the last two steps in L-tryptophan biosynthesis. The common metabolite indole is transferred from one enzyme to the other in each alphabeta-dimeric unit of the alpha2beta2 complex via an interconnecting 25-A-long tunnel. Recent solution studies of the Salmonella typhimurium alpha2beta2 complex coupled with X-ray crystal-structure determinations of complexes with substrates, intermediates and substrate analogs have driven important breakthroughs concerning the identification of the linkages between the bi-enzyme complex structure, catalysis at the alpha- and beta-active sites, and the allosteric regulation of substrate channeling.  相似文献   

20.
1-Deoxy-d-xylulose-5-phosphate reductoisomerase (DXR) is the second enzyme in the non-mevalonate pathway of isoprenoid biosynthesis. The structure of the apo-form of this enzyme from Zymomonas mobilis has been solved and refined to 1.9-A resolution, and that of a binary complex with the co-substrate NADPH to 2.7-A resolution. The subunit of DXR consists of three domains. Residues 1-150 form the NADPH binding domain, which is a variant of the typical dinucleotide-binding fold. The second domain comprises a four-stranded mixed beta-sheet, with three helices flanking the sheet. Most of the putative active site residues are located on this domain. The C-terminal domain (residues 300-386) folds into a four-helix bundle. In solution and in the crystal, the enzyme forms a homo-dimer. The interface between the two monomers is formed predominantly by extension of the sheet in the second domain. The adenosine phosphate moiety of NADPH binds to the nucleotide-binding fold in the canonical way. The adenine ring interacts with the loop after beta1 and with the loops between alpha2 and beta2 and alpha5 and beta5. The nicotinamide ring is disordered in crystals of this binary complex. Comparisons to Escherichia coli DXR show that the two enzymes are very similar in structure, and that the active site architecture is highly conserved. However, there are differences in the recognition of the adenine ring of NADPH in the two enzymes.  相似文献   

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