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1.
Yeast Kex2 and human furin are subtilisin-related proprotein convertases that function in the late secretory pathway and exhibit similar though distinguishable patterns of substrate recognition. Although both enzymes prefer Arg at P(1) and basic residues at P(2), the two differ in recognition of P(4) and P(6) residues. To probe P(4) and P(6) recognition by Kex2p, furin-like substitutions were made in the putative S(4) and S(6) subsites of Kex2. T252D and Q283E mutations were introduced to increase the preference for Arg at P(4) and P(6), respectively. Glu(255) was replaced with Ile to limit recognition of P(4) Arg. The effects of putative S(4) and S(6) mutations were determined by examining the cleavage by purified mutant enzymes of a series of fluorogenic substrates with systematic changes in P(4) and/or P(6). Whereas wild Kex2 exhibited little preference type for Arg at P(6), the T252D mutant and T252D/Q283E double mutant exhibited clear interactions with P(6) Arg. Moreover, the T252D and T252D/Q283E substitutions altered the influence of the P(6) residue on P(4) recognition. We infer that cross-talk between S(4) and S(6), not seen in furin, allows wild type and mutant forms of Kex2 to adapt their subsites for altered modes of recognition. This apparent plasticity may allow the subsites to rearrange their local environment to interact with different substrates in a productive manner. E255I-Kex2 exhibited significantly decreased recognition of P(4) Arg in a tetrapeptide substrate with Lys at P(1), although the general pattern of selectivity for aliphatic residues at P(4) remained unchanged.  相似文献   

2.
The crystal structures of the four product-complexed single mutants of the catalytic residues of Pseudomonas stutzeri maltotetraose-forming alpha-amylase, E219G, D193N, D193G and D294N, have been determined. Possible roles of the catalytic residues Glu219, Asp193 and Asp294 have been discussed by comparing the structures among the previously determined complexed mutant E219Q and the present mutant enzymes. The results suggested that Asp193 predominantly works as the base catalyst (nucleophile), whose side chain atom lies in close proximity to the C1-atom of Glc4, being involved in the intermediate formation in the hydrolysis reaction. While Asp294 works for tightly binding the substrate to give a twisted and a deformed conformation of the glucose ring at position -1 (Glc4). The hydrogen bond between the side chain atom of Glu219 and the O1-atom of Glc4, that implies the possibility of interaction via hydrogen, consistently present throughout these analyses, supports the generally accepted role of this residue as the acid catalyst (proton donor).  相似文献   

3.
Clostridium paraputrificum M-21 beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase 3A (Nag3A) is an enzyme classified in family 3 of the glycoside hydrolases. To identify catalytic residues of this enzyme, mutations were introduced into highly conserved Glu and Asp residues. Replacement of Asp175 with Ala abolished the catalytic activity without change in the circular dichroism spectrum, strongly suggesting that this residue is a catalytic residue, a nucleophile/base or a proton donor. Since the K(m) values of mutant enzymes D119N, D229N, D229A and D274N increased 17 to 41 times as compared with that of wild-type enzyme, Asp119, Asp229, and Asp274 appear to be involved in substrate recognition and binding. Taking previous studies into consideration, we presume that Asp303 is the catalytic nucleophile and Asp175 is the proton donor of C. paraputrificum Nag3A.  相似文献   

4.
Aspergillus niger isopullulanase (IPU) is the only pullulan-hydrolase in glycosyl hydrolase (GH) family 49 and does not hydrolyse dextran at all, while all other GH family 49 enzymes are dextran-hydrolysing enzymes. To investigate the common catalytic mechanism of GH family 49 enzymes, nine mutants were prepared to replace residues conserved among GH family 49 (four Trp, three Asp and two Glu). Homology modelling of IPU was also carried out based on the structure of Penicillium minioluteum dextranase, and the result showed that Asp353, Glu356, Asp372, Asp373 and Trp402, whose substitutions resulted in the reduction of activity for both pullulan and panose, were predicted to be located in the negatively numbered subsites. Three Asp-mutated enzymes, D353N, D372N and D373N, lost their activities, indicating that these residues are candidates for the catalytic residues of IPU. The W402F enzyme significantly reduced IPU activity, and the Km value was sixfold higher and the k0 value was 500-fold lower than those for the wild-type enzyme, suggesting that Trp402 is a residue participating in subsite -1. Trp31 and Glu273, whose substitutions caused a decrease in the activity for pullulan but not for panose, were predicted to be located in the interface between N-terminal and beta-helical domains. The substrate preference of the negatively numbered subsites of IPU resembles that of GH family 49 dextranases. These findings suggest that IPU and the GH family 49 dextranases have a similar catalytic mechanism in their negatively numbered subsites in spite of the difference of their substrate specificities.  相似文献   

5.
In an effort to understand the catalytic mechanism of the tryptophan synthase beta-subunit from Salmonella typhimurium, possible functional active site residues have been identified (on the basis of the 3-D crystal structure of the bienzyme complex) and targeted for analysis utilizing site-directed mutagenesis. The chromophoric properties of the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate cofactor provide a particularly convenient and sensitive spectral probe to directly investigate changes in catalytic events which occur upon modification of the beta-subunit. Substitution of Asp for Glu 109 in the beta-subunit was found to alter both the catalytic activity and the substrate specificity of the beta-reaction. Steady-state kinetic data reveal that the beta-reaction catalyzed by the beta E109D alpha 2 beta 2 mutant enzyme complex is reduced 27-fold compared to the wild-type enzyme. Rapid-scanning stopped-flow (RSSF) UV-visible spectroscopy shows that the mutation does not seriously affect the pre-steady-state reaction of the beta E109D mutant with L-serine to form the alpha-aminoacrylate intermediate, E(A-A). Binding of the alpha-subunit specific ligand, alpha-glycerol phosphate (GP) to the alpha 2 beta 2 complex exerts the same allosteric effects on the beta-subunit as observed with the wild-type enzyme. However, the pre-steady-state spectral changes for the reaction of indole with E(A-A) show that the formation of the L-tryptophan quinonoid, E(Q3), is drastically altered. Discrimination against E(Q3) formation is also observed for the binding of L-tryptophan to the mutant alpha 2 beta 2 complex in the reverse reaction. In contrast, substitution of Asp for Glu 109 increases the apparent affinity of the beta E109D alpha-aminoacrylate complex for the indole analogue indoline and results in the increased rate of synthesis of the amino acid product dihydroiso-L-tryptophan. Thus, the mutation affects the covalent bond forming addition reactions and the nucleophile specificity of the beta-reaction catalyzed by the bienzyme complex.  相似文献   

6.
Molecular dynamics simulations of the tetradecasaccharide XXXGXXXG in complex with the hybrid aspen xyloglucan endo-transglycosylase PttXET16-34 have been performed and analysed with respect to structure, dynamics, flexibility and ligand interactions. Notably, the charge state of the so-called ‘helper residue’ aspartate 87 (Asp87), which lies between the catalytic nucleophile [glutamate 85 (Glu85)] and general acid/base (Glu89) residues on the same beta strand, had a significant effect on PttXET16-34 active site structure. When Asp87 was deprotonated, electrostatic repulsion forced the nucleophile away from C1 of the sugar ring in subsite ? 1 and the proton–donating ability of Glu89 was also weakened due to the formation of a hydrogen bond with Asp87, whereas the protonation of Asp87 resulted in the formation of a hydrogen bond with the catalytic nucleophile and correct positioning of the catalytic machinery. The results suggest that catalysis in glycoside hydrolase family 16, and by extension clan GH-B enzymes, is optimal when the catalytic nucleophile is deprotonated for nucleophilic attack on the substrate, whereas the ‘helper residue’ and general acid/base residue are both in their conjugate acid forms to align the nucleophile and deliver a proton to the departing sugar, respectively.  相似文献   

7.
Sucrose phosphorylase utilizes a glycoside hydrolase-like double displacement mechanism to convert its disaccharide substrate and phosphate into alpha-d-glucose 1-phosphate and fructose. Site-directed mutagenesis was employed to characterize the proposed roles of Asp(196) and Glu(237) as catalytic nucleophile and acid-base, respectively, in the reaction of sucrose phosphorylase from Leuconostoc mesenteroides. The side chain of Asp(295) is suggested to facilitate the catalytic steps of glucosylation and deglucosylation of Asp(196) through a strong hydrogen bond (23 kJ/mol) with the 2-hydroxyl of the glucosyl oxocarbenium ion-like species believed to be formed in the transition states flanking the beta-glucosyl enzyme intermediate. An assortment of biochemical techniques used to examine the mechanism of alpha-retaining glucosyl transfer by Schizophyllum commune alpha,alpha-trehalose phosphorylase failed to provide evidence in support of a similar two-step catalytic reaction via a covalent intermediate. Mutagenesis studies suggested a putative active-site structure for this trehalose phosphorylase that is typical of retaining glycosyltransferases of fold family GT-B and markedly different from that of sucrose phosphorylase. While ambiguity remains regarding the chemical mechanism by which the trehalose phosphorylase functions, the two disaccharide phosphorylases have evolved strikingly different reaction coordinates to achieve catalytic efficiency and stereochemical control in their highly analogous substrate transformations.  相似文献   

8.
Glycoside hydrolase family 77 (GH77) belongs to the alpha-amylase superfamily (Clan H) together with GH13 and GH70. GH77 enzymes are amylomaltases or 4-alpha-glucanotransferases, involved in maltose metabolism in microorganisms and in starch biosynthesis in plants. Here we characterized the amylomaltase from the hyperthermophilic bacterium Thermus thermophilus HB8 (Tt AMase). Site-directed mutagenesis of the active site residues (Asp293, nucleophile; Glu340, general acid/base catalyst; Asp395, transition state stabilizer) shows that GH77 Tt AMase and GH13 enzymes share the same catalytic machinery. Quantification of the enzyme's transglycosylation and hydrolytic activities revealed that Tt AMase is among the most efficient 4-alpha-glucanotransferases in the alpha-amylase superfamily. The active site contains at least seven substrate binding sites, subsites -2 and +3 favoring substrate binding and subsites -3 and +2 not, in contrast to several GH13 enzymes in which subsite +2 contributes to oligosaccharide binding. A model of a maltoheptaose (G7) substrate bound to the enzyme was used to probe the details of the interactions of the substrate with the protein at acceptor subsites +2 and +3 by site-directed mutagenesis. Substitution of the fully conserved Asp249 with a Ser in subsite +2 reduced the activity 23-fold (for G7 as a substrate) to 385-fold (for maltotriose). Similar mutations reduced the activity of alpha-amylases only up to 10-fold. Thus, the characteristics of acceptor subsite +2 represent a main difference between GH13 amylases and GH77 amylomaltases.  相似文献   

9.
EndA is a sequence non-specific endonuclease that serves as a virulence factor during Streptococcus pneumoniae infection. Expression of EndA provides a strategy for evasion of the host''s neutrophil extracellular traps, digesting the DNA scaffold structure and allowing further invasion by S. pneumoniae. To define mechanisms of catalysis and substrate binding, we solved the structure of EndA at 1.75 Å resolution. The EndA structure reveals a DRGH (Asp-Arg-Gly-His) motif-containing ββα-metal finger catalytic core augmented by an interesting ‘finger-loop’ interruption of the active site α-helix. Subsequently, we delineated DNA binding versus catalytic functionality using structure-based alanine substitution mutagenesis. Three mutants, H154A, Q186A and Q192A, exhibited decreased nuclease activity that appears to be independent of substrate binding. Glu205 was found to be crucial for catalysis, while residues Arg127/Lys128 and Arg209/Lys210 contribute to substrate binding. The results presented here provide the molecular foundation for development of specific antibiotic inhibitors for EndA.  相似文献   

10.
A computational study on the glycoside hydrolase 13 (GH13) family of the CAZy database has been carried out at the atomic level in order to identify the conserved positions that may be responsible for recognition of the substrate. Analysis with substrate analog-, inhibitor-, or product-bound 3D structures was carried out to find the atomic spatial arrangement of the amino acids that make −2, −1, +1, and +2 subsites and water oxygen atoms around the ligand. The identified conserved positions of subsites were independent from the nature of the amino acid. The −1 and +1 subsites have more conserved positions than the −2 and +2 subsites. Some of the clusters of the −1 and +1 subsites have atoms of the same chemical nature. A spatially conserved position for water, which is stabilized by a hydrogen bond with the carboxyl group of a proton donor (Glu) and Asp of the catalytic triad, was found in the −1 subsite of 75% of the enzymes subjected to analysis. This position could be the region of hydrolytic water.  相似文献   

11.
Depolymerization of polysaccharides is catalyzed by highly specific enzymes that promote hydrolysis of the scissile glycosidic bond by an activated water molecule. 1,3-1,4-beta-Glucanases selectively cleave beta-1,4 glycosidic bonds in 3-O-substituted glucopyranosyl units within polysaccharides with mixed linkage. The reaction follows a double-displacement mechanism by which the configuration of the anomeric C(1)-atom of the glucosyl unit in subsite -I is retained. Here we report the high-resolution crystal structure of the hybrid 1,3-1,4-beta-glucanase H(A16-M)(E105Q/E109Q) in complex with a beta-glucan tetrasaccharide. The structure shows four beta-d-glucosyl moieties bound to the substrate-binding cleft covering subsites -IV to -I, thus corresponding to the reaction product. The ten active-site residues Asn26, Glu63, Arg65, Phe92, Tyr94, Glu105, Asp107, Glu109, Asn182 and Trp184 form a network of hydrogen bonds and hydrophobic stacking interactions with the substrate. These residues were previously identified by mutational analysis as significant for stabilization of the enzyme-carbohydrate complex, with Glu105 and Glu109 being the catalytic residues. Compared to the Michaelis complex model, the tetrasaccharide moiety is slightly shifted toward that part of the cleft binding the non-reducing end of the substrate, but shows previously unanticipated strong stacking interactions with Phe92 in subsite -I. A number of specific hydrogen-bond contacts between the enzyme and the equatorial O(2), O(3) and O(6) hydroxyl groups of the glucosyl residues in subsites -I, -II and -III are the structural basis for the observed substrate specificity of 1,3-1,4-beta-glucanases. Kinetic analysis of enzyme variants with the all beta-1,3 linked polysaccharide laminarin identified key residues mediating substrate specificity in good agreement with the structural data. The comparison with structures of the apo-enzyme H(A16-M) and a covalent enzyme-inhibitor (E.I) complex, together with kinetic and mutagenesis data, yields new insights into the structural requirements for substrate binding and catalysis. A detailed view of enzyme-carbohydrate interactions is presented and mechanistic implications are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Creatine kinase catalyzes the reversible transphosphorylation of creatine by MgATP. From the sequence homology and the molecular structure of creatine kinase isoenzymes, we have identified several highly conserved residues with a potential function in the active site: a negatively charged cluster (Glu(226), Glu(227), Asp(228)) and a serine (Ser(280)). Mutant proteins E226Q, E226L, E227Q, E227L, D228N, and S280A/S280D of human sarcomeric mitochondrial creatine kinase were generated by in vitro mutagenesis, expressed in Escherichia coli, and purified to homogeneity. Their overall structural integrity was confirmed by CD spectroscopy and gel filtration chromatography. The enzymatic activity of all proteins mutated in the negatively charged cluster was extremely low (0.002-0.4% of wild type) and showed apparent Michaelis constants (K(m)) similar to wild type, suggesting that most of the residual activity may be attributed to wild-type revertants. Mutations of Ser(280) led to higher residual activities and altered K(m) values; S280A showed an increase of K(m) for phosphocreatine (65-fold), creatine (6-fold), and ATP (6-fold); S280D showed a decrease of K(m) for creatine (6-fold). These results, together with the transition state structure of the homologous arginine kinase (Zhou, G., Somasundaram, T., Blanc, E., Parthasarathy G., Ellington, W. R., and Chapman, M. S. (1998) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 95, 8449-8454), strongly suggest a critical role of Glu(226), Glu(227), and Asp(228) in substrate binding and catalysis and point to Glu(227) as a catalytic base.  相似文献   

13.
Ung MU  Lu B  McCammon JA 《Biopolymers》2006,81(6):428-439
The active site of the mammalian cAMP-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit (C-subunit) has a cluster of nonconserved acidic residues-Glu127, Glu170, Glu203, Glu230, and Asp241-that are crucial for substrate recognition and binding. Studies have shown that the Glu230 to Gln mutant (E230Q) of the enzyme has physical properties similar to the wild-type enzyme and has decreased affinity for a short peptide substrate, Kemptide. However, recent experiments intended to crystallize ternary complex of the E230Q mutant with MgATP and protein kinase inhibitor (PKI) could only obtain crystals of the apo-enzyme of E230Q mutant. To deduce the possible mechanism that prevented ternary complex formation, we used the relaxed-complex method (Lin, J.-H., et al. J Am Chem Soc 2002, 24, 5632-5633) to study PKI binding to the E230Q mutant C-subunit. In the E230Q mutant, we observed local structural changes of the peptide binding site that correlated closely to the reduced PKI affinity. The structural changes occurred in the F-to-G helix loop and appeared to hinder PKI binding. Reduced electrostatic potential repulsion among Asp241 from the helix loop section and the other acidic residues in the peptide binding site appear to be responsible for the structural change.  相似文献   

14.
β-Glycosidase from Thermococcus kodakarensis KOD1 is a hyperthermophilic enzyme with β-glucosidase, β-mannosidase, β-fucosidase and β-galactosidase activities. Sequence alignment with other β-glycosidases from hyperthermophilic archaea showed two unique active site residues, Gln77 and Asp206. These residues were represented by Arg and Asp in all other hyperthermophilic β-glycosidases. The two active site residues were mutated to Q77R, D206N and D206Q, to study the role of these unique active site residues in catalytic activity and to alter the substrate specificity to enhance its β-glucosidase activity. The secondary structure analysis of all the mutants showed no change in their structure and exhibited in similar conformation like wild-type as they all existed in dimer form in an SDS-PAGE under non-reducing conditions. Q77R and D206Q affected the catalytic activity of the enzyme whereas the D206N altered the catalytic turn-over rate for glucosidase and mannosidase activities with fucosidase activity remain unchanged. Gln77 is reported to interact with catalytic nucleophile and Asp206 with axial C2-hydroxyl group of substrates. Q77R might have made some changes in three dimensional structure due to its electrostatic effect and lost its catalytic activity. The extended side chains of D206Q is predicted to affect the substrate binding during catalysis. The high-catalytic turn-over rate by D206N for β-glucosidase activity makes it a useful enzyme in cellulose degradation at high temperatures.  相似文献   

15.
The active site of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit harbors a cluster of acidic residues-Asp 127, Glu 170, Glu 203, Glu 230, and Asp 241-that are not conserved throughout the protein kinase family. Based on crystal structures of the catalytic subunit, these amino acids are removed from the site of phosphoryl transfer and are implicated in substrate recognition. Glu 230, the most buried of these acidic residues, was mutated to Ala (rC[E230A]) and Gln (rC[E230Q]) and overexpressed in Escherichia coli. In contrast to the mostly insoluble and destabilized rC[E230A], rC[E230Q] is largely soluble, purifies like wild-type enzyme, and displays wild-type-like thermal stability. The mutation in rC[E230Q] causes an order of magnitude decrease in the affinity for a heptapeptide substrate, Kemptide. In addition, two independent kinetic techniques were used to dissect phosphoryl transfer and product release steps in the reaction pathway. Viscosometric and pre-steady-state quench-flow analyses revealed that the phosphoryl transfer rate constant decreases by an order of magnitude, whereas the product release rate constant remains unperturbed. Electrostatic alterations in the rC[E230Q] active site were assessed using modeling techniques that provide molecular interpretations for the substrate affinity and phosphoryl transfer rate decreases observed experimentally. These observations indicate that subsite recognition elements in the catalytic subunit make electrostatic contributions that are important not only for peptide affinity, but also for catalysis. Protein kinases may, therefore, discriminate substrates by not only binding them tightly, but also by only turning over ones that complement the electrostatic character of the active site.  相似文献   

16.
Isoprimeverose-producing enzymes (IPases) release isoprimeverose (α-d-xylopyranosyl-(1?→?6)-d-glucopyranose) from the non-reducing end of xyloglucan oligosaccharides. Aspergillus oryzae IPase (IpeA) is classified as a member of the glycoside hydrolase family 3 (GH3); however, it has unusual substrate specificity compared with other GH3 enzymes. Xylopyranosyl branching at the non-reducing ends of xyloglucan oligosaccharides is vital for IpeA activity. We solved the crystal structure of IpeA with isoprimeverose at 2.4?Å resolution, showing that the structure of IpeA formed a dimer and was composed of three domains: an N-terminal (β/α)8 TIM-barrel domain, α/β/α sandwich fold domain, and a C-terminal fibronectin-like domain. The catalytic TIM-barrel domain possessed a catalytic nucleophile (Asp300) and acid/base (Glu524) residues. Interestingly, we found that the cavity of the active site of IpeA was larger than that of other GH3 enzymes, and subsite ?1′ played an important role in its activity. The glucopyranosyl and xylopyranosyl residues of isoprimeverose were located at subsites ?1 and ?1′, respectively. Gln58 and Tyr89 contributed to the interaction with the xylopyranosyl residue of isoprimeverose through hydrogen bonding and stacking effects, respectively. Our findings provide new insights into the substrate recognition of GH3 enzymes.  相似文献   

17.
Choi JK  Lee BH  Chae CH  Shin W 《Proteins》2004,55(1):22-33
The structure of a pectin-bound complex of rhamnogalacturonase was modeled to identify the amino acid residues involved in catalysis and substrate binding. The "hairy" region of pectin, represented by six repeating stretches of (1-->4)-D-galacturonate-(1-->2)-L-rhamnose dimer, was flexibly docked into the putative binding site of rhamnogalacturonase from Aspergillus aculeatus whose X-ray structure is known. A search of the complex configurational space was performed using AutoDock for the dimeric and tetrameric sugar units in which the -1 galacturonate residue has various ring conformations. Then the plausible AutoDock solutions were manually extended to the dodecameric pectin models. Subsequently, the resulting complex models were subjected to solvated molecular dynamics using AMBER. In the best model, the substrate has an extended pseudo-threefold helix with the -1 ring in a 4H3 half-chair that approaches the transition state conformation. The catalytic machinery is clearly defined: Asp197 is a general acid and the activated water bound between Asp177 and Glu198 is a nucleophile. The active site is similar, with a small yet significant difference, to that of polygalacturonase that degrades the pectic "smooth" region of linear homopolymer of D-(1-->4)-linked galacturonic acid. Rhamnogalacturonase has ten binding subsites ranging from -3 to +7, while polygalacturonase has eight subsites from -5 to +3. The model suggests that the eight amino acids including three arginine and three lysine residues, all of which are invariantly conserved in the rhamnogalacturonase family of proteins, are important in substrate binding. The present study may aid in designing mutational studies to characterize rhamnogalacturonase.  相似文献   

18.
Fructosyltransferases catalyze the transfer of a fructose unit from one sucrose/fructan to another and are engaged in the production of fructooligosaccharide/fructan. The enzymes belong to the glycoside hydrolase family 32 (GH32) with a retaining catalytic mechanism. Here we describe the crystal structures of recombinant fructosyltransferase (AjFT) from Aspergillus japonicus CB05 and its mutant D191A complexes with various donor/acceptor substrates, including sucrose, 1-kestose, nystose, and raffinose. This is the first structure of fructosyltransferase of the GH32 with a high transfructosylation activity. The structure of AjFT comprises two domains with an N-terminal catalytic domain containing a five-blade β-propeller fold linked to a C-terminal β-sandwich domain. Structures of various mutant AjFT-substrate complexes reveal complete four substrate-binding subsites (−1 to +3) in the catalytic pocket with shapes and characters distinct from those of clan GH-J enzymes. Residues Asp-60, Asp-191, and Glu-292 that are proposed for nucleophile, transition-state stabilizer, and general acid/base catalyst, respectively, govern the binding of the terminal fructose at the −1 subsite and the catalytic reaction. Mutants D60A, D191A, and E292A completely lost their activities. Residues Ile-143, Arg-190, Glu-292, Glu-318, and His-332 combine the hydrophobic Phe-118 and Tyr-369 to define the +1 subsite for its preference of fructosyl and glucosyl moieties. Ile-143 and Gln-327 define the +2 subsite for raffinose, whereas Tyr-404 and Glu-405 define the +2 and +3 subsites for inulin-type substrates with higher structural flexibilities. Structural geometries of 1-kestose, nystose and raffinose are different from previous data. All results shed light on the catalytic mechanism and substrate recognition of AjFT and other clan GH-J fructosyltransferases.  相似文献   

19.
Using site-directed mutagenesis we have investigated the catalytic residues in a xylanase from Bacillus circulans. Analysis of the mutants E78D and E172D indicated that mutations in these conserved residues do not grossly alter the structure of the enzyme and that these residues participate in the catalytic mechanism. We have now determined the crystal structure of an enzyme-substrate complex to 108 A resolution using a catalytically incompetent mutant (E172C). In addition to the catalytic residues, Glu 78 and Glu 172, we have identified 2 tyrosine residues, Tyr 69 and Tyr 80, which likely function in substrate binding, and an arginine residue, Arg 112, which plays an important role in the active site of this enzyme. On the basis of our work we would propose that Glu 78 is the nucleophile and that Glu 172 is the acid-base catalyst in the reaction.  相似文献   

20.
Dextranase is an enzyme that hydrolyzes dextran α-1,6 linkages. Streptococcus mutans dextranase belongs to glycoside hydrolase family 66, producing isomaltooligosaccharides of various sizes and consisting of at least five amino acid sequence regions. The crystal structure of the conserved fragment from Gln100 to Ile732 of S. mutans dextranase, devoid of its N- and C-terminal variable regions, was determined at 1.6 Å resolution and found to contain three structural domains. Domain N possessed an immunoglobulin-like β-sandwich fold; domain A contained the enzyme''s catalytic module, comprising a (β/α)8-barrel; and domain C formed a β-sandwich structure containing two Greek key motifs. Two ligand complex structures were also determined, and, in the enzyme-isomaltotriose complex structure, the bound isomaltooligosaccharide with four glucose moieties was observed in the catalytic glycone cleft and considered to be the transglycosylation product of the enzyme, indicating the presence of four subsites, −4 to −1, in the catalytic cleft. The complexed structure with 4′,5′-epoxypentyl-α-d-glucopyranoside, a suicide substrate of the enzyme, revealed that the epoxide ring reacted to form a covalent bond with the Asp385 side chain. These structures collectively indicated that Asp385 was the catalytic nucleophile and that Glu453 was the acid/base of the double displacement mechanism, in which the enzyme showed a retaining catalytic character. This is the first structural report for the enzyme belonging to glycoside hydrolase family 66, elucidating the enzyme''s catalytic machinery.  相似文献   

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