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1.
Catalytic antibody 15A10 hydrolyzes the benzoyl ester of cocaine to form the nonpsychoactive metabolites benzoic acid and ecgonine methylester. Here, we report biochemical and structural studies that characterize the catalytic mechanism. The crystal structure of the cocaine-hydrolyzing monoclonal antibody (mAb) 15A10 has been determined at 2.35 A resolution. The binding pocket is fairly shallow and mainly hydrophobic but with a cluster of three hydrogen-bond donating residues (TrpL96, AsnH33, and TyrH35). Computational docking of the transition state analogue (TSA) indicates that these residues are appropriately positioned to coordinate the phosphonate moiety of the TSA and, hence, form an oxyanion hole. Tyrosine modification of the antibody with tetranitromethane reduced hydrolytic activity to background level. The contribution from these and other residues to catalysis and TSA binding was explored by site-directed mutagenesis of 15A10 expressed in a single chain fragment variable (scFv) format. The TyrH35Phe mutant had 4-fold reduced activity, and TrpL96Ala, TrpL96His, and AsnH33Ala mutants were all inactive. Comparison with an esterolytic antibody D2.3 revealed a similar arrangement of tryptophan, asparagine, and tyrosine residues in the oxyanion hole that stabilizes the transition state for ester hydrolysis. Furthermore, the crystal structure of the bacterial cocaine esterase (cocE) also showed that the cocE employs a tyrosine hydroxyl in the oxyanion hole. Thus, the biochemical and structural data are consistent with the catalytic antibody providing oxyanion stabilization as its major contribution to catalysis.  相似文献   

2.
Factor VIIa (FVIIa) consists of a gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla) domain, two epidermal growth factor-like domains, and a protease domain. FVIIa binds seven Ca(2+) ions in the Gla, one in the EGF1, and one in the protease domain. However, blood contains both Ca(2+) and Mg(2+), and the Ca(2+) sites in FVIIa that could be specifically occupied by Mg(2+) are unknown. Furthermore, FVIIa contains a Na(+) and two Zn(2+) sites, but ligands for these cations are undefined. We obtained p-aminobenzamidine-VIIa/soluble tissue factor (sTF) crystals under conditions containing Ca(2+), Mg(2+), Na(+), and Zn(2+). The crystal diffracted to 1.8A resolution, and the final structure has an R-factor of 19.8%. In this structure, the Gla domain has four Ca(2+) and three bound Mg(2+). The EGF1 domain contains one Ca(2+) site, and the protease domain contains one Ca(2+), one Na(+), and two Zn(2+) sites. (45)Ca(2+) binding in the presence/absence of Mg(2+) to FVIIa, Gla-domainless FVIIa, and prothrombin fragment 1 supports the crystal data. Furthermore, unlike in other serine proteases, the amide N of Gly(193) in FVIIa points away from the oxyanion hole in this structure. Importantly, the oxyanion hole is also absent in the benzamidine-FVIIa/sTF structure at 1.87A resolution. However, soaking benzamidine-FVIIa/sTF crystals with d-Phe-Pro-Arg-chloromethyl ketone results in benzamidine displacement, d-Phe-Pro-Arg incorporation, and oxyanion hole formation by a flip of the 192-193 peptide bond in FVIIa. Thus, it is the substrate and not the TF binding that induces oxyanion hole formation and functional active site geometry in FVIIa. Absence of oxyanion hole is unusual and has biologic implications for FVIIa macromolecular substrate specificity and catalysis.  相似文献   

3.
Recent crystallography studies have shown that the binding site oxyanion hole plays an important role in inhibitor binding, but can exist in two conformations (active/inactive). We have undertaken molecular dynamics (MD) calculations to better understand oxyanion hole dynamics and thermodynamics. We find that the Zika virus (ZIKV) NS2B/NS3 protease maintains a stable closed conformation over multiple 100-ns conventional MD simulations in both the presence and absence of inhibitors. The S1, S2, and S3 pockets are stable as well. However, in two of eight simulations, the A132-G133 peptide bond in the binding pocket of S1' spontaneously flips to form a 310-helix that corresponds to the inactive conformation of the oxyanion hole, and then maintains this conformation until the end of the 100-ns conventional MD simulations without inversion of the flip. This conformational change affects the S1' pocket in ZIKV NS2B/NS3 protease active site, which is important for small molecule binding. The simulation results provide evidence at the atomic level that the inactive conformation of the oxyanion hole is more favored energetically when no specific interactions are formed between substrate/inhibitor and oxyanion hole residues. Interestingly, however, transition between the active and inactive conformation of the oxyanion hole can be observed by boosting the valley potential in accelerated MD simulations. This supports a proposed induced-fit mechanism of ZIKV NS2B/NS3 protease from computational methods and provides useful direction to enhance inhibitor binding predictions in structure-based drug design.  相似文献   

4.
Thiolases belong to a superfamily of condensing enzymes that includes also beta-ketoacyl acyl carrier protein synthases (KAS enzymes), involved in fatty acid synthesis. Here, we describe the high resolution structure of human cytosolic acetoacetyl-CoA thiolase (CT), both unliganded (at 2.3 angstroms resolution) and in complex with CoA (at 1.6 angstroms resolution). CT catalyses the condensation of two molecules of acetyl-CoA to acetoacetyl-CoA, which is the first reaction of the metabolic pathway leading to the synthesis of cholesterol. CT is a homotetramer of exact 222 symmetry. There is an excess of positively charged residues at the interdimer surface leading towards the CoA-binding pocket, possibly important for the efficient capture of substrates. The geometry of the catalytic site, including the three catalytic residues Cys92, His 353, Cys383, and the two oxyanion holes, is highly conserved between the human and bacterial Zoogloea ramigera thiolase. In human CT, the first oxyanion hole is formed by Wat38 (stabilised by Asn321) and NE2(His353), and the second by N(Cys92) and N(Gly385). The active site of this superfamily is constructed on top of four active site loops, near Cys92, Asn321, His353, and Cys383, respectively. These loops were used for the superpositioning of CT on the bacterial thiolase and on the Escherichia coli KAS I. This comparison indicates that the two thiolase oxyanion holes also exist in KAS I at topologically equivalent positions. Interestingly, the hydrogen bonding interactions at the first oxyanion hole are different in thiolase and KAS I. In KAS I, the hydrogen bonding partners are two histidine NE2 atoms, instead of a water and a NE2 side-chain atom in thiolase. The second oxyanion hole is in both structures shaped by corresponding main chain peptide NH-groups. The possible importance of bound water molecules at the catalytic site of thiolase for the reaction mechanism is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
The alpha/beta‐hydrolases (ABH) are among the largest structural families of proteins that are found in nature. Although they vary in their sequence and function, the ABH enzymes use a similar acid–base‐nucleophile catalytic mechanism to catalyze reactions on different substrates. Because ABH enzymes are biocatalysts with a wide range of potential applications, protein engineering has taken advantage of their catalytic versatility to develop enzymes with industrial applications. This study is a comprehensive analysis of 40 ABH enzyme families focusing on two identified substructures: the nucleophile zone and the oxyanion zone, which co‐ordinate the catalytic nucleophile and the residues of the oxyanion hole, and independently reported as critical for the enzymatic activity. We also frequently observed an aromatic cluster near the nucleophile and oxyanion zones, and opposite the ligand‐binding site. The nucleophile zone, the oxyanion zone and the residue cluster enriched in aromatic side chains comprise a three‐dimensional structural organization that shapes the active site of ABH enzymes and plays an important role in the enzymatic function by structurally stabilizing the catalytic nucleophile and the residues of the oxyanion hole. The structural data support the notion that the aromatic cluster can participate in co‐ordination of the catalytic histidine loop, and properly place the catalytic histidine next to the catalytic nucleophile.  相似文献   

6.
Essentially complete (96%) sequence-specific assignments were made for the backbone and side-chain 1H, 13C, and 15N resonances of Fusarium solani pisi cutinase, produced as a 214-residue heterologous protein in Escherichia coli, using heteronuclear NMR techniques. Three structural features were noticed during the assignment. (1) The secondary structure in solution corresponds mostly with the structure from X-ray diffraction, suggesting that both structures are globally similar. (2) The HN of Ala32 has a strongly upfield-shifted resonance at 3.97 ppm, indicative of an amide-aromatic hydrogen bond to the indole ring of Trp69 that stabilizes the N-terminal side of the parallel beta-sheet. (3) The NMR data suggest that the residues constituting the oxyanion hole are quite mobile in the free enzyme in solution, in contrast to the existence of a preformed oxyanion hole as observed in the crystal structure. Apparently, cutinase forms its oxyanion hole upon binding of the substrate like true lipases.  相似文献   

7.
Sortase cysteine transpeptidases covalently attach proteins to the bacterial cell wall or assemble fiber-like pili that promote bacterial adhesion. Members of this enzyme superfamily are widely distributed in Gram-positive bacteria that frequently utilize multiple sortases to elaborate their peptidoglycan. Sortases catalyze transpeptidation using a conserved active site His-Cys-Arg triad that joins a sorting signal located at the C terminus of their protein substrate to an amino nucleophile located on the cell surface. However, despite extensive study, the catalytic mechanism and molecular basis of substrate recognition remains poorly understood. Here we report the crystal structure of the Staphylococcus aureus sortase B enzyme in a covalent complex with an analog of its NPQTN sorting signal substrate, revealing the structural basis through which it displays the IsdC protein involved in heme-iron scavenging from human hemoglobin. The results of computational modeling, molecular dynamics simulations, and targeted amino acid mutagenesis indicate that the backbone amide of Glu224 and the side chain of Arg233 form an oxyanion hole in sortase B that stabilizes high energy tetrahedral catalytic intermediates. Surprisingly, a highly conserved threonine residue within the bound sorting signal substrate facilitates construction of the oxyanion hole by stabilizing the position of the active site arginine residue via hydrogen bonding. Molecular dynamics simulations and primary sequence conservation suggest that the sorting signal-stabilized oxyanion hole is a universal feature of enzymes within the sortase superfamily.  相似文献   

8.
Patatin is a non-specific plant lipase and the eponymous member of a broad class of serine hydrolases termed the patatin-like phospholipase domain containing proteins (PNPLAs). Certain PNPLA family members can be inhibited by organophosphorus (OP) compounds. Currently, no structural data are available on the modes of interaction between the PNPLAs and OP compounds or their native substrates. To this end, we present the crystal structure of patatin-17 (pat17) in its native state as well as following inhibition with methyl arachidonyl fluorophosphonate (MAFP) and inhibition/aging with diisopropylphosphorofluoridate (DFP). The native pat17 structure revealed the existence of two portals (portal1 and portal2) that lead to its active-site chamber. The DFP-inhibited enzyme underwent the aging process with the negatively charged phosphoryl oxygen, resulting from the loss of an isopropyl group, being within hydrogen-binding distance to the oxyanion hole. The MAFP-inhibited pat17 structure showed that MAFP did not age following its interaction with the nucleophilic serine residue (Ser77) of pat17 since its O-methyl group was intact. The MAFP moiety is oriented with its phosphoryl oxygen in close proximity to the oxyanion hole of pat17 and its O-methyl group located farther away from the oxyanion hole of pat17 relative to the DFP-bound state. The orientation of the alkoxy oxygens within the two OP compounds suggests a role for the oxyanion hole in stabilizing the emerging negative charge on the oxygen during the aging reaction. The arachidonic acid side chain of MAFP could be contained within portals 1 or 2. Comparisons of pat17 in the native, inhibited, and aged states showed no significant global conformational changes with respect to their Cα backbones, consistent with observations from other α/β hydrolases such as group VIIA phospholipase A2.  相似文献   

9.
A longstanding proposal in enzymology is that enzymes are electrostatically and geometrically complementary to the transition states of the reactions they catalyze and that this complementarity contributes to catalysis. Experimental evaluation of this contribution, however, has been difficult. We have systematically dissected the potential contribution to catalysis from electrostatic complementarity in ketosteroid isomerase. Phenolates, analogs of the transition state and reaction intermediate, bind and accept two hydrogen bonds in an active site oxyanion hole. The binding of substituted phenolates of constant molecular shape but increasing p K a models the charge accumulation in the oxyanion hole during the enzymatic reaction. As charge localization increases, the NMR chemical shifts of protons involved in oxyanion hole hydrogen bonds increase by 0.50–0.76 ppm/p K a unit, suggesting a bond shortening of ˜0.02 Å/p K a unit. Nevertheless, there is little change in binding affinity across a series of substituted phenolates (ΔΔG = −0.2 kcal/mol/p K a unit). The small effect of increased charge localization on affinity occurs despite the shortening of the hydrogen bonds and a large favorable change in binding enthalpy (ΔΔH = −2.0 kcal/mol/p K a unit). This shallow dependence of binding affinity suggests that electrostatic complementarity in the oxyanion hole makes at most a modest contribution to catalysis of ˜300-fold. We propose that geometrical complementarity between the oxyanion hole hydrogen-bond donors and the transition state oxyanion provides a significant catalytic contribution, and suggest that KSI, like other enzymes, achieves its catalytic prowess through a combination of modest contributions from several mechanisms rather than from a single dominant contribution.  相似文献   

10.
Escherichia coli thioesterase I (TAP) is a multifunctional enzyme possessing activities of thioesterase, esterase, arylesterase, protease, and lysophospholipase. In particular, TAP has stereoselectivity for amino acid derivative substrates, hence it is useful for the kinetic resolution of racemic mixtures of industrial chemicals. In the present work, the crystal structure of native TAP was determined at 1.9A, revealing a minimal SGNH-hydrolase fold. The structure of TAP in complex with a diethyl phosphono moiety (DEP) identified its catalytic triad, Ser10-Asp154-His157, and oxyanion hole, Ser10-Gly44-Asn73. The oxyanion hole of TAP consists of three residues each separated from the other by more than 3.5A, implying that all of them are highly polarized when substrate bound. The catalytic (His)C(epsilon1)-H...O=C hydrogen bond usually plays a role in the catalytic mechanisms of most serine hydrolases, however, there were none present in SGNH-hydrolases. We propose that the existence of the highly polarized tri-residue-constituted oxyanion hole compensates for the lack of a (His)C(epsilon1)-H...O=C hydrogen bond. This suggests that members of the SGNH-hydrolase family may employ a unique catalytic mechanism. In addition, most SGNH-hydrolases have low sequence identities and presently there is no clear criterion to define consensus sequence blocks. Through comparison of TAP and the three SGNH-hydrolase structures currently known, we have identified a unique hydrogen bond network which stabilizes the catalytic center: a newly discovered structural feature of SGNH-hydrolases. We have defined these consensus sequence blocks providing a basis for the sub-classification of SGNH-hydrolases.  相似文献   

11.
Lipases and esterases are important biocatalysts for synthetic organic fine chemistry. An esterase from Bacillus sp. BP-7 (EstBP7) bears in its amino acid sequence a rare GGG(A)X oxyanion hole motif, where an uncommon threonine (T) is found at the third position. Detection of this pattern motivated evaluation of the ability of EstBP7 for conversion of tertiary alcohols. The enzyme was engineered in order to optimize its performance to provide important chiral building blocks: five variants with mutations in the oxyanion hole motif were created to investigate the influence on activity and enantioselectivity in the kinetic resolution of eight acetates of tertiary alcohols. Wild-type enzyme converted all esters of tertiary alcohols assayed with low enantioselectivity, whereas some of the mutants displayed significantly increased E-values. One of the mutants (EstBP7-AGA; Mut 5) showed an E >100 towards a complex tertiary alcohol acetate (2-(4-pyridyl)but-3-yn-2-yl acetate) at low reaction temperature (4 °C). Therefore, the catalytic toolbox was expanded for biocatalysis of optically pure tertiary alcohols valuable for the pharmaceutical industry.  相似文献   

12.
We have designed, synthesized, and evaluated the factor Xa inhibitory activities of p-amidinophenyl-sulfones, amines, and alcohols intended to take advantage of the polarity and hydrogen-bonding potential of the oxyanion hole region of the S1 specificity pocket. We demonstrate that placement of an anionic group within the oxyanion hole region of the catalytic site substantially enhances activity, with small flexible groups favored over bulkier ones. Ab initio pKa calculations suggest that the hydroxyl substituent frequently used for benzamidine moieties may be ionized to form an anionic group, consistent with the general trend. One nonamidine based substituent also shows promising activity.  相似文献   

13.
Both functional and structural studies of serine beta-lactamases indicate the existence of an oxyanion hole at the active site with an important role in catalysis. The functional presence of the oxyanion hole is demonstrated by the previous observation that thiono-beta-lactams are very poor substrates of beta-lactamases (B. P. Murphy, and R. F. Pratt, 1988, Biochem. J. 256, 669-672) and in the present paper by the inability of these enzymes to catalyze hydrolysis of a thiono analog of a depsipeptide substrate. This thiono effect was first noted and interpreted in regard to classical serine hydrolases although the chemical basis for it has not been firmly established either in those enzymes or in beta-lactamases. In this paper a computational approach to a further understanding of the effect has been taken. The results for a class C beta-lactamase show that the deacylation tetrahedral intermediate interacted more strongly with the enzyme with an O(-) placed in the oxyanion hole than an S(-). On the other hand, the converse was true for acylation tetrahedral intermediate species, a result distinctly not in accord with experiment. These results indicate that the thiono effect does not arise from unfavorable interactions between enzyme and thiono substrate at the tetrahedral intermediate stage but must be purely kinetic in nature, i.e., arise in a transitional species at an early stage of the acylation reaction. The same conclusion as to the origin of the thiono effect was also indicated by a less extensive series of calculations on a class A beta-lactamase and on chymotrypsin.  相似文献   

14.
Using molecular dynamics simulations, we have obtained an important insight into the structural and dynamical changes exerted by a nonaqueous solvent on the serine protease subtilisin Carlsberg. Our findings show that the structural properties of the subtilisin–acetonitrile (MeCN) system were sensitive to the amount of water present at the protein surface. A decrease or lack of water promoted the enzyme–MeCN interaction, which increased structural changes of the enzyme primarily at the surface loops. This effect caused variations on the secondary and tertiary structure of the protein and induced the opening of a pathway for the solvent to the protein core. Also, disturbance of the oxyanion hole was observed due to changes in the orientation in the Asn-155 side chain. The disruption of the oxyanion hole and the changes of the tertiary structure should affect the optimal activity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
Infrared difference spectra show that at least 4 conformations coexist for the ester carbonyl group of the stable acyl-enzyme species formed between the antibiotic aztreonam and the class C beta-lactamase from Citrobacter freundii. A novel method for the assignment of the bands that arise from the ester carbonyl group has been employed. This has made use of the finding that the infrared absorption intensity of aliphatic esters is surprisingly constant, so a direct comparison with simple model esters has been possible. This has allowed a clear distinction to be made between ester and amide (protein) absorptions. The polarity of the conformer environment varies from hexane-like to strongly hydrogen-bonded. We assume that the conformer with the lowest frequency (1,690 cm(-)(1)) and hence the strongest hydrogen-bonding is the singular conformer observed in the X-ray crystallographic structure, since a good interaction via two hydrogen bonds with the oxyanion hole is seen. Molecular dynamics simulation by the method of locally enhanced sampling revealed that the motion of the ester carbonyl of the acyl-enzyme species in and out of the oxyanion hole is facile. The simulation revealed two pathways for this motion that would go through intermediates that first break one or the other of the two hydrogen bonds to the oxyanion hole, prior to departure of the carbonyl moiety out of the active site. It is likely that such motion for the acyl-enzyme species might also occur with more typical beta-lactam substrates for beta-lactamases, but their detection in the more rapid time scale may prove a challenge.  相似文献   

16.
The enzyme Δ1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate (P5C) dehydrogenase (aka P5CDH and ALDH4A1) is an aldehyde dehydrogenase that catalyzes the oxidation of γ-glutamate semialdehyde to l-glutamate. The crystal structures of mouse P5CDH complexed with glutarate, succinate, malonate, glyoxylate, and acetate are reported. The structures are used to build a structure-activity relationship that describes the semialdehyde carbon chain length and the position of the aldehyde group in relation to the cysteine nucleophile and oxyanion hole. Efficient 4- and 5-carbon substrates share the common feature of being long enough to span the distance between the anchor loop at the bottom of the active site and the oxyanion hole at the top of the active site. The inactive 2- and 3-carbon semialdehydes bind the anchor loop but are too short to reach the oxyanion hole. Inhibition of P5CDH by glyoxylate, malonate, succinate, glutarate, and l-glutamate is also examined. The Ki values are 0.27 mM for glyoxylate, 58 mM for succinate, 30 mM for glutarate, and 12 mM for l-glutamate. Curiously, malonate is not an inhibitor. The trends in Ki likely reflect a trade-off between the penalty for desolvating the carboxylates of the free inhibitor and the number of compensating hydrogen bonds formed in the enzyme-inhibitor complex.  相似文献   

17.
Quantum chemical and molecular dynamics investigations have been performed on model systems for Candida rugosa lipase (CRL) to study mechanistic and conformational features of the catalytic hydrolysis. Based on X-ray data, a simplified model of the CRL substrate complex was created for the PM3 and ab initio calculations, including the amino acid residues both of the catalytic triad and the oxyanion hole.The energetic and structural properties of significant species along the pathway of the hydrolysis of the model substrate acetic acid methyl ester have been calculated. By modifications of the residues of the oxyanion hole as well as the catalytic triad, the influence of these parts of the active site on the pathway of the reaction was analysed in more detail.Moreover, molecular dynamics simulations have been carried out on CRL adducts with (±)-cis-4-acetamido-cyclopent-2-ene-1-carboxylic esters with different lengths of their alkyl chain and their absolute configuration as substrates. For the MD simulations using the AMBER program, all amino acid residues and water molecules with a cut-off radius less than 1500 pm from the substrate were taken into account. From the analysis of the trajectories and histograms for significant hydrogen bonds in the active site of the enzyme adducts, some hints were obtained for the enantiodifferentiation and the chain dependence of the esters in catalytic hydrolysis by CRL.Electronic Supplementary Material available.  相似文献   

18.
The existence of an oxyanion hole in cysteine proteases able to stabilize a transition-state complex in a manner analogous to that found with serine proteases has been the object of controversy for many years. In papain, the side chain of Gln19 forms one of the hydrogen-bond donors in the putative oxyanion hole, and its contribution to transition-state stabilization has been evaluated by site-directed mutagenesis. Mutation of Gln19 to Ala caused a decrease in kcat/KM for hydrolysis of CBZ-Phe-Arg-MCA, which is 7700 M-1 s-1 in the mutant enzyme as compared to 464,000 M-1 s-1 in wild-type papain. With a Gln19Ser variant, the activity is even lower, with a kcat/KM value of 760 M-1 s-1. The 60- and 600-fold decreases in kcat/KM correspond to changes in free energy of catalysis of 2.4 and 3.8 kcal/mol for Gln19Ala and Gln19Ser, respectively. In both cases, the decrease in activity is in large part attributable to a decrease in kcat, while KM values are only slightly affected. These results indicate that the oxyanion hole is operational in the papain-catalyzed hydrolysis of CBZ-Phe-Arg-MCA and constitute the first direct evidence of a mechanistic requirement for oxyanion stabilization in the transition state of reactions catalyzed by cysteine proteases. The equilibrium constants Ki for inhibition of the papain mutants by the aldehyde Ac-Phe-Gly-CHO have also been determined. Contrary to the results with the substrate, mutation at position 19 of papain has a very small effect on binding of the inhibitor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
A combined docking and molecular dynamics protocol was applied to investigate quercetin binding modes within the catalytic cavity of Candida antarctica lipase B (CALB) and Pseudomonas cepacia lipase (PCL), aiming to explain the difference of specificity of these enzymes in acetylation reaction. For both lipases, docking of quercetin yielded two families of conformers with either the quercetin A or B-ring pointing towards the catalytic residues. Molecular dynamics (MD) calculations were subsequently performed on several complexes of each family. MD trajectories were analyzed focusing on the orientation of the acyl donor bound to the catalytic serine towards the oxyanion hole residues and the proximity of quercetin hydroxyl groups to the catalytic residues. Results showed that with CALB, the acetate was not correctly positioned within the oxyanion hole whatever the orientation of quercetin, suggesting that no product could be obtained. With PCL, the acetate remained within the oxyanion hole during all MD trajectories. Depending on quercetin orientation, either the 7-OH group or the 3, 5, 3′, 4′-OH groups came alternatively near the catalytic residues, suggesting that all of them could be acylated. The capacity of models to explain the regioselectivity of the reaction was discussed. Key residues and interactions involved in quercetin binding modes were identified and related to the reaction feasibility.  相似文献   

20.
Crystallographic studies of the complex between beta-lactamase and clavulanate reveal a structure of two acyl-enzymes with covalent bonds at the active site Ser70, representing two different stages of inhibitor degradation alternately occupying the active site. Models that are consistent with biochemical data are derived from the electron density map and refined at 2.2 A resolution: cis enamine, in which the carboxylate group of the clavulanate molecule makes a salt bridge with Lys234 of beta-lactamase; decarboxylated trans enamine, which is oriented away from Lys234. For both acyl-enzymes, the carbonyl oxygen atom of the ester group occupies the oxyanion hole in a manner similar to that found in inhibitor binding to serine proteases. Whereas the oxygen atom in the trans product is optimally positioned in the oxyanion hole, that of the cis product clashes with the main-chain nitrogen atom of Ser70 and the beta-carbon atom of the adjacent Ala69. In contrast to cis to trans isomerization in solution that relieves the steric strain inherent in a cis double bond, at the enzyme-inhibitor interface two additional factors play an important role. The salt bridge enhances the stability of the cis product, while the steric strain introduced by the short contacts with the protein reduces its stability.  相似文献   

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