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1.
Peptide deformylase (PDF), which is essential for normal growth of bacteria but not for higher organisms, is explored as an attractive target for developing novel antibiotics. Here, we present the crystal structure of Leptospira interrogans PDF (LiPDF) at 2.2A resolution. To our knowledge, this is the first crystal structure of PDF associating in a stable dimer. The key loop (named the CD-loop: amino acid residues 66-76) near the active-site pocket adopts "closed" or "open" conformations in the two monomers forming the dimer. In the closed subunit, the CD-loop and residue Arg109 block the entry of the substrate-binding pocket, while the active-site pocket of the open subunit is occupied by the C-terminal tail from the neighbouring molecule. Moreover, a formate group, as one product of deformylisation, is observed bound with the active-site zinc ion. LiPDF displays significant structural differences in the C-terminal region compared to both type-I and type-II PDFs, suggesting a new family of PDFs.  相似文献   

2.
Dimeric lactoglobulin molecules exist in the open conformation at basic pH, whereas they exist in the closed conformation at acidic pH, after undergoing the Tanford transition around neutral pH. Orthorhombic crystals consisting of molecules in the open conformation, grown close to neutral pH, undergo a water-mediated transformation when the relative humidity around the crystals is reduced. The two subunits in the dimer are related by a crystallographic twofold axis in the native crystals while the dimer is asymmetric in the low humidity form. Interestingly, one of the subunits in the dimer in the low humidity form is in an open conformation while the other is in a closed conformation. This is the first observation of such an asymmetric dimer. A hydrogen bond between the side chains of Gln35 and Tyr42 exists and the side chain of Glu89 is substantially buried in the closed subunit of the asymmetric unit, as in other structures with molecules in the closed conformation. However, the closure of the EF loop is not complete; its conformation can be described as half-closed. A comparison of different crystal structures of beta-lactoglobulin indicates that the conformation of the loops in the molecule is substantially influenced by other factors such as crystal packing, the pH, and the composition of the medium, while the change in the conformation of the EF loop follows the Tanford transition. The mutual disposition of the two subunits in the low humidity form is halfway between those in the open and closed structures. The present work further demonstrates that structural changes that occur during partial dehydration could mimic those that occur during the action of proteins.  相似文献   

3.
Triosephosphate isomerase has an important loop near the active site which can exist in a "closed" and in an "open" conformation. Here we describe the structural properties of this "flexible" loop observed in two different structures of trypanosomal triosephosphate isomerase. Trypanosomal triosephosphate isomerase, crystallized in the presence of 2.4 M ammonium sulfate, packs as an asymmetric dimer of 54,000 Da in the crystallographic asymmetric unit. Due to different crystal contacts, peptide 167-180 (the flexible loop of subunit-1) is an open conformation, whereas in subunit-2, this peptide (residues 467-480) is in a closed conformation. In the closed conformation, a hydrogen bond exists between the tip of the loop and a well-defined sulfate ion which is bound to the active site of subunit-2. Such an active site sulfate is not present in subunit-1 due to crystal contacts. When the native (2.4 M ammonium sulfate) crystals are transferred to a sulfate-free mother liquor, the flexible loop of subunit-2 adopts the open conformation. From a closed starting model, this open conformation was discovered through molecular dynamics refinement without manual intervention, despite involving C alpha shifts of up to 7 A. The tip of the loop, residues 472, 473, 474, and 475, moves as a rigid body. Our analysis shows that in this crystal form the flexible loop of subunit-2 faces a solvent channel. Therefore the open and the closed conformations of this flexible loop are virtually unaffected by crystal contacts. The actual observed conformation depends only on the absence or presence of a suitable ligand in the active site.  相似文献   

4.
The significant variation among solved structures of the λ Cro dimer suggests its flexibility. However, contacts in the crystal lattice could have stabilized a conformation which is unrepresentative of its dominant solution form. Here we report on the conformational space of the Cro dimer in solution using replica exchange molecular dynamics in explicit solvent. The simulated ensemble shows remarkable correlation with available x-ray structures. Network analysis and a free energy surface reveal the predominance of closed and semi-open dimers, with a modest barrier separating these two states. The fully open conformation lies higher in free energy, indicating that it requires stabilization by DNA or crystal contacts. Most NMR models are found to be unstable conformations in solution. Intersubunit salt bridging between Arg4 and Glu53 during simulation stabilizes closed conformations. Because a semi-open state is among the low-energy conformations sampled in simulation, we propose that Cro-DNA binding may not entail a large conformational change relative to the dominant dimer forms in solution.  相似文献   

5.
Human serum transferrin tightly binds ferric ions in the blood stream but is able to release them in cells by a process involving receptor-mediated endocytosis and decrease in pH. Iron binding and release are accompanied by a large conformation change. In this study, we investigate theoretically the open and closed forms of the N-lobe human serum transferrin apoprotein by performing pKa calculations and molecular dynamics and free-energy simulations. In agreement with the hypothesis based on the x-ray crystal structures, our calculations show that there is a shift in the pKa values of the lysines forming the dilysine trigger when the conformation changes. We argue, however, that simple electrostatic repulsion between the lysines is not sufficient to trigger domain opening and, instead, propose an alternative explanation for the dilysine-trigger effect. Analysis of the molecular dynamics and free-energy results indicate that the open form is more mobile than the closed form and is much more stable at pH 5.3, in large part due to entropic effects. Despite a lower free energy, the dynamics simulation of the open form shows that it is flexible enough to sample conformations that are consistent with iron binding.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Low-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptors bind lipoprotein particles at the cell surface and release them in the low pH environment of the endosome. The published structure of the receptor determined at endosomal pH reveals an interdomain interface between its beta propeller and its fourth and fifth ligand binding (LA) repeats, suggesting that the receptor adopts a closed conformation at low pH to release LDL. Here, we combine lipoprotein binding and release assays with NMR spectroscopy to examine structural features of the receptor promoting release of LDL at low pH. These studies lead to a model in which the receptor uses a pH-invariant scaffold as an anchor to restrict conformational search space, combining it with flexible linkers between ligand binding repeats to interconvert between open and closed conformations. This finely tuned balance between interdomain rigidity and flexibility is likely to represent a shared structural feature in proteins of the LDL receptor family.  相似文献   

8.
Chang GG  Tong L 《Biochemistry》2003,42(44):12721-12733
Malic enzyme is a tetrameric protein with double dimer structure in which the dimer interface is more intimately contacted than the tetramer interface. Each monomeric unit of the enzyme is composed of four structural domains, which show a different folding topology from those of the other oxidative decarboxylases. The active center is located at the interface between domains B and C. For human mitochondrial malic enzyme, there is an exo nucleotide-binding site for the inhibitor ATP and an allosteric site for the activator fumarate, located at the tetramer and dimer interfaces, respectively. Crystal structures of the enzyme in various complexed forms indicate that the enzyme may exist in equilibrium among two open and two closed forms. Interconversion among these forms involves rigid-body movements of the four structural domains. Substrate binding at the active site shifts the open form to the closed form that represents an active site closure. Fumarate binding at the allosteric site induces the interconversion between forms I and II, which is mediated by the movements of domains A and D. Structures of malic enzyme from different sources are compared with an emphasis on the differences and their implications to structure-function relationships. The binding modes of the substrate, product, cofactors, and transition-state analogue at the active site, as well as ATP and fumarate at the exo site and allosteric site, respectively, provide a clear account for the catalytic mechanism, nucleotide specificities, allosteric regulation, and functional roles of the quaternary structure. The proposed catalytic mechanism involves tyrosine-112 and lysine-183 as the general acid and base, respectively. In addition, a divalent metal ion (Mn(2+) or Mg(2+)) is essential in helping the catalysis. Binding of the metal ion also plays an important role in stabilizing the quaternary structural integrity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
Miraculin is a plant protein that displays the peculiar property of modifying taste by swiching sour into a sweet taste. Its monomer is flavourless at all pH as well as at high concentration; the dimer form elicits its taste-modifying activity at acidic pH; a tetrameric form is also reported as active. Two histidine residues, located in exposed regions, are the main responsible of miraculin activity, as demonstrated by mutagenesis studies. Since structural data of miraculin are not available, we have predicted its three-dimensional structure and simulated both its dimer and tetramer forms by comparative modelling and molecular docking techniques. Finally, molecular dynamics simulations at different pH conditions have indicated that at acidic pH the dimer assumes a widely open conformation, in agreement with the hypotheses coming from other studies.  相似文献   

10.
Tail-anchored (TA) proteins are integral membrane proteins that possess a single transmembrane domain near their carboxy terminus. TA proteins play critical roles in many important cellular processes such as membrane trafficking, protein translocation, and apoptosis. The GET complex mediates posttranslational insertion of newly synthesized TA proteins to the endoplasmic reticulum membrane. The GET complex is composed of the homodimeric Get3 ATPase and its heterooligomeric receptor, Get1/2. During insertion, the Get3 dimer shuttles between open and closed conformational states, coupled with ATP hydrolysis and the binding/release of TA proteins. We report crystal structures of ADP-bound Get3 in complex with the cytoplasmic domain of Get1 (Get1CD) in open and semi-open conformations at 3.0‐ and 4.5‐Å resolutions, respectively. Our structures and biochemical data suggest that Get1 uses two interfaces to stabilize the open dimer conformation of Get3. We propose that one interface is sufficient for binding of Get1 by Get3, while the second interface stabilizes the open dimer conformation of Get3.  相似文献   

11.
We present an original approach based on full-atom normal mode analysis (NMA) aimed to expand the general framework of homology modeling. Using the rat heme-free oxygenase 1 as a case system, we show how NMA can be used to model different physiologically relevant conformations of the same protein. Starting from a unique heme-bound X-ray structure, and using two structural templates corresponding to a human and an incomplete rat heme-free structures, we generate models of the rat unbound species with open and closed conformations. Less than 100 lowest frequency modes of the target were sufficient to obtain the heme-free conformations, the closest to the templates. The rat HO-1 model built for the open form shows features similar to the open form of the human heme-free oxygenase, and the one built for the closed form was similar to the incompletely resolved X-ray structure of the same protein available in the Protein DataBank. In the latter case, the use of NMA was particularly useful since it allowed to build a complete structure and therefore to discuss on the reason of the structural differences between open and closed forms. This study shows that the amount of main chain flexibility provided by the normal modes can lead to major improvements in homology modeling approaches. Such applications will allow the characterization of alternative conformations of a target protein with respect to the templates and/or the construction of good quality 3D models based on existing templates with unresolved parts in their tertiary structure.  相似文献   

12.
The Escherichia coli histidine binding protein HisJ is a type II periplasmic binding protein (PBP) that preferentially binds histidine and interacts with its cytoplasmic membrane ABC transporter, HisQMP2, to initiate histidine transport. HisJ is a bilobal protein where the larger Domain 1 is connected to the smaller Domain 2 via two linking strands. Type II PBPs are thought to undergo “Venus flytrap” movements where the protein is able to reversibly transition from an open to a closed conformation. To explore the accessibility of the closed conformation to the apo state of the protein, we performed a set of all‐atom molecular dynamics simulations of HisJ starting from four different conformations: apo‐open, apo‐closed, apo‐semiopen, and holo‐closed. The simulations reveal that the closed conformation is less dynamic than the open one. HisJ experienced closing motions and explored semiopen conformations that reverted to closed forms resembling those found in the holo‐closed state. Essential dynamics analysis of the simulations identified domain closing/opening and twisting as main motions. The formation of specific inter‐hinge strand and interdomain polar interactions contributed to the adoption of the closed apo‐conformations although they are up to 2.5‐fold less prevalent compared with the holo‐closed simulations. The overall sampling of the closed form by apo‐HisJ provides a rationale for the binding of unliganded PBPs with their cytoplasmic membrane ABC transporters. Proteins 2014; 82:386–398. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

13.
The structures of pig heart and chicken heart citrate synthase have been determined by multiple isomorphous replacement and restrained crystallographic refinement for two crystal forms, a tetragonal form at 2·7 Å and a monoclinic form at 1·7 Å resolution, with crystallographic R-values of 0·199 and 0·192, respectively. The structure determination involved a novel application of restrained crystallographic refinement, in that the refinement of incomplete models was necessary in order to completely determine the course of the polypeptide chain. The recently determined amino acid sequence (Bloxham et al., 1981) has been fitted to the models. The molecule has substantially different conformations in the two crystal forms, and there is evidence that a conformational change is required for enzymatic activity.The molecule is a dimer of identical subunits with 437 amino acid residues each. The conformation is all α-helix, with 40 helices per dimer packing tightly to form a globular molecule. Many of the helices are kinked in various ways or bent smoothly over a large angle. Several of the helices show an unusual antiparallel packing.Each subunit is clearly divided into a large and a small domain. The two crystal forms differ by the relative arrangement of the two domains. The tetragonal form represents an open configuration with a deep cleft between the two domains, the monoclinic form is closed. The structural change from the open to the closed form can be described by an 18 ° rotation of the small domain relative to the large domain.Crystallographic analyses were performed with the product citrate bound in both crystal forms, with coenzyme A (CoA) and a citryl-CoA analogue bound to the monoclinic form. These studies establish the CoA and the citrate binding sites, and the conformations of the two product molecules in atomic detail. The subunits are extensively interdigitated, with one subunit making significant contributions to both the citrate and the CoA binding sites of the other subunit. The adenine moiety of CoA is bound to the small domain, and the pantothenic arm is bound to the large domain. The citrate molecule is bound in a cleft between the large domain. The citrate molecule is bound in a cleft between the large and small domain, with the si carboxymethylene group facing the SH arm of coenzyme A. In the monoclinic form, the cysteamine part of CoA shields the bound citrate completely from the solution. Partial reaction of CoA-SH and aspartate 375 to form aspartyl-CoA, and citrate to form citryl-CoA may occur in the crystals. The conformation of CoA is compact, characterized by an internal hydrogen bond O-52 … N-7 and a tightlybound water molecule O-51 … HOH … O-20.  相似文献   

14.
Tryptases alpha and beta are trypsin-like serine proteinases expressed in large amounts by mast cells. Beta-tryptase is a tetramer that has enzymatic activity, but requires heparin binding to maintain functional and structural stability, whereas alpha-tryptase has little, if any, enzymatic activity but is a stable tetramer in the absence of heparin. As shown previously, these differences can be mainly attributed to the different conformations of the 214-220 segment. Interestingly, the replacement of Asp216 by Gly, which is present in beta-tryptase, results in enzymatically active but less stable alpha-tryptase mutants. We have solved the crystal structures of both the single (D216G) and the double (K192Q/D216G) mutant forms of recombinant human alphaI-tryptase in complex with the peptide inhibitor leupeptin, as well as the structure of the non-inhibited single mutant. The inhibited mutants exhibited an open functional substrate binding site, while in the absence of an inhibitor, the open (beta-tryptase-like) and the closed (alpha-tryptase-like) conformations were present simultaneously. This shows that both forms are in a two-state equilibrium, which is influenced by the residues in the vicinity of the active site and by inhibitor/substrate binding. Novel insights regarding the observed stability differences as well as a potential proteolytic activity of wild-type alpha-tryptase, which may possess a cryptic active site, are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
CYP130 is one of the 20 Mycobacterium tuberculosis cytochrome P450 enzymes, only two of which, CYP51 and CYP121, have so far been studied as individually expressed proteins. Here we characterize a third heterologously expressed M. tuberculosis cytochrome P450, CYP130, by UV-visible spectroscopy, isothermal titration calorimetry, and x-ray crystallography, including determination of the crystal structures of ligand-free and econazole-bound CYP130 at a resolution of 1.46 and 3.0A(,) respectively. Ligand-free CYP130 crystallizes in an "open" conformation as a monomer, whereas the econazole-bound form crystallizes in a "closed" conformation as a dimer. Conformational changes enabling the "open-closed" transition involve repositioning of the BC-loop and the F and G helices that envelop the inhibitor in the binding site and reshape the protein surface. Crystal structure analysis shows that the portion of the BC-loop relocates as much as 18A between the open and closed conformations. Binding of econazole to CYP130 involves a conformational change and is mediated by both a set of hydrophobic interactions with amino acid residues in the active site and coordination of the heme iron. CYP130 also binds miconazole with virtually the same binding affinity as econazole and clotrimazole and ketoconazole with somewhat lower affinities, which makes it a plausible target for this class of therapeutic drugs. Overall, binding of the azole inhibitors is a sequential two-step, entropy-driven endothermic process. Binding of econazole and clotrimazole exhibits positive cooperativity that may reflect a propensity of CYP130 to associate into a dimeric structure.  相似文献   

16.
The ribose-binding protein (RBP) is a sugar-binding bacterial periplasmic protein whose function is associated with a large allosteric conformational change from an open to a closed conformation upon binding to ribose. The crystal structures of RBP in open and closed conformations have been solved. It has been hypothesized that the open and closed conformations exist in a dynamic equilibrium in solution, and that sugar binding shifts the population from open conformations to closed conformations. Here, we study by computer simulations the thermodynamic changes that accompany this conformational change, and model the structural changes that accompany the allosteric transition, using umbrella sampling molecular dynamics and the weighted histogram analysis method. The open state is comprised of a diverse ensemble of conformations; the open ribose-free X-ray crystal conformations being representative of this ensemble. The unligated open form of RBP is stabilized by conformational entropy. The simulations predict detectable populations of closed ribose-free conformations in solution. Additional interdomain hydrogen bonds stabilize this state. The predicted shift in equilibrium from the open to the closed state on binding to ribose is in agreement with experiments. This is driven by the energetic stabilization of the closed conformation due to ribose-protein interactions. We also observe a significant population of a hitherto unobserved ribose-bound partially open state. We believe that this state is the one that has been suggested to play a role in the transfer of ribose to the membrane-bound permease complex.  相似文献   

17.
Inwardly rectifying potassium (Kir) channels are characterized by a long pore comprised of continuous transmembrane and cytosolic portions. A high-resolution structure of a Kir3.1 chimera revealed the presence of the cytosolic (G-loop) gate captured in the closed or open conformations. Here, we conducted molecular-dynamics simulations of these two channel states in the presence and absence of phosphatidylinositol bisphosphate (PIP(2)), a phospholipid that is known to gate Kir channels. Simulations of the closed state with PIP(2) revealed an intermediate state between the closed and open conformations involving direct transient interactions with PIP(2), as well as a network of transitional inter- and intrasubunit interactions. Key elements in the G-loop gating transition involved a PIP(2)-driven movement of the N-terminus and C-linker that removed constraining intermolecular interactions and led to CD-loop stabilization of the G-loop gate in the open state. To our knowledge, this is the first dynamic molecular view of PIP(2)-induced channel gating that is consistent with existing experimental data.  相似文献   

18.
In this study, an analysis of the transition between the inactive ("closed") and active ("open") conformations of Candida rugosa lipase in solution is performed using irreversible enzyme inhibitors, cyclic saligenin phosphates. It is shown that >90% inhibition of the enzyme activity toward water-soluble substrates (esterolytic activity) can be achieved with as little as 0.3 mol of the inhibitor per mole of enzyme, whereas activity toward emulsified substrates decreases by approximately 20% under the same conditions. It is also shown that short-term exposure of this inhibited enzyme preparation to an interface leads to a significant increase in esterolytic activity, which even exceeds that of the untreated control. These experimental observations suggest that the inhibitors interact predominantly, if not exclusively, with the open form of the enzyme and that any transitions occurring between the two conformers of the enzyme in solution, in the absence of an interface, are extremely slow. This conclusion is verified by separating the open and closed forms of the enzyme by hydrophobic interaction column chromatography on phenyl-sepharose. Fractions enriched with the respective conformations of the enzyme are further purified using gel-permeation chromatography. On the basis of the elution pattern from this step, and sodium dodecylsulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), the open (active in the absence of interface) form of the lipase is found to be present in solution as a dimer, whereas the closed form appears to be a monomer. The latter form of the enzyme may be activated by up to 60-fold when exposed to triolein.  相似文献   

19.
Structural snapshots corresponding to various states enable elucidation of the molecular recognition mechanism of enzymes. Adenosine deaminase has two distinct conformations, an open form and a closed form, although it has so far been unclear what factors influence adaptation of the alternative conformations. Herein, we have determined the first nonligated structure as an initial state, which was the open form, and have thereby rationally deduced the molecular recognition mechanism. Inspection of the active site in the nonligated and ligated states indicated that occupancy at one of the water-binding positions in the nonligated state was highly significant in determining alternate conformations. When this position is empty, subsequent movement of Phe65 toward the space induces the closed form. On the other hand, while occupied, the overall conformation remains in the open form. This structural understanding should greatly assist structure-oriented drug design and enable control of the enzymatic activity.  相似文献   

20.
The 8-kDa light chain of dynein (DLC8) is ubiquitously expressed in various cell types. Other than serving as a light chain of the dynein complexes, this highly conserved protein has been shown to bind a larger number of proteins with diverse biological functions. DLC8 forms a homodimer via three-dimensional domain swapping of an internal beta-strand (the beta2-strand) at neutral pH. The protein undergoes non-reversible dimer-to-monomer dissociation when the pH value of the protein solution decreases. The three-dimensional structure of the DLC8 monomer determined by NMR spectroscopy at pH 3.0 showed that the protein is well folded. The major conformational change accompanied by dimer dissociation is in the beta2-strand of the protein, which undergoes transition from a beta-strand to a nascent alpha-helix. The monomer form of DLC8 is not capable of binding to target proteins. Insertion of two flexible amino acid residues in the tight beta1/beta2-loop dramatically stabilized the monomer conformation of the protein. NMR studies showed that the mutation altered the conformation as well as the three-dimensional domain swapping-mediated assembly of the DLC8 dimer. The mutant DLC8 was unable to bind to its targets even at physiological pH. The three-dimensional structure of the mutant protein in its monomeric form provides the structural basis of the mutation-induced stabilization of the monomer conformation. Based on the experimental data, we conclude that the formation of the beta2-strand swapping-mediated dimer is mandatory for the structure and function of DLC8. We further note that the DLC8 dimer represents a novel mode of three-dimensional domain swapping.  相似文献   

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