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1.
The C-peptide of ribonuclease A (residues 1 to 13) is obtained by cyanogen bromide cleavage at Met13, which converts methionine to a mixture of homoserine lactone (giving C-peptide lactone) and homoserine carboxylate (giving C-peptide carboxylate). The helix-forming properties of C-peptide lactone have been reported. The helix is formed intramolecularly in aqueous solution, is stabilized at low temperatures (0 to 20 °C) and also by a pH-dependent interaction between sidechains. The C-peptide lactone helix is about 1000-fold more stable than expected from “host-guest” data for helix formation in synthetic polypeptides.Here we report the failure of C-peptide carboxylate to form an α-helix in comparable conditions. Formation of a salt-bridge between the α-COO? group and the imidazolium ring of His12+ appears to be responsible for the suppression of helix formation. The presence of the Hse13-COO? … His12+ salt-bridge in C-peptide carboxylate is shown by 1H nuclear magnetic resonance titration of the amide proton resonances of His12 and Hse13, and is expected from model peptide studies. The most probable reason why C-peptide carboxylate does not form an α-helix is that the Hse13-COO? … His12+ salt-bridge competes successfully with a helix stabilizing salt-bridge (Glu9? … His12+).S-peptide (residues 1 to 20 of ribonuclease A) does form an α-helix with properties similar to those of the C-peptide (lactone) helix, which shows that the lactone ring of C-peptide lactone is not needed for helix formation.These results support the hypothesis that a Glu9? … His12+ salt-bridge stabilizes the C-peptide (lactone) helix, and they show that specific interactions between side-chains can be important in preventing as well as in promoting α-helix formation.  相似文献   

2.
The folding of ribonuclease A 1–13 (C-peptide) in H2O near 0°C has been monitored by means of the amide and side chain NH proton resonances. The C-peptide carboxylate at low temperature forms, in a significant amount, a folded structure similar to the one that the 1–19 S-peptide adopts in the same conditions (3–13 α-helix). A quantitative comparison between helix stabilities of the lactone and carboxylate forms of C-peptide and S-peptide is reported. It is concluded that the proposed His 12+ … Hse 13 (COO? salt bridge, which competes with the one-turn stabilizing salt bridge His 12+ … Glu 9? in the C-peptide carboxylate, does not suppress helix formation as previously suggested but it merely reduces its stability. The behaviour of the N5-H resonance of the Arg 10+ side chain provides evidence for its implication in a further stabilizing interaction, most probably with Glu 2?.  相似文献   

3.
Previous studies have identified Lys 1, Glu 2, and His 12 as the charged residues responsible for the pH-dependent stability of the helix formed by the isolated C-peptide (residues 1-13 of ribonuclease A). Here we examine whether the helix-stabilizing behavior of Glu 2- results from a Glu 2- ... Arg 10+ interaction, which is known to be present in the crystal structure of ribonuclease A. The general approach is to measure the helix content of C-peptide analogs as a function of three variables: pH (titration of ionizing groups), amino acid identity (substitution test), and NaCl concentration (ion screening test). In order to interpret the results of residue replacement, several factors in addition to the putative Glu 2- ... Arg 10+ interaction have been studied: intrinsic helix-forming tendencies of amino acids; interactions of charged residues with the alpha-helix macrodipole; and helix-lengthening effects. The results provide strong evidence that the Glu 2- ... Arg 10+ interaction is linked to helix formation and contributes to the stability of the isolated C-peptide helix. NMR evidence supports these conclusions and suggests that this interaction also acts as the N-terminal helix stop signal. The implications of this work for protein folding and stability are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Side-chain interactions in the C-peptide helix: Phe 8 ... His 12+   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Previous studies have demonstrated that His 12 plays a major role in the pH-dependent stability of the helix formed by the isolated C-peptide (residues 1-13 of ribonuclease A). Here, amino acid replacement experiments show that His 12+ stabilizes the C-peptide helix chiefly by interacting with Phe 8. The Phe 8 ... His 12+ ring interaction is specific for the protonated form of His 12 (His 12+) and the interaction is not screened significantly by NaCl, unlike the charged group ... helix dipole interactions studied earlier in C-peptide. Analogs of C-peptide that are unable to form the Phe 8 ... His 12+ interaction show large increases in helix content for Phe----Ala and His----Ala. Therefore, the helical tendencies of the individual residues Phe, His, and Ala are important in determining the result of a replacement experiment. Since the side chains of Phe 8 and His 12 probably interact within the N-terminal helix of ribonuclease A, the existence of the Phe 8 ... His 12+ interaction in the isolated C-peptide helix adds to the evidence that the C-peptide helix is an autonomous folding unit.  相似文献   

5.
Tombusviruses, such as Carnation Italian ringspot virus (CIRV), encode a protein homodimer called p19 that is capable of suppressing RNA silencing in their infected hosts by binding to and sequestering short‐interfering RNA (siRNA) away from the RNA silencing pathway. P19 binding stability has been shown to be sensitive to changes in pH but the specific amino acid residues involved have remained unclear. Using constant pH molecular dynamics simulations, we have identified key pH‐dependent residues that affect CIRV p19–siRNA binding stability at various pH ranges based on calculated changes in the free energy contribution from each titratable residue. At high pH, the deprotonation of Lys60, Lys67, Lys71, and Cys134 has the largest effect on the binding stability. Similarly, deprotonation of several acidic residues (Asp9, Glu12, Asp20, Glu35, and/or Glu41) at low pH results in a decrease in binding stability. At neutral pH, residues Glu17 and His132 provide a small increase in the binding stability and we find that the optimal pH range for siRNA binding is between 7.0 and 10.0. Overall, our findings further inform recent experiments and are in excellent agreement with data on the pH‐dependent binding profile.  相似文献   

6.
Recent work has shown that a short α-helix can be stable in water near 1 °C when stabilized by specific interactions between side-chains, while earlier “host-guest” results with random copolymers have shown that a short α-helix is unstable in water at all temperatures in the absence of stabilizing side-chain interactions. As regards the mechanism of protein folding, it is now reasonable on energetic grounds to consider isolated α-helices and β-sheets as the first intermediates on the pathway of protein folding. Proton nuclear magnetic resonance is used here to detect isolated secondary structures in ribonuclease A denatured by guanidine · HCl (GuHCl). Temperatures near 1 °C are used because the low-temperature stability of the C-peptide helix may be a general property of isolated secondary structures in water.Our procedure is to titrate with GuHCl the C2H resonance lines of the four histidine residues of denatured ribonuclease A. Studies of model peptides (C-peptide (lactone) and C-peptide carboxylate, residues 1 to 13 of ribonuclease A; S-peptide, residues 1 to 20) show linear titration curves for the C2H resonance of His12 above 0.5 M-GuHCl, once helix unfolding is complete. Deviations from this line are used to monitor helix formation. The GuHCl titration curves of the other three histidine residues are also linear, once unfolding is complete. The results show that the helix found in C-peptide and S-peptide is also found in denatured ribonuclease A, where it behaves as an isolated helix not stabilized significantly by interactions with other chain segments. Studies of denatured S-protein show that the remaining three His residues, His48, His105 and His119, are involved in structure only below 1 m-GuHCl at 9 °C, pH 1.9. The nature of this structure is not known. The main conclusion from this work is that the His12 helix can be observed as a stable, isolated helix in denatured ribonuclease A near 1 °C, and that none of the other three His residues is involved in a comparably stable local structure. In native ribonuclease A, His12 is within an α-helix and the other three His residues are involved in a 3-stranded β-sheet structure.The helix-coil transition of C-peptide has also been studied for other side-chain resonances by GuHCl titration. Typically, but not always, the titration curves are linear after helix unfolding takes place and resonance lines from different residues of the same amino acid type can be resolved in GuHCl solutions. This is true of the four histidine residues of ribonuclease A although their pK values in 5 m-GuHCl are nearly the same. In C-peptide, the βCH3 resonance of Ala6 is affected strongly by GuHCl while the lines of Ala4 and Ala5 are shifted only weakly by GuHCl. Evidently the interactions between GuHCl and side-chains in an unfolded peptide depend upon neighboring groups.  相似文献   

7.
The 1H-n.m.r. spectra (360 MHz) of 12-(beta-(3-pyridyl)-L-Ala) ribonuclease S-peptide (1-14), a tetradecapeptide incorporating (beta-3-pyridyl-L-Ala) instead of His at position 12, have been assigned. The shift vs. temperature dependence has been analyzed at three different pD's in terms of a two-state helix (3-13) in equilibrium coil equilibrium, and the corresponding values for the thermodynamic quantities delta H degrees and delta S degrees determined. Helix populations at 0 degrees C have been measured as a function of pD, showing their dependence on two apparent pKa's at approximately 3.3 and 5.5, with a maximum at pD approximately 4.2. All the obtained results show that the new peptide has very similar folding properties to those shown by S-peptide and particularly to those of C-peptide. The 3-13 helix formed is stabilized by two interactions: a salt-bridge Glu 2-...Arg 10+ and a partial stacking between the aromatic rings of residues Phe 8 and His 12. Calculations involving ring current shifts and potential energies validate the possible existence of this latter interaction, which must present a local geometry defined by chi 81 180 degrees, chi 82 100 degrees, chi 121-60 and chi 122 80.  相似文献   

8.
We study the folding mechanism of an analog of the C-peptide of ribonuclease A in explicit water by a replica-exchange multicanonical molecular dynamics simulation based on all-atom models. The multicanonical weight factor was determined by the combined use of the multicanonical replica-exchange method and the replica-exchange multicanonical algorithm. Using statistically reliable data thus obtained, we have examined the free-energy landscape of the peptide system. The global-minimum free-energy state in the landscape at room temperature has an alpha-helix structure with a distortion near the N-terminus. The state also has a salt bridge between Glu(-)-2 and Arg(+)-10 and an aromatic-aromatic interaction between Phe-8 and His(+)-12, both of which have been observed in x-ray and other experimental measurements. Principal component analysis clearly shows the different roles of these side-chain interactions in the peptide folding. The side-chain interaction between Phe-8 and His(+)-12 greatly enhances the stability of helical structure toward the C-terminal end, whereas the salt bridge between Glu(-)-2 and Arg(+)-10 mainly works as a restraint to prevent the alpha-helix structure from extending to the N-terminus. The free-energy landscape of C-peptide reveals a funnel-like shape where all of these interactions consistently exist only in the global-minimum state. This is the major reason why the native structure of the short helical peptide shows significant stability at low temperatures.  相似文献   

9.
Conformational role of His-12 in C-peptide of ribonuclease A   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Possible interactions of the His-12 ring with other side chain and backbone groups of C-peptide lactone (CPL) are discussed. The works published so far are critically reviewed and compared with the latest results obtained by the authors. The main new conclusion is that in the helical conformation of CPL, the Phe-8 and His-12 rings are clustered together. Studies of Phe-8----Ala analogs of CPL and calculations of ring current effects satisfactorily explain the observed environmental shifts of Phe-8 and His-12 protons in NMR spectra of CPL. Interaction between both rings is favorable for alpha-helix formation, but cannot explain an increase in helix stability related with protonation of His-12. This effect arises from favorable interactions of the charged His+-12 ring with the helix backbone.  相似文献   

10.
The active site of ß‐galactosidase (E. coli) contains a Mg2+ ion ligated by Glu‐416, His‐418 and Glu‐461 plus three water molecules. A Na+ ion binds nearby. To better understand the role of the active site Mg2+ and its ligands, His‐418 was substituted with Asn, Glu and Phe. The Asn‐418 and Glu‐418 variants could be crystallized and the structures were shown to be very similar to native enzyme. The Glu‐418 variant showed increased mobility of some residues in the active site, which explains why the substitutions at the Mg2+ site also reduce Na+ binding affinity. The Phe variant had reduced stability, bound Mg2+ weakly and could not be crystallized. All three variants have low catalytic activity due to large decreases in the degalactosylation rate. Large decreases in substrate binding affinity were also observed but transition state analogs bound as well or better than to native. The results indicate that His‐418, together with the Mg2+, modulate the central role of Glu‐461 in binding and as a general acid/base catalyst in the overall catalytic mechanism. Glucose binding as an acceptor was also dramatically decreased, indicating that His‐418 is very important for the formation of allolactose (the natural inducer of the lac operon).  相似文献   

11.
Three amino acid residues in the active site of lipoamide dehydrogenase from Azotobacter vinelandii were replaced with other residues. His450, the active-site base, was replaced with Ser, Tyr or Phe. Pro451, from X-ray analysis found to be in cis conformation positioning the backbone carbonyl of His450 close to N3 of the flavin, was changed to Ala. Glu455, from X-ray analysis expected to be involved in modulating the pKa of the base (His450), was replaced with Asp and Gln. The general conclusion is that mutation of the His-Glu diad impairs intramolecular electron transfer between the disulfide/dithiol and the FADH-/FAD. The wild-type enzyme functions according to a ping-pong mechanism in the physiological reaction in which the formation of NADH is rate-limiting. Above pH 8.0 the enzyme is strongly inhibited by the product NADH. The pH dependence of the steady-state kinetics using the NAD+ analog 3-acetylpyridine adenine dinucleotide (AcPyAde+) reveals a pKa of 8.1 in the pKm AcPyAde+ plot indicating that this pKa is related to the deprotonation of His450 [Benen, J., Berkel van, W., Zak, Z., Visser, T., Veeger, C. & Kok de, A. (1991) Eur. J. Biochem. 202, 863-872] and to the inhibition by NADH. The mutations considerably affect turnover. Enzymes with the mutations Pro451----Ala, His450----Phe and His450----Tyr appear to be almost inactive in both directions. Enzyme His450----Ser is minimally active, V at the pH optimum being 0.5% of wild-type activity in the physiological reaction. Rapid reaction kinetics show that for the His450-mutated enzymes the reductive half reaction using reduced 6,8-thioctic acid amide [Lip(SH)2] is rate-limiting and extremely slow when compared using reduced 6,8-thioctic acid amide [Lip(SH)2] is rate-limiting and extremely slow when compared to the wild-type enzyme. For enzyme Pro451----Ala it is concluded that the loss of activity is due to over-reduction by Lip(SH)2 and NADH. The Glu455-mutated enzymes are catalytically competent but show strong inhibition by the product NADH (enzyme Glu455----Asp more than Glu455----Gln). The inhibition can largely be overcome by using AcPyAde+ instead of NAD+ in the physiological reaction. The rapid reaction kinetics obtained for enzymes Glu455----Asp and Glu455----Gln deviate from the wild-type enzyme. It is concluded that this difference is due to cooperativity between the active sites in this dimeric enzyme.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Esterase 6 fromDrosophila melanogaster is a carboxylesterase that belongs to the serine esterase multigene family. It has a basic histidine (His) at residue 187, adjacent to the reactive serine (Ser) at residue 188, whereas most other characterized members of the family have an acidic glutamate (Glu) in the equivalent position. We have used site-directedin vitro mutagenesis to replace the His codon of the esterase 6 gene with either Gln or Glu codons. The enzymes encoded by these active-site mutants and a wild-type control have been expressed, purified, and characterized. Substitution of Gln for His at position 187 has little effect on the biochemical properties of esterase 6, but the presence of Glu at this position is associated with three major differences. First, the pH optimum is increased from 7 to 9. Second, the mutant enzyme shows decreased activity for β-naphthyl esters andp-nitrophenyl acetate but has gained the ability to hydrolyze acetylthiocholine. Finally, the Gibb’s free energy of activation for the enzyme is increased. These results suggest that residue 187 interacts directly with the substrate alkyl group and that this interaction is fully realized in the transition state. We further propose that the presence of His rather than Glu at position 187 in esterase 6 contributes significantly to its functional divergence from the cholinesterases and that this divergence is due to different interactions between residue 187 and the substrate alkyl group.  相似文献   

13.
14.
The mutants at position 242 of manganese peroxidase (MnP), where the native Asp has been substituted with a Ser or a Glu, have been shown to be active, and are here characterized by electronic, EPR, and NMR spectroscopies. We have also mutated another residue on the proximal side, Phe 190 to Val and Leu, yielding active mutants. When studied by the above-mentioned spectroscopies, the mutants at both positions 242 and 190 exhibit three pH-dependent transitions. In contrast to the transitions observed at low and high pH, the spectroscopic studies reveal that the transition at intermediate pH has pK(a) values up to 2 units lower for the mutants at D242E and -S and F190V than for the wild type. This process is due to the ionization of a group that affects the transition to the bis-histidine coordination at the iron. The observed changes in the pK(a) values are related to the altered affinity of the calcium-binding site in the distal pocket. Other variations are observed in the other two pK(a) values. Characterization of the cyanide derivatives indicates that the location and orientation of the distal and proximal His residues are essentially identical to that in the wild type. Our results indicate that mutations on the proximal side residues can affect changes in the distal side. In particular, deprotonation of a group, whose pK(a) is influenced by the nature of the residues in the proximal side, produces a movement of helix B, which in turn induces the coordination of the distal His and the loss of the distal calcium ion.  相似文献   

15.
Galanin, a neuroendocrine peptide of 29 amino acids, binds to Gi/Go-coupled receptors to trigger cellular responses. To determine which amino acids of the recently cloned seven-transmembrane domain-type human galanin receptor are involved in the high-affinity binding of the endogenous peptide ligand, we performed a mutagenesis study. Mutation of the His264 or His267 of transmembrane domain VI to alanine, or of Phe282 of transmembrane domain VII to glycine, results in an apparent loss of galanin binding. The substitution of Glu271 to serine in the extracellular loop III of the receptor causes a 12-fold loss in affinity for galanin. We combined the mutagenesis results with data on the pharmacophores (Trp2, Tyr9) of galanin and with molecular modelling of the receptor using bacteriorhodopsin as a model. Based on these studies, we propose a binding site model for the endogenous peptide ligand in the galanin receptor where the N-terminus of galanin hydrogen bonds with Glu271 of the receptor, Trp2 of galanin interacts with the Zn2+ sensitive pair of His264 and His267 of transmembrane domain VI, and Tyr9 of galanin interacts with Phe282 of transmembrane domain VII, while the C-terminus of galanin is pointing towards the N-terminus of th  相似文献   

16.
C-peptide binding to human cell membranes: importance of Glu27   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
In addition to its established role in proinsulin folding, C-peptide has a function in regulation of cellular activity. The 31-residue peptide influences renal, vascular, and metabolic functions in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Binding to cells has been demonstrated for C-peptide, which can be displaced by its C-terminal pentapeptide. We have now used fluorescence correlation spectroscopy to investigate structural requirements on the pentapeptide part for C-peptide binding. All pentapeptide residues, E(27)GSLQ(31), were individually replaced with Ala and the capacity of the resulting peptides to displace rhodamine-labelled full-length human C-peptide from human renal tubular cell membranes was determined. This showed that Glu27 is essential for displacement, while replacement of Gly28 with Ala has little effect, and replacement of any of the three most C-terminal residues had intermediate effects. Morevover, free Glu displaces full-length C-peptide to about 50%, while free Ala, C-peptide(1-26), and the truncated pentapeptide, corresponding to the tetrapeptide G(28)SLG(31), have no displacing capacity. The peptides EVARQ (corresponding to the rat C-terminal pentapeptide) and ELGGGPGAG (corresponding to positions 11-19 of human C-peptide) do not displace human C-peptide. These results indicate that Glu27 of C-peptide is critically involved in binding to cellular targets.  相似文献   

17.
Rishavy MA  Berkner KL 《Biochemistry》2008,47(37):9836-9846
Vitamin K-dependent (VKD) proteins become activated by the VKD carboxylase, which converts Glu's to carboxylated Glu's (Gla's) in their Gla domains. The carboxylase uses vitamin K epoxidation to drive Glu carboxylation, and the two half-reactions are coupled in 1:1 stoichiometry by an unknown mechanism. We now report the first identification of a residue, His160, required for coupling. A H160A mutant showed wild-type levels of epoxidation but substantially less carboxylation. Monitoring proton abstraction using a peptide with Glu tritiated at the gamma-carbon position revealed that poor coupling was due to impaired carbanion formation. H160A showed a 10-fold lower ratio of tritium release to vitamin K epoxidation than wild-type enzyme (i.e., 0.12 versus 1.14, respectively), which could fully account for the fold decrease in coupling efficiency. The Ala substitution in His160 did not affect the K m for vitamin K and caused only a 2-fold increase in the K m for Glu and 2-fold decrease in the activation of vitamin K epoxidation by Glu. The H160A K m for CO 2 was 5-fold higher than the wild-type enzyme. However, the k cat for H160A carboxylation was 8-9-fold lower than the wild-type enzyme with all three substrates (i.e., Glu, CO 2, and vitamin K), suggesting a catalytic role for His160 in carbanion formation. We propose that His160 facilitates the formation of the transition state for carbanion formation. His160 is highly conserved in metazoan VKD carboxylases but not in some bacterial orthologues (acquired by horizontal gene transfer), which has implications for how bacteria have adapted the carboxylase for novel functions.  相似文献   

18.
Real-time measurements of the cytochrome c oxidase reaction with oxygen were performed by ATR-FTIR spectroscopy, using a mutant with a blocked D-pathway of proton transfer (D124N, Paracoccus denitrificans numbering). The complex spectrum of the ferryl-->oxidized transition together with other bands showed protonation of Glu 278 with a peak position at 1743 cm-1. Since our time resolution was not sufficient to follow the earlier reaction steps, the FTIR spectrum of the CO-inhibited fully reduced-->ferryl transition was obtained as a difference between the spectrum before the laser flash and the first spectrum after it. A trough at 1735 cm-1 due to deprotonation of Glu 278 was detected in this spectrum. These observations confirm the proposal [Smirnova I.A., et al. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 6826-6833] that the proton required for chemistry at the binuclear site is taken from Glu 278 in the perroxy-->ferryl step, and that the rate of the next step (ferryl-->oxidized) is limited by reprotonation of Glu 278 from the N-side of the membrane in the D124N mutant enzyme. The blockage of the D-pathway in this mutant for the first time allowed direct detection of deprotonation of Glu 278 and its reprotonation during oxidation of cytochrome oxidase by O2.  相似文献   

19.
Based on our first structural data of L-threonine dehydrogenase (TDH) of Pyrococcus horikoshii (PhTDH), we examined its catalytic mechanism. The structural analysis indicated that a catalytic zinc atom at the active centre of PhTDH is coordinated by four residues (Cys42, His67, Glu68 and Glu152) with low affinity. These residues are highly conserved in alcohol dehydrogenases (ADHs) and TDHs. Several PhTDH mutants were prepared with respect to Glu152 and other residues, relating to the proton relay system that is substantially a rate-limiting step in ADH. It was found that the E152D mutant showed 3-fold higher turnover rate and reduced affinities toward L-threonine and NAD(+), compared to wild-type PhTDH. The kinetic analysis of Glu152 mutants indicated that the carboxyl group of Glu152 is important for expressing the catalytic activity. The results obtained from pH dependency of kinetic parameters suggested that Glu152 to Asp substitution causes the enhancement of deprotonation of His47 or ionization of zinc-bound water and threonine in the enzyme-NAD(+) complex. Furthermore, it was predicted that the access of threonine substrate to the enzyme-NAD(+) complex induces a large conformational change in the active domain of PhTDH. From these results, we propose here that the proton relay system works as a catalytic mechanism of PhTDH.  相似文献   

20.
Prolyl 4-hydroxylase (EC 1.14.11.2), an alpha2beta2 tetramer, catalyzes the formation of 4-hydroxyproline in collagens. We converted 16 residues in the human alpha subunit individually to other amino acids, and expressed the mutant polypeptides together with the wild-type beta subunit in insect cells. Asp414Ala and Asp414Asn inactivated the enzyme completely, whereas Asp414Glu increased the K(m) for Fe2+ 15-fold and that for 2-oxoglutarate 5-fold. His412Glu, His483Glu and His483Arg inactivated the tetramer completely, as did Lys493Ala and Lys493His, whereas Lys493Arg increased the K(m) for 2-oxoglutarate 15-fold. His501Arg, His501Lys, His501Asn and His501Gln reduced the enzyme activity by 85-95%; all these mutations increased the K(m) for 2-oxoglutarate 2- to 3-fold and enhanced the rate of uncoupled decarboxylation of 2-oxoglutarate as a percentage of the rate of the complete reaction up to 12-fold. These and other data indicate that His412, Asp414 and His483 provide the three ligands required for the binding of Fe2+ to a catalytic site, while Lys493 provides the residue required for binding of the C-5 carboxyl group of 2-oxoglutarate. His501 is an additional critical residue at the catalytic site, probably being involved in both the binding of the C-1 carboxyl group of 2-oxoglutarate and the decarboxylation of this cosubstrate.  相似文献   

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