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1.
Bovine kidney lysosomal alpha-mannosidase is a family 38 alpha-mannosidase involved in the degradation of glycoproteins. The mechanism-based reagent, 5-fluoro-beta-L-gulosyl fluoride, was used to trap a glycosyl-enzyme intermediate, thereby labelling the catalytic nucleophile of this enzyme. After proteolytic digestion and high performance liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry (MS) analysis, a labelled peptide was localised, and the sequence: HIDPFGHSRE determined by fragmentation tandem MS analysis. Taking into consideration sequence alignments of this region with those of other alpha-mannosidases of the same family, this result strongly suggests that the catalytic nucleophile in this enzyme is Asp197.  相似文献   

2.
The alkaline phosphatase superfamily comprises a large number of hydrolytic metalloenzymes such as phosphatases and sulfatases. We have characterised a new member of this superfamily, a phosphonate monoester hydrolase/phosphodiesterase from Rhizobium leguminosarum (RlPMH) both structurally and kinetically. The 1.42 Å crystal structure shows structural homology to arylsulfatases with conservation of the core α/β-fold, the mononuclear active site and most of the active-site residues. Sulfatases use a unique formylglycine nucleophile, formed by posttranslational modification of a cysteine/serine embedded in a signature sequence (C/S)XPXR. We provide mass spectrometric and mutational evidence that RlPMH is the first non-sulfatase enzyme shown to use a formylglycine as the catalytic nucleophile. RlPMH hydrolyses phosphonate monoesters and phosphate diesters with similar efficiency. Burst kinetics suggest that substrate hydrolysis proceeds via a double-displacement mechanism. Kinetic characterisation of active-site mutations establishes the catalytic contributions of individual residues. A mechanism for substrate hydrolysis is proposed on the basis of the kinetic data and structural comparisons with E. coli alkaline phosphatase and Pseudomonas aeruginosa arylsulfatase. RlPMH represents a further example of conservation of the overall structure and mechanism within the alkaline phosphatase superfamily.  相似文献   

3.

Background

The commercially important glycoside hydrolase family 3 (GH3) β-glucosidases from Aspergillus niger are anomeric-configuration-retaining enzymes that operate through the canonical double-displacement glycosidase mechanism. Whereas the catalytic nucleophile is readily identified across all GH3 members by sequence alignments, the acid/base catalyst in this family is phylogenetically variable and less readily divined.

Methods

In this report, we employed three-dimensional structure homology modeling and detailed kinetic analysis of site-directed mutants to identify the catalytic acid/base of a GH3 β-glucosidase from A. niger ASKU28.

Results

In comparison to the wild-type enzyme and other mutants, the E490A variant exhibited greatly reduced kcat and kcat/Km values toward the natural substrate cellobiose (67,000- and 61,000-fold, respectively). Correspondingly smaller kinetic effects were observed for artificial chromogenic substrates p-nitrophenyl β-d-glucoside and 2,4-dinitrophenyl β-d-glucoside, the aglycone leaving groups of which are less dependent on acid catalysis, although changes in the rate-determining catalytic step were revealed for both. pH-rate profile analyses also implicated E490 as the general acid/base catalyst. Addition of azide as an exogenous nucleophile partially rescued the activity of the E490A variant with the aryl β-glucosides and yielded β-glucosyl azide as a product.

Conclusions and general significance

These results strongly support the assignment of E490 as the acid/base catalyst in a β-glucosidase from A. niger ASKU28, and provide crucial experimental support for the bioinformatic identification of the homologous residue in a range of related GH3 subfamily members.  相似文献   

4.
The crystal structure of GcnA, an N-acetyl-β-d-glucosaminidase from Streptococcus gordonii, was solved by multiple wavelength anomalous dispersion phasing using crystals of selenomethionine-substituted protein. GcnA is a homodimer with subunits each comprised of three domains. The structure of the C-terminal α-helical domain has not been observed previously and forms a large dimerisation interface. The fold of the N-terminal domain is observed in all structurally related glycosidases although its function is unknown. The central domain has a canonical (β/α)8 TIM-barrel fold which harbours the active site. The primary sequence and structure of this central domain identifies the enzyme as a family 20 glycosidase. Key residues implicated in catalysis have different conformations in two different crystal forms, which probably represent active and inactive conformations of the enzyme. The catalytic mechanism for this class of glycoside hydrolase, where the substrate rather than the enzyme provides the cleavage-inducing nucleophile, has been confirmed by the structure of GcnA complexed with a putative reaction intermediate analogue, N-acetyl-β-d-glucosamine-thiazoline. The catalytic mechanism is discussed in light of these and other family 20 structures.  相似文献   

5.
Family 2 of the glycoside hydrolase classification is one of the largest families. Structurally characterized members of this family include enzymes with β-galactosidase activity (Escherichia coli LacZ), β-glucuronidase activity (Homo sapiens GusB), and β-mannosidase activity (Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron BtMan2A). Here, we describe the structure of a family 2 glycoside hydrolase, CsxA, from Amycolatopsis orientalis that has exo-β-d-glucosaminidase (exo-chitosanase) activity. Analysis of a product complex (1.85 Å resolution) reveals a unique negatively charged pocket that specifically accommodates the nitrogen of nonreducing end glucosamine residues, allowing this enzyme to discriminate between glucose and glucosamine. This also provides structural evidence for the role of E541 as the catalytic nucleophile and D469 as the catalytic acid/base. The structures of an E541A mutant in complex with a natural β-1,4-d-glucosamine tetrasaccharide substrate and both E541A and D469A mutants in complex with a pNP-β-d-glucosaminide synthetic substrate provide insight into interactions in the + 1 subsite of this enzyme. Overall, a comparison with the active sites of other GH2 enzymes highlights the unique architecture of the CsxA active site, which imparts specificity for its cationic substrate.  相似文献   

6.
Human NUDT5 (hNUDT5) is an ADP-ribose (ADPR) pyrophosphatase (ADPRase) that plays important roles in controlling the intracellular levels of ADPR and preventing non-enzymatic ADP-ribosylation of proteins by hydrolyzing ADPR to AMP and ribose 5′-phosphate. We report the crystal structure of hNUDT5 in complex with a non-hydrolyzable ADPR analogue, α,β-methyleneadenosine diphosphoribose, and three Mg2 + ions representing the transition state of the enzyme during catalysis. Analysis of this structure and comparison with previously reported hNUDT5 structures identify key residues involved in substrate binding and catalysis. In the transition-state structure, three metal ions are bound at the active site and are coordinated by surrounding residues and water molecules. A conserved water molecule is at an ideal position for nucleophilic attack on the α-phosphate of ADPR. The side chain of Glu166 on loop L9 changes its conformation to interact with the conserved water molecule compared with that in the substrate-bound structure and appears to function as a catalytic base. Mutagenesis and kinetic studies show that Trp28 and Trp46 are important for the substrate binding; Arg51 is involved in both the substrate binding and the catalysis; and Glu112 and Glu116 of the Nudix motif, Glu166 on loop L9, and Arg111 are critical for the catalysis. The structural and biochemical data together reveal the molecular basis of the catalytic mechanism of ADPR hydrolysis by hNUDT5. Specifically, Glu166 functions as a catalytic base to deprotonate a conserved water molecule that acts as a nucleophile to attack the α-phosphate of ADPR, and three Mg2 + ions are involved in the activation of the nucleophile and the binding of the substrate. Structural comparison of different ADPRases also suggests that most dimeric ADPRases may share a similar catalytic mechanism of ADPR hydrolysis.  相似文献   

7.
In this study, the trypsin gene (bgtryp-1) from the German cockroach, Blattella germanica, was cloned via the immunoscreening of patients with allergies to cockroaches. Nucleotide sequence analysis predicted an 863 bp open reading frame which encodes for 257 amino acids. The deduced amino acid sequence exhibited 42-57% homology with the serine protease from dust mites, and consisted of a conserved catalytic domain (GDSGGPLV). bgtryp-1 was determined by both Northern and Southern analysis to be a 0.9 kb, single-copy gene. SDS-PAGE and Western blotting analyses of the recombinant protein (Bgtryp-1) over-expressed in Escherichia coli revealed that the molecular mass of the expressed protein was 35 kDa, and the expressed protein was capable of reacting with the sera of cockroach allergy patients. We also discussed the possibility that trypsin excreted by the digestive system of the German cockroach not only functions as an allergen, but also may perform a vital role in the activation of PAR-2.  相似文献   

8.
Mueller M  Nidetzky B 《FEBS letters》2007,581(20):3814-3818
Site-directed mutagenesis was used to examine the specificity of Leuconostoc mesenteroides sucrose phosphorylase for utilization of fructose and phosphate as leaving group/nucleophile of the reaction. The largest catalytic defect in Arg(137)-->Ala (approximately 60-fold) and Tyr(340)-->Ala (approximately 2500-fold) concerned phosphate dependent half-reactions whereas that in Asp(338)-->Asn (approximately 7000-fold) derived from disruption of steps where fructose departs or attacks. The relative efficiencies for enzyme glucosylation by sucrose compared with alpha-d-glucose-1-phosphate and enzyme deglucosylation by phosphate compared with fructose were 5.5 and 6.2 for wild-type, 19 and 2.0 for Arg(137)-->Ala, 950 and 0.17 for Tyr(340)-->Ala, and 0.05 and 180 for Asp(338)-->Asn, respectively. Asp(338) and Tyr(340) have a key role in differential binding of fructose and phosphate, respectively.  相似文献   

9.
The three-dimensional crystal structure of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) beta-mannanase 4a (LeMAN4a) has been determined to 1.5 A resolution. The enzyme adopts the (beta/alpha)(8) fold common to the members of glycohydrolase family GH5. The structure is comparable with those of the homologous Trichoderma reesei and Thermomonospora fusca beta-mannanases: There is a conserved three-stranded beta-sheet located near the N terminus that stacks against the central beta-barrel at the end opposite the active site. Three noncanonical beta-helices surround the active site. Similar helices are found in T. reesei but not T. fusca beta-mannanase. By analogy with other beta-mannanases, the catalytic acid/base residue is E204 and the nucleophile residue is E318. The active site cleft of L. esculentum beta-mannanase most closely resembles that of the T. reesei isozyme. A model of substrate binding in LeMAN4a is proposed in which the mannosyl residue occupying the -1 subsite of the enzyme adopts the (1)S(5) skew-boat conformation.  相似文献   

10.
Thermococcus litoralis 4-alpha-glucanotransferase (TLGT) belongs to family 57 of glycoside hydrolases and catalyzes the disproportionation and cycloamylose synthesis reactions. Family 57 glycoside hydrolases have not been well investigated, and even the catalytic mechanism involving the active site residues has not been studied. Using 3-ketobutylidene-beta-2-chloro-4-nitrophenyl maltopentaoside (3KBG5CNP) as a donor and glucose as an acceptor, we showed that the disproportionation reaction of TLGT involves a ping-pong bi-bi mechanism. On the basis of this reaction mechanism, the glycosyl-enzyme intermediate, in which a donor substrate was covalently bound to the catalytic nucleophile, was trapped by treating the enzyme with 3KBG5CNP in the absence of an acceptor and was detected by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry after peptic digestion. Postsource decay analysis suggested that either Glu-123 or Glu-129 was the catalytic nucleophile of TLGT. Glu-123 was completely conserved between family 57 enzymes, and the catalytic activity of the E123Q mutant enzyme was greatly decreased. On the other hand, Glu-129 was a variable residue, and the catalytic activity of the E129Q mutant enzyme was not decreased. These results indicate that Glu-123 is the catalytic nucleophile of TLGT. Sequence alignment of TLGT and family 38 enzymes (class II alpha-mannosidases) revealed that Glu-123 of TLGT corresponds to the nucleophilic aspartic acid residue of family 38 glycoside hydrolases, suggesting that family 57 and 38 glycoside hydrolases may have had a common ancestor.  相似文献   

11.
In this study, we describe Korean isolates of Trichomonas vaginalis infected with double-stranded (ds) RNA virus (TVV). One T. vaginalis isolate infected with TVV IH-2 evidenced weak pathogenicity in the mouse assay coupled with the persistent presence of a dsRNA, thereby indicating a hypovirulence effect of dsRNA in T. vaginalis. Cloning and sequence analysis results revealed that the genomic dsRNA of TVV IH-2 was 4,647 bp in length and evidenced a sequence identity of 80% with the previously-described TVV 1-1 and 1-5, but only a 42% identity with TVV 2-1 and 3 isolates. It harbored 2 overlapping open reading frames of the putative capsid protein and dsRNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp). As previously observed in the TVV isolates 1-1 and 1-5, a conserved ribosomal slippage heptamer (CCUUUUU) and its surrounding sequence context within the consensus 14-nt overlap implied the gene expression of a capsid protein-RdRp fusion protein, occurring as the result of a potential ribosomal frameshift event. The phylogenetic analysis of RdRp showed that the Korean TVV IH-2 isolate formed a compact group with TVV 1-1 and 1-5 isolates, which was divergent from TVV 2-1, 3 and other viral isolates classified as members of the Giardiavirus genus.  相似文献   

12.
The Ser/Thr kinase CK2 (former name: casein kinase 2) is a heterotetrameric enzyme composed of two catalytic chains (CK2α) attached to a dimer of noncatalytic subunits. Together with the cyclin-dependent kinases and the mitogen-activated protein kinases, CK2α belongs to the CMGC family of the eukaryotic protein kinases. CK2 is an important survival and stability factor in eukaryotic cells: its catalytic activity is elevated in a wide variety of tumors while its down-regulation can lead to apoptosis. Thus, CK2 is a valuable target for drug development and for chemical biology approaches of cell biological research, and small organic inhibitors addressing CK2 are of considerable interest. We describe here the complex structure between a C-terminal deletion mutant of human CK2α and the ATP-competitive inhibitor emodin (1,3,8-trihydroxy-6-methylanthraquinone, International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry name: 1,3,8-trihydroxy-6-methylanthracene-9,10-dione) and compare it with a previously published complex structure of emodin and maize CK2α. With a resolution of 1.5 Å, the human CK2α/emodin structure has a much better resolution than its maize counterpart (2.6 Å). Even more important, in spite of a sequence identity of more than 77% between human and maize CK2α, the two structures deviate significantly in the orientation, in which emodin is trapped by the enzyme, and in the local conformations around the ligand binding site: maize CK2α shows its largest adaptations in the ATP-binding loop, whereas human CK2α shows its largest adaptations in the hinge region connecting the two main domains of the protein kinase core. These observations emphasize the importance of local plasticity for ligand binding and demonstrate that two orthologues of an enzyme can behave quite different in this respect.  相似文献   

13.
AIM: To determine if and how a loop region in the peptide deformylase (PDF) of Chlamydia trachomatis regulates enzyme function.METHODS: Molecular dynamics simulation was used to study a structural model of the chlamydial PDF (cPDF) and predict the temperature factor per residue for the protein backbone atoms. Site-directed mutagenesis was performed to construct cPDF variants. Catalytic properties of the resulting variants were determined by an enzyme assay using formyl-Met-Ala-Ser as a substrate.RESULTS: In silico analysis predicted a significant increase in atomic motion in the DGELV sequence (residues 68-72) of a loop region in a cPDF mutant, which is resistant to PDF inhibitors due to two amino acid substitutions near the active site, as compared to wild-type cPDF. The D68R and D68R/E70R cPDF variants demonstrated significantly increased catalytic efficiency. The E70R mutant showed only slightly decreased efficiency. Although deletion of residues 68-72 resulted in a nearly threefold loss in substrate binding, this deficiency was compensated for by increased catalytic efficiency.CONCLUSION: Movement of the DGELV loop region is involved in a rate-limiting conformational change of the enzyme during catalysis. However, there is no stringent sequence requirement for this region for cPDF enzyme activity.  相似文献   

14.
We have recently reported that human soluble epoxide hydrolase (sEH) is a bifunctional enzyme with a novel phosphatase enzymatic activity. Based on a structural relationship with other members of the haloacid dehalogenase superfamily, the sEH N-terminal phosphatase domain revealed four conserved sequence motifs, including the proposed catalytic nucleophile D9, and several other residues potentially implicated in substrate turnover and/or Mg2+ binding. To enlighten the catalytic mechanism of dephosphorylation, we constructed sEH phosphatase active-site mutants by site-directed mutagenesis. A total of 18 mutants were constructed and recombinantly expressed in Escherichia coli as soluble proteins, purified to homogeneity and subsequently analysed for their kinetic parameters. A replacement of residues D9, K160, D184 or N189 resulted in a complete loss of phosphatase activity, consistent with an essential function for catalysis. In contrast, a substitution of D11, T123, N124 and D185 leads to sEH mutant proteins with altered kinetic properties. We further provide evidence of the formation of an acylphosphate intermediate on D9 by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry based on the detection of homoserine after NaBH4 reduction of the phosphorylated enzyme, which identifies D9 as the catalytic nucleophile. Surprisingly, we could only show such homoserine formation using the D11N mutant, which strongly suggests D11 to be involved in the acylphosphate hydrolysis. In the D11 mutant, the second catalytic step becomes rate limiting, which then allows trapping of the labile intermediate. Substrate turnover in the presence of 18H2O revealed that the nucleophilic attack during the second reaction step occurs at the acylphosphate phosphorous. Based on these findings, we propose a two-step catalytic mechanism of dephosphorylation that involves the phosphate substrate hydrolysis by nucleophilic attack by the catalytic nucleophile D9 followed by hydrolysis of the acylphosphate enzyme intermediate supported by D11.  相似文献   

15.
The structure of Pseudomonas fluorescens mannitol 2-dehydrogenase with bound NAD+ leads to the suggestion that the carboxylate group of Asp(69) forms a bifurcated hydrogen bond with the 2' and 3' hydroxyl groups of the adenosine of NAD+ and contributes to the 400-fold preference of the enzyme for NAD+ as compared to NADP+. Accordingly, the enzyme with the Asp(69)-->Ala substitution was found to use NADP(H) almost as well as wild-type enzyme uses NAD(H). The Glu(68)-->Lys substitution was expected to enhance the electrostatic interaction of the enzyme with the 2'-phosphate of NADP+. The Glu(68)-->Lys:Asp(69)-->Ala doubly mutated enzyme showed about a 10-fold preference for NADP(H) over NAD(H), accompanied by a small decrease in catalytic efficiency for NAD(H)-dependent reactions as compared to wild-type enzyme.  相似文献   

16.
Chagasin is a protein produced by Trypanosoma cruzi, the parasite that causes Chagas' disease. This small protein belongs to a recently defined family of cysteine protease inhibitors. Although resembling well-known inhibitors like the cystatins in size (110 amino acid residues) and function (they all inhibit papain-like (C1 family) proteases), it has a unique amino acid sequence and structure. We have crystallized and solved the structure of chagasin in complex with the host cysteine protease, cathepsin L, at 1.75 A resolution. An inhibitory wedge composed of three loops (L2, L4, and L6) forms a number of contacts responsible for high-affinity binding (K(i), 39 pM) to the enzyme. All three loops interact with the catalytic groove, with the central loop L2 inserted directly into the catalytic center. Loops L4 and L6 embrace the enzyme molecule from both sides and exhibit distinctly different patterns of protein-protein recognition. Comparison with a 1.7 A structure of uncomplexed chagasin, also determined in this study, demonstrates that a conformational change of the first binding loop (L4) allows extended binding to the non-primed substrate pockets of the enzyme active site cleft, thereby providing a substantial part of the inhibitory surface. The mode of chagasin binding is generally similar, albeit distinctly different in detail, when compared to those displayed by cystatins and the cysteine protease inhibitory p41 fragment of the invariant chain. The chagasin-cathepsin L complex structure provides details of how the parasite protein inhibits a host enzyme of possible importance in host defense. The high level of structural and functional similarity between cathepsin L and the T. cruzi enzyme cruzipain gives clues to how the cysteine protease activity of the parasite can be targeted. This information will aid in the development of synthetic inhibitors for use as potential drugs for the treatment of Chagas disease.  相似文献   

17.
Bovine α1,3galactosyltransferase (α1,3GalT) transfers galactose from UDP-α-galactose to terminal β-linked galactosyl residues with retention of configuration of the incoming galactose residue. The epitope synthesized has been shown to be critical for xenotransplantation. According to a proposed double-displacement reaction mechanism, glutamate-317 (E317) is thought to be the catalytic nucleophile. The proposed catalytic role of E317 involves an initial nucleophilic attack with inversion of configuration and formation of a covalent sugar–enzyme intermediate between E317 and galactose from the donor substrate, followed by a second nucleophilic attack performed by the acceptor substrate with a second inversion of configuration. To determine whether E317 of α1,3GalT is critical for enzyme activity, site-directed mutagenesis was used to substitute alanine, aspartic acid, cysteine and histidine for E317. If the proposed reaction mechanism for the α1,3GalT enzyme is correct, E317D and E317H would produce active enzymes since they can act as nucleophiles. The non-conservative mutation E317A and conservative mutation E317C are predicted to produce inactive or very low activity enzymes since the E317A mutant cannot engage in a nucleophilic attack, and the E317C mutant would trap the galactose residue. The results obtained demonstrate that E317D and E317H mutants retained activity, albeit significantly less than the wild-type enzyme. Additionally, both E317A and E317C mutant also retained enzyme activity, suggesting that E317 is not the catalytic nucleophile proposed in the double-displacement mechanism. Therefore, either a different amino acid may act as the catalytic nucleophile or the reaction must proceed by a different mechanism.  相似文献   

18.
Based on sequence and phylogenetic analyses, glycoside hydrolase (GH) family 3 can be divided into several clusters that differ in the length of their primary sequences. However, structural data on representatives of GH3 are still scarce, since only three of their structures are known and only one of them has been thoroughly characterized—that of an exohydrolase from barley. To allow a deeper structural understanding of the GH3 family, we have determined the crystal structure of the thermostable β-glucosidase from Thermotoga neapolitana, which has potentially important applications in environmentally friendly industrial biosynthesis at a resolution of 2.05 Å. Selected active-site mutants have been characterized kinetically, and the structure of the mutant D242A is presented at 2.1 Å resolution. Bgl3B from Th. neapolitana is the first example of a GH3 glucosidase with a three-domain structure. It is composed of an (α/β)8 domain similar to a triose phosphate isomerase barrel, a five-stranded α/β sandwich domain (both of which are important for active-site organization), and a C-terminal fibronectin type III domain of unknown function. Remarkably, the direction of the second β-strand of the triose phosphate isomerase barrel domain is reversed, which has implications for the active-site shape. The active site, at the interface of domains 1 and 2, is much more open to solvent than the corresponding site in the structurally homologous enzyme from barley, and only the − 1 site is well defined. The structures, in combination with kinetic studies of active-site variants, allow the identification of essential catalytic residues (the nucleophile D242 and the acid/base E458), as well as other residues at the − 1 subsite, including D58 and W243, which, by mutagenesis, are shown to be important for substrate accommodation/interaction. The position of the fibronectin type III domain excludes a direct participation of this domain in the recognition of small substrates, although it may be involved in the anchoring of the enzyme on large polymeric substrates and in thermostability.  相似文献   

19.
Fucose-containing glycoconjugates are key antigenic determinants in many biological processes. A change in expression levels of the enzymes responsible for tailoring these glycoconjugates has been associated with many pathological conditions and it is therefore surprising that little information is known regarding the mechanism of action of these important catabolic enzymes. Thermotoga maritima, a thermophilic bacterium, produces a wide range of carbohydrate-processing enzymes including a 52-kDa alpha-L-fucosidase that has 38% sequence identity and 56% similarity to human fucosidases. The catalytic nucleophile of this enzyme was identified to be Asp-224 within the peptide sequence 222WNDMGWPEKGKEDL235 using the mechanism-based covalent inactivator 2-deoxy-2-fluoro-alpha-L-fucosyl fluoride. The 10(4)-fold lower activity (kcat/Km) of the site-directed mutant D224A, and the subsequent rescue of activity upon addition of exogenous nucleophiles, conclusively confirms this assignment. This article presents the first direct identification of the catalytic nucleophile of an alpha-L-fucosidase, a key step in the understanding of these important enzymes.  相似文献   

20.
Human cytosolic beta-glucosidase (hCBG) is a xenobiotic-metabolizing enzyme that hydrolyses certain flavonoid glucosides, with specificity depending on the aglycone moiety, the type of sugar and the linkage between them. In this study, the substrate preference of this enzyme was investigated by mutational analysis, X-ray crystallography and homology modelling. The crystal structure of hCBG was solved by the molecular replacement method and refined at 2.7 A resolution. The main-chain fold of the enzyme belongs to the (beta/alpha)(8) barrel structure, which is common to family 1 glycoside hydrolases. The active site is located at the bottom of a pocket (about 16 A deep) formed by large surface loops, surrounding the C termini of the barrel of beta-strands. As for all the clan of GH-A enzymes, the two catalytic glutamate residues are located on strand 4 (the acid/base Glu165) and on strand 7 (the nucleophile Glu373). Although many features of hCBG were shown to be very similar to previously described enzymes from this family, crucial differences were observed in the surface loops surrounding the aglycone binding site, and these are likely to strongly influence the substrate specificity. The positioning of a substrate molecule (quercetin-4'-glucoside) by homology modelling revealed that hydrophobic interactions dominate the binding of the aglycone moiety. In particular, Val168, Trp345, Phe225, Phe179, Phe334 and Phe433 were identified as likely to be important in determining substrate specificity in hCBG, and site-directed mutagenesis supported a key role for some of these residues.  相似文献   

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