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1.
Catalase-peroxidases have a two-domain structure. The N-terminal domain contains the bifunctional active site, but the function of the C-terminal domain is unknown. We produced catalase-peroxidase containing only its N-terminal domain (KatG(Nterm)). Removal of the C-terminal domain did not result in unexpected changes in secondary structure as evaluated by CD, but KatG(Nterm) had neither catalase nor peroxidase activity. Partial recovery of both activities was achieved by incubating KatG(Nterm) with the separately expressed and isolated KatG C-terminal domain. Spectroscopic measurements revealed a shift in heme environment from a mixture of high-spin species (wtKatG) to exclusively hexacoordinate, low-spin (KatG(Nterm)). Moreover, a > 1000-fold lower kon for CN- binding was observed for KatG(Nterm). EPR spectra for KatG(Nterm) and the results of site-specific substitution of active site histidines suggested that the distal histidine was the sixth ligand. Thus, one important role for the C-terminal domain may be to support the architecture of the active site, preventing heme ligation by this catalytically essential residue.  相似文献   

2.
Catalase-peroxidase function is strictly dependent on a gene-duplicated C-terminal domain. This domain no longer has a functioning active site, but from 25 to 30 Å away it is essential for preventing the coordination of an active site base (His106) to the heme. The mechanisms by which this distant structure supports active site function have not yet been elucidated. Tyr111 is a strictly conserved member of an interdomain H-bonding network that supports the loop connecting the N-terminal B (bearing His106) and C helices. Spectroscopic evaluation of the Tyr111Ala variant of KatG showed a substantial increase in hexa-coordinate low-spin heme, giving it the appearance of a transition between the wild type (primarily high-spin) and the N-terminal domain alone (pure low-spin). Concomitant with the spectral changes was decreased activity compared to the wild type enzyme, suggesting that Tyr111 does have a role in preventing His106 coordination. Substitution of Tyr111 diminishes catalase activity more substantially than peroxidase activity. Such an effect cannot be explained by His106 coordination alone, suggesting that these interdomain interactions may help tune the catalase-peroxidase active site for bifunctionality.  相似文献   

3.
Catalase–peroxidases (KatGs) are ancestral bifunctional heme peroxidases found in archaeons, bacteria and lower eukaryotes. In contrast to homologous cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) and ascorbate peroxidase (APx) homodimeric KatGs have a two-domain monomeric structure with a catalytic N-terminal heme domain and a C-terminal domain of high sequence and structural similarity but without obvious function. Nevertheless, without its C-terminal counterpart the N-terminal domain exhibits neither catalase nor peroxidase activity. Except some hybrid-type proteins all other members of the peroxidase–catalase superfamily lack this C-terminal domain. In order to probe the role of the two-domain monomeric structure for conformational and thermal stability urea and temperature-dependent unfolding experiments were performed by using UV–Vis-, electronic circular dichroism- and fluorescence spectroscopy, as well as differential scanning calorimetry. Recombinant prokaryotic (cyanobacterial KatG from Synechocystis sp. PCC6803) and eukaryotic (fungal KatG from Magnaporthe grisea) were investigated. The obtained data demonstrate that the conformational and thermal stability of bifunctional KatGs is significantly lower compared to homologous monofunctional peroxidases. The N- and C-terminal domains do not unfold independently. Differences between the cyanobacterial and the fungal enzyme are relatively small. Data will be discussed with respect to known structure and function of KatG, CcP and APx.  相似文献   

4.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis catalase-peroxidase (Mtb KatG) is a bifunctional enzyme that possesses both catalase and peroxidase activities and is responsible for the activation of the antituberculosis drug isoniazid. Mtb KatG contains an unusual adduct in its distal heme-pocket that consists of the covalently linked Trp107, Tyr229, and Met255. The KatG(Y229F) mutant lacks this adduct and has decreased steady-state catalase activity and enhanced peroxidase activity. In order to test a potential structural role of the adduct that supports catalase activity, we have used resonance Raman spectroscopy to probe the local heme environment of KatG(Y229F). In comparison to wild-type KatG, resting KatG(Y229F) contains a significant amount of 6-coordinate, low-spin heme and a more planar heme. Resonance Raman spectroscopy of the ferrous-CO complex of KatG(Y229F) suggest a non-linear Fe-CO binding geometry that is less tilted than in wild-type KatG. These data provide evidence that the Met-Tyr-Trp adduct imparts structural stability to the active site of KatG that seems to be important for sustaining catalase activity.  相似文献   

5.
Catalase–peroxidases (KatGs) have two peroxidase-like domains. The N-terminal domain contains the heme-dependent, bifunctional active site. Though the C-terminal domain lacks the ability to bind heme or directly catalyze any reaction, it has been proposed to serve as a platform to direct the folding of the N-terminal domain. Toward such a purpose, its I′-helix is highly conserved and appears at the interface between the two domains. Single and multiple substitution variants targeting highly conserved residues of the I′-helix were generated for intact KatG as well as the stand-alone C-terminal domain (KatGC). Single variants of intact KatG produced only subtle variations in spectroscopic and catalytic properties of the enzyme. However, the double and quadruple variants showed substantial increases in hexa-coordinate low-spin heme and diminished enzyme activity, similar to that observed for the N-terminal domain on its own (KatGN). The analogous variants of KatGC showed a much more profound loss of function as evaluated by their ability to return KatGN to its active conformation. All of the single variants showed a substantial decrease in the rate and extent of KatGN reactivation, but with two substitutions, KatGC completely lost its capacity for the reactivation of KatGN. These results suggest that the I′-helix is central to direct structural adjustments in the adjacent N-terminal domain and supports the hypothesis that the C-terminal domain serves as a platform to direct N-terminal domain conformation and bifunctionality.  相似文献   

6.
Catalase-peroxidase is a member of the class I peroxidase superfamily. The enzyme exhibits both catalase and peroxidase activities to remove the harmful peroxide molecule from the living cell. The 2.0 A crystal structure of the catalase-peroxidase from Haloarcula marismortui (HmCP) reveals that the enzyme is a dimer of two identical subunits. Each subunit is composed of two structurally homologous domains with a topology similar to that of class I peroxidase. The active site of HmCP is in the N-terminal domain. Although the arrangement of the catalytic residues and the cofactor heme b in the active site is virtually identical to that of class I peroxidases, the heme moiety is buried inside the domain, similar to that in a typical catalase. In the vicinity of the active site, novel covalent bonds are formed among the side chains of three residues, including that of a tryptophan on the distal side of the heme. Together with the C-terminal domain, these covalent bonds fix two long loops on the surface of the enzyme that cover the substrate access channel to the active site. These features provide an explanation for the dual activities of this enzyme.  相似文献   

7.
The loop connecting the F and G helices of catalase-peroxidases contains a approximately 35 amino acid structure (the FG insertion) that is absent from monofunctional peroxidases. These two groups of enzymes share highly similar active sites, yet the monofunctional peroxidases lack appreciable catalase activity. Thus, the FG insertion may serve a role in catalase-peroxidase bifunctionality, despite its peripheral location relative to the active site. We produced a variant of Escherichia coli catalase-peroxidase (KatG) lacking its FG insertion (KatG(DeltaFG)). Absorption spectra indicated the heme environment of KatG(DeltaFG) was highly similar to wild-type KatG, but the variant retained only 0.2% catalase activity. In contrast, the deletion reduced peroxidase activity by only 50%. Kinetic parameters for the peroxidase and residual catalase activities of KatG(DeltaFG) as well as pH dependence studies suggested that the FG insertion supports hydrogen-bonded networks critical for reactions involving H2O2. The structure also appears to regulate access of electron donors to the active site.  相似文献   

8.
All phytopathogenic fungi have two catalase–peroxidase paralogues located either intracellularly (KatG1) or extracellularly (KatG2). Here, for the first time a secreted bifunctional, homodimeric catalase–peroxidase (KatG2 from the rice blast fungus Magnaporthe grisea) has been produced heterologously with almost 100% heme occupancy and comprehensively investigated by using a broad set of methods including UV–Vis, ECD and resonance Raman spectroscopy (RR), thin-layer spectroelectrochemistry, mass spectrometry, steady-state &; presteady-state spectroscopy. RR spectroscopy reveals that MagKatG2 shows a unique mixed-spin state, non-planar heme b, and a proximal histidine with pronounced imidazolate character. At pH 7.0 and 25 °C, the standard reduction potential E°′ of the Fe(III)/Fe(II) couple for the high-spin native protein was found to fall in the range typical for the KatG family. Binding of cyanide was relatively slow at pH 7.0 and 25 °C and with a Kd value significantly higher than for the intracellular counterpart. Demonstrated by mass spectrometry MagKatG2 has the typical Trp118-Tyr251-Met277 adduct that is essential for its predominantly catalase activity at the unique acidic pH optimum. In addition, MagKatG2 acts as a versatile peroxidase using both one- and two-electron donors. Based on these data, structure–function relationships of extracellular eukaryotic KatGs are discussed with respect to intracellular KatGs and possible role(s) in host–pathogen interaction.  相似文献   

9.
The ferrous form of native cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) is known to undergo a reversible transition when titrated over the pH range of 7.00-9.70. This transition produces a conversion from a pentacoordinate high-spin to a hexacoordinate low-spin heme active site and is clearly apparent in the heme optical absorption spectra. Here, we report the characterization of this transition and its effect upon the local heme environment using various optical spectroscopies. The formation of hexacoordinate low-spin heme is interpreted to involve the binding of His-52 at the distal site after the perturbation of the extensive H-bonded network within and around the heme pocket of CCP(II) at alkaline pH. Interestingly, CD investigations of CCP(II) in the far-UV and Soret regions indicate the dissappearance of a single high-spin species and the existence of at least two low-spin species of CCP(II) as the pH is raised above 7.90. Furthermore, transient resonance Raman experiments demonstrate that the hexacoordinate low-spin species can be photolyzed within 10-ns laser pulses, producing a species similar to the low-pH (high-spin) form of CCP(II) at alkaline pH. However, the extent of photolysis is quite pH dependent, with a maximum photodissociation yield at pH = 8.50.  相似文献   

10.
Catalase-peroxidases (KatGs) are prokaryotic heme peroxidases with homology to yeast cytochrome c peroxidase (CCP) and plant ascorbate peroxidases (APXs). KatGs, CCP and APXs contain identical amino acid triads in the heme pocket (distal Arg/Trp/His and proximal His/Trp/Asp), but differ dramatically in their reactivities towards hydrogen peroxide and various one-electron donors. Only KatGs have high catalase activity in addition to a peroxidase activity of broad specificity. Here, we investigated the effect of mutating the conserved proximal triad on KatG catalysis. With the exception of W341F, all variants (H290Q, W341A, D402N, D402E) exhibited a catalase activity <1% of wild-type KatG and spectral properties indicating alterations in heme coordination and spin states. Generally, the peroxidase activity was much less effected by these mutations. Compared with wild-type KatG the W341F variant had a catalase and halogenation activity of about 40% and an even increased overall peroxidase activity. This variant, for the first time, allowed to monitor the hydrogen peroxide mediated transitions of ferric KatG to compound I and back to the resting enzyme. Compound I reduction by aromatic one-electron donors (o-dianisidine, pyrogallol, aniline) was not influenced by exchanging Trp by Phe. The findings are discussed in comparison with the data known from CCP and APX and a reaction mechanism for the multifunctional activity of the W341F variant is suggested.  相似文献   

11.
Lou BS  Snyder JK  Marshall P  Wang JS  Wu G  Kulmacz RJ  Tsai AL  Wang J 《Biochemistry》2000,39(40):12424-12434
Prostaglandin H synthase isoforms 1 and 2 (PGHS-1 and -2) catalyze the first two steps in the biosynthesis of prostaglandins. Resonance Raman spectroscopy was used to characterize the PGHS heme active site and its immediate environment. Ferric PGHS-1 has a predominant six-coordinate high-spin heme at room temperature, with water as the sixth ligand. The proximal histidine ligand (or the distal water ligand) of this hexacoordinate high-spin heme species was reversibly photolabile, leading to a pentacoordinate high-spin ferric heme iron. Ferrous PGHS-1 has a single species of five-coordinate high-spin heme, as evident from nu(2) at 1558 cm(-1) and nu(3) at 1471 cm(-1). nu(4) at 1359 cm(-1) indicates that histidine is the proximal ligand. A weak band at 226-228 cm(-1) was tentatively assigned as the Fe-His stretching vibration. Cyanoferric PGHS-1 exhibited a nu(Fe)(-)(CN) line at 446 cm(-1) and delta(Fe)(-)(C)(-)(N) at 410 cm(-1), indicating a "linear" Fe-C-N binding conformation with the proximal histidine. This linkage agrees well with the open distal heme pocket in PGHS-1. The ferrous PGHS-1 CO complex exhibited three important marker lines: nu(Fe)(-)(CO) (531 cm(-1)), delta(Fe)(-)(C)(-)(O) (567 cm(-1)), and nu(C)(-)(O) (1954 cm(-1)). No hydrogen bonding was detected for the heme-bound CO in PGHS-1. These frequencies markedly deviated from the nu(Fe)(-)(CO)/nu(C)(-)(O) correlation curve for heme proteins and porphyrins with a proximal histidine or imidazolate, suggesting an extremely weak bond between the heme iron and the proximal histidine in PGHS-1. At alkaline pH, PGHS-1 is converted to a second CO binding conformation (nu(Fe)(-)(CO): 496 cm(-1)) where disruption of the hydrogen bonding interactions to the proximal histidine may occur.  相似文献   

12.
KatG, the catalase-peroxidase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis, has been characterized by resonance Raman, electron spin resonance, and visible spectroscopies. The mutant KatG(S315T), which is found in about 50% of isoniazid-resistant clinical isolates, is also spectroscopically characterized. The electron spin resonance spectrum of ferrous nitrosyl KatG is consistent with a proximal histidine ligand. The Fe-His stretching vibration observed at 244 cm(-1) for ferrous wild-type KatG and KatG(S315T) confirms the imidazolate character of the proximal histidine in their five-coordinate high-spin complexes. The ferrous forms of wild-type KatG and KatG(S315T) are mixtures of six-coordinate low-spin and five-coordinate high-spin hemes. The optical and resonance Raman signatures of ferric wild-type KatG indicate that a majority of the heme exists in a five-coordinate high-spin state, but six-coordinate hemes are also present. At room temperature, more six-coordinate low-spin heme is observed in ferrous and ferric KatG(S315T) than in the WT enzyme. While the nature of the sixth ligand of LS ferric wild-type KatG is not completely clear, visible, resonance Raman, and electron spin resonance data of KatG(S315T) indicate that its sixth ligand is a neutral nitrogen donor. Possible effects of these differences on enzyme activity are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The heme-regulated phosphodiesterase (PDE) from Escherichia coli (Ec DOS) is a tetrameric protein composed of an N-terminal sensor domain (amino acids 1-201) containing two PAS domains (PAS-A, amino acids 21-84, and PAS-B, amino acids 144-201) and a C-terminal catalytic domain (amino acids 336-799). Heme is bound to the PAS-A domain, and the redox state of the heme iron regulates PDE activity. In our experiments, a H77A mutation and deletion of the PAS-B domain resulted in the loss of heme binding affinity to PAS-A. However, both mutant proteins were still tetrameric and more active than the full-length wild-type enzyme (140% activity compared with full-length wild type), suggesting that heme binding is not essential for catalysis. An N-terminal truncated mutant (DeltaN147, amino acids 148-807) containing no PAS-A domain or heme displayed 160% activity compared with full-length wild-type protein, confirming that the heme-bound PAS-A domain is not required for catalytic activity. An analysis of C-terminal truncated mutants led to mapping of the regions responsible for tetramer formation and revealed PDE activity in tetrameric proteins only. Mutations at a putative metal-ion binding site (His-590, His-594) totally abolished PDE activity, suggesting that binding of Mg2+ to the site is essential for catalysis. Interestingly, the addition of the isolated PAS-A domain in the Fe2+ form to the full-length wild-type protein markedly enhanced PDE activity (>5-fold). This activation is probably because of structural changes in the catalytic site as a result of interactions between the isolated PAS-A domain and that of the holoenzyme.  相似文献   

14.
Catalase-peroxidases (KatG), which belong to Class I heme peroxidase enzymes, have high catalase activity and substantial peroxidase activity. The Y229F mutant of Mycobacterium tuberculosis KatG was prepared and characterized to investigate the functional role of this conserved residue unique to KatG enzymes. Purified, overexpressed KatG[Y229F] exhibited severely reduced steady-state catalase activity while the peroxidase activity was enhanced. Optical stopped-flow experiments showed rapid formation of Compound (Cmpd) II (oxyferryl heme intermediate) in the reaction of resting KatG[Y229F] with peroxyacetic acid or chloroperoxybenzoic acid, without detectable accumulation of Cmpd I (oxyferryl heme pi-cation radical intermediate), the latter being readily observed in the wild-type enzyme under similar conditions. Facile formation of Cmpd III (oxyferrous enzyme) also occurred in the mutant in the presence of micromolar hydrogen peroxide. Thus, the lost catalase function may be explained in part because of formation of intermediates that do not participate in catalatic turnover. The source of the reducing equivalent required for generation of Cmpd II from Cmpd I was shown by rapid freeze-quench electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy to be a tyrosine residue, just as in wild-type KatG. The kinetic coupling of radical generation and Cmpd II formation was shown in KatG[Y229F]. Residue Y229, which is a component of a newly defined three amino acid adduct in catalase-peroxidases, is critically important for protecting the catalase activity of KatG.  相似文献   

15.
X Lu  H F Gilbert  J W Harper 《Biochemistry》1992,31(17):4205-4210
Protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) catalyzes the oxidative folding of proteins containing disulfide bonds by increasing the rate of disulfide bond rearrangements which normally occur during the folding process. The amino acid sequences of the N- and C-terminal redox active sites (PWCGHCK) in PDI are completely conserved from yeast to man and display considerable identity with the redox-active center of thioredoxin (EWCGPCK). Available data indicate that the two thiol/disulfide centers of PDI can function independently in the isomerase reaction and that the cysteine residues in each active site are essential for catalysis. To evaluate the role of residues flanking the active-site cysteines of PDI in function, a variety of mutations were introduced into the N-terminal active site of PDI within the context of both a functional C-terminal active site and an inactive C-terminal active site in which serine residues replaced C379 and C382. Replacement of non-cysteine residues (W34 to Ser, G36 to Ala, and K39 to Arg) resulted in only a modest reduction in catalytic activity in both the oxidative refolding of RNase A and the reduction of insulin (10-27%), independent of the status of the C-terminal active site. A somewhat larger effect was observed with the H37P mutation where approximately 80% of the activity attributable to the N-terminal domain (approximately 40%) was lost. However, the H37P mutant N-terminal site expressed within the context of an inactive C-terminal domain exhibits 30% activity, approximately 70% of the activity of the N-terminal site alone.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Isomaltulose synthase from Klebsiella sp. LX3 (PalI, EC 5.4.99.11) catalyzes the isomerization of sucrose to produce isomaltulose (alpha-D-glucosylpyranosyl-1,6-D-fructofuranose) and trehalulose (alpha-D-glucosylpyranosyl-1,1-d-fructofuranose). The PalI structure, solved at 2.2-A resolution with an R-factor of 19.4% and Rfree of 24.2%, consists of three domains: an N-terminal catalytic (beta/alpha)8 domain, a subdomain between N beta 3 and N alpha 3, and a C-terminal domain having seven beta-strands. The active site architecture of PalI is identical to that of other glycoside hydrolase family 13 members, suggesting a similar mechanism in substrate binding and hydrolysis. However, a unique RLDRD motif in the proximity of the active site has been identified and shown biochemically to be responsible for sucrose isomerization. A two-step reaction mechanism for hydrolysis and isomerization, which occurs in the same pocket is proposed based on both the structural and biochemical data. Selected C-terminal truncations have been shown to reduce and even abolish the enzyme activity, consistent with the predicted role of the C-terminal residues in the maintenance of enzyme conformation and active site topology.  相似文献   

17.
The pentaheme cytochrome c nitrite reductase (NrfA) of Escherichia coli is responsible for nitrite reduction during anaerobic respiration when nitrate is scarce. The NrfA active site consists of a hexacoordinate high-spin heme with a lysine ligand on the proximal side and water/hydroxide or substrate on the distal side. There are four further highly conserved active site residues including a glutamine (Q263) positioned 8 A from the heme iron for which the side chain, unusually, coordinates a conserved, essential calcium ion. Mutation of this glutamine to the more usual calcium ligand, glutamate, results in an increase in the K m for nitrite by around 10-fold, while V max is unaltered. Protein film voltammetry showed that lower potentials were required to detect activity from NrfA Q263E when compared with native enzyme, consistent with the introduction of a negative charge into the vicinity of the active site heme. EPR and MCD spectroscopic studies revealed the high spin state of the active site to be preserved, indicating that a water/hydroxide molecule is still coordinated to the heme in the resting state of the enzyme. Comparison of the X-ray crystal structures of the as-prepared, oxidized native and mutant enzymes showed an increased bond distance between the active site heme Fe(III) iron and the distal ligand in the latter as well as changes to the structure and mobility of the active site water molecule network. These results suggest that an important function of the unusual Q263-calcium ion pair is to increase substrate affinity through its role in supporting a network of hydrogen bonded water molecules stabilizing the active site heme distal ligand.  相似文献   

18.
Heme-regulated eIF2alpha kinase [heme-regulated inhibitor (HRI)] plays a critical role in the regulation of protein synthesis by heme iron. The kinase active site is located in the C-terminal domain, whereas the N-terminal domain is suggested to regulate catalysis in response to heme binding. Here, we found that the rate of dissociation for Fe(III)-protoporphyrin IX was much higher for full-length HRI (1.5 x 10(-)(3) s(-)(1)) than for myoglobin (8.4 x 10(-)(7) s(-)(1)) or the alpha-subunit of hemoglobin (7.1 x 10(-)(6) s(-)(1)), demonstrating the heme-sensing character of HRI. Because the role of the N-terminal domain in the structure and catalysis of HRI has not been clear, we generated N-terminal truncated mutants of HRI and examined their oligomeric state, heme binding, axial ligands, substrate interactions, and inhibition by heme derivatives. Multiangle light scattering indicated that the full-length enzyme is a hexamer, whereas truncated mutants (truncations of residues 1-127 and 1-145) are mainly trimers. In addition, we found that one molecule of heme is bound to the full-length and truncated mutant proteins. Optical absorption and electron spin resonance spectra suggested that Cys and water/OH(-) are the heme axial ligands in the N-terminal domain-truncated mutant complex. We also found that HRI has a moderate affinity for heme, allowing it to sense the heme concentration in the cell. Study of the kinetics showed that the HRI kinase reaction follows classical Michaelis-Menten kinetics with respect to ATP but sigmoidal kinetics and positive cooperativity between subunits with respect to the protein substrate (eIF2alpha). Removal of the N-terminal domain decreased this cooperativity between subunits and affected the other kinetic parameters including inhibition by Fe(III)-protoporphyrin IX, Fe(II)-protoporphyrin IX, and protoporphyrin IX. Finally, we found that HRI is inhibited by bilirubin at physiological/pathological levels (IC(50) = 20 microM). The roles of the N-terminal domain and the binding of heme in the structural and functional properties of HRI are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Both the propeptide in the precursor carboxypeptidase Y (proCPY) and the mature CPY (mCPY)-specific endogenous inhibitor (I(C)) inhibit CPY activity. The N-terminal inhibitory reactive site of I(C) (the N-terminal seven amino acids of I(C)) binds to the substrate-binding site of mCPY and is essential for mCPY inhibition, but the mechanism of mCPY inhibition by the propeptide is poorly understood. In this study, sequence alignment between I(C) and proCPY indicated that a sequence similar to the N-terminal region of I(C) was present in proCPY. In particular, a region including the C-terminus of the propeptide was similar to the N-terminal seven amino acids of I(C). In the presence of peptides identical to the N-terminus of I(C) and the C-terminus of the propeptide, CPY activity was competitively inhibited. The C-terminal region of the propeptide might bind to the substrate-binding site of mCPY.  相似文献   

20.
Thermotoga maritima β-glucosidase consists of three structural regions with 721 amino acids: the N-terminal domain, middle non-homologous region and a C-terminal domain. To investigate the role of these domains in the co-refolding of two fragments into catalytically active form, five sites coding the amino acid residue at 244, 331 in the N-terminal domain, 403 in the non-homologous region, 476 and 521 in the C-terminal domain were selected to split the gene. All the 10 resultant individual fragments were obtained as insoluble inclusion bodies and found to be catalytically inactive. However, the catalytic activity was recovered when the two fragments derived from N-terminal and C-terminal peptides were co-refolded together. It is quite interesting to find that not only the complement polypeptides such as N476/477C but also the truncated combination (N476/522C, amino acid residues from 477 to 521 is truncated) and overlapped combination (N476/245C and N476/404C, amino acid residues from 245 to 476 and from 404 to 476 are overlapped) also gave catalytically active enzymes. Our results showed that folding motifs consisted of the complete N-terminal domain play an important role in the co-refolding of the polypeptides into the catalytically active form.  相似文献   

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