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1.
This study characterizes the substrate-binding sites of human salivary alpha-amylase (HSA) and its Y151M mutant. It describes the first subsite maps, namely, the number of subsites, the position of cleavage sites and apparent subsite energies. The product pattern and cleavage frequencies were determined by high-performance liquid chromatography, utilizing a homologous series of chromophore-substituted maltooligosaccharides of degree of polymerization 3-10 as model substrates. The binding region of HSA is composed of four glycone and three aglycone-binding sites, while that of Tyr151Met is composed of four glycone and two aglycone-binding sites. The subsite maps show that Y151M has strikingly decreased binding energy at subsite (+2), where the mutation has occurred (-2.6 kJ/mol), compared to the binding energy at subsite (+2) of HSA (-12.0 kJ/mol).  相似文献   

2.
A computer program has been evaluated for subsite map calculations of depolymerases. The program runs in windows and uses the experimentally determined bond cleavage frequencies (BCFs) for determination of the number of subsites, the position of the catalytic site and for calculation of subsite binding energies. The apparent free energy values were optimized by minimization of the differences of the measured and calculated BCF data. The program called suma (SUbsite Mapping of alpha-Amylases) is freely available for research and educational purposes via the Internet (E-mail: gyemant@tigris.klte.hu). The advantages of this program are demonstrated through alpha-amylases of different origin, e.g. porcine pancreatic alpha-amylase (PPA) studied in our laboratory, in addition to barley and rice alpha-amylases published in the literature. Results confirm the popular 'five subsite model' for PPA with three glycone and two aglycone binding sites. Calculations for barley alpha-amylase justify the '6 + 2 + (1) model' prediction. The binding area of barley alpha-amylase is composed of six glycone, two aglycone binding sites followed by a barrier subsite at the reducing end of the binding site. Calculations for rice alpha-amylase represent an entirely new map with a '(1) + 2 + 5 model', where '(1)' is a barrier subsite at the nonreducing end of the binding site and there are two glycone and five aglycone binding sites. The rice model may be reminiscent of the action of the bacterial maltogenic amylase, that is, suggesting an exo-mechanism for this enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
Synthetic deoxyfluoro derivatives of methyl - -glucopyranoside, as well as methyl -glycosides of isomalto-oligosaccharides, some having fluorine substituted for hydroxyl groups at selected positions, have been evaluated for their binding with a myeloma monoclonal IgA known to bind only to an oligosaccharide sequence at the nonreducing end of -(1→6)-linked -glucopyranans (dextrans). The results are compatible with the antibody's possessing one subsite of high affinity for its -glucosyl group, the remaining three subsites having low affinities for their respective -glucosyl residues. The high-affinity antibody-subsite occurs at the interior end of the sequence of four subsites, appears to be relatively accessible, and binds the (terminal) nonreducing -glucosyl group of the oligosaccharidic determinant using two, and possibly three, hydroxyl groups in hydrogen bonding.  相似文献   

4.
The actions of three isozymes of human pancreatic alpha-amylase (HPA) on phenyl alpha-maltopentaoside, phenyl alpha-maltotetraoside, and their derivatives which have an iodo, an amino, or a carboxyl group at their first or penultimate glucopyranosyl residue from the non-reducing-end were examined. The results revealed that there was no difference in the actions of the three isozymes on the modified substrates and suggested the presence of five subsites (S3, S2, S1, S1', and S2') and a hydrophobic amino acid residue at subsite S3 in the active site of HPA. As compared with the action of human salivary alpha-amylase (HSA) on the same substrates, HPA had a tendency to release more phenyl alpha-glucoside from every substrate; however, an iodo, an amino, and a carboxyl group of the substrates had the same effects on the binding modes of the substrates to the active site of HPA as seen in the case of the salivary enzyme. This result indicates that the three-dimensional structures of the active sites of both alpha-amylases are quite similar except for some minor changes at subsites S3 and S2'.  相似文献   

5.
Restructuring the network of xyloglucan (XG) and cellulose during plant cell wall morphogenesis involves the action of xyloglucan endo-transglycosylases (XETs). They cleave the XG chains and transfer the enzyme-bound XG fragment to another XG molecule, thus allowing transient loosening of the cell wall and also incorporation of nascent XG during expansion. The substrate specificity of a XET from Populus (PttXET16-34) has been analyzed by mapping the enzyme binding site with a library of xylogluco-oligosaccharides as donor substrates using a labeled heptasaccharide as acceptor. The extended binding cleft of the enzyme is composed of four negative and three positive subsites (with the catalytic residues between subsites -1 and +1). Donor binding is dominated by the higher affinity of the XXXG moiety (G=Glcbeta(1-->4) and X=Xylalpha(1-->6)Glcbeta(1-->4)) of the substrate for positive subsites, whereas negative subsites have a more relaxed specificity, able to bind (and transfer to the acceptor) a cello-oligosaccharyl moiety of hybrid substrates such as GGGGXXXG. Subsite mapping with k(cat)/K(m) values for the donor substrates showed that a GG-unit on negative and -XXG on positive subsites are the minimal requirements for activity. Subsites -2 and -3 (for backbone Glc residues) and +2' (for Xyl substitution at Glc in subsite +2) have the largest contribution to transition state stabilization. GalGXXXGXXXG (Gal=Galbeta(1-->4)) is the best donor substrate with a "blocked" nonreducing end that prevents polymerization reactions and yields a single transglycosylation product. Its kinetics have unambiguously established that the enzyme operates by a ping-pong mechanism with competitive inhibition by the acceptor.  相似文献   

6.
This study represents the first characterisation of the substrate-binding site of Bacillus licheniformis alpha-amylase (BLA). It describes the first subsite map, namely, number of subsites, apparent subsite energies and the dual product specificity of BLA. The product pattern and cleavage frequencies were determined by high-performance liquid chromatography, utilising a homologous series of chromophore-substituted maltooligosaccharides of degree of polymerisation 4-10 as model substrates. The binding region of BLA is composed of five glycone, three aglycone-binding sites and a 'barrier' subsite. Comparison of the binding energies of subsites, which were calculated with a computer program, shows that BLA has similarity to the closely related Bacillus amyloliquefaciens alpha-amylase.  相似文献   

7.
Rockey WM  Laederach A  Reilly PJ 《Proteins》2000,40(2):299-309
The Lamarckian genetic algorithm of AutoDock 3.0 was used to dock alpha-maltotriose, methyl alpha-panoside, methyl alpha-isopanoside, methyl alpha-isomaltotrioside, methyl alpha-(6(1)-alpha-glucopyranosyl)-maltoside, and alpha-maltopentaose into the closed and, except for alpha-maltopentaose, into the open conformation of the soybean beta-amylase active site. In the closed conformation, the hinged flap at the mouth of the active site closes over the substrate. The nonreducing end of alpha-maltotriose docks preferentially to subsites -2 or +1, the latter yielding nonproductive binding. Some ligands dock into less optimal conformations with the nonreducing end at subsite -1. The reducing-end glucosyl residue of nonproductively-bound alpha-maltotriose is close to residue Gln194, which likely contributes to binding to subsite +3. In the open conformation, the substrate hydrogen-bonds with several residues of the open flap. When the flap closes, the substrate productively docks if the nonreducing end is near subsites -2 or -1. Trisaccharides with alpha-(1-->6) bonds do not successfully dock except for methyl alpha-isopanoside, whose first and second glucosyl rings dock exceptionally well into subsites -2 and -1. The alpha-(1-->6) bond between the second and third glucosyl units causes the latter to be improperly positioned into subsite +1; the fact that isopanose is not a substrate of beta-amylase indicates that binding to this subsite is critical for hydrolysis.  相似文献   

8.
Modified α-d-(1 → 4)-glucans containing a small proportion of 14C-labeled 2-deoxy-d-glucose or 2-amino-2-deoxy-d-glucose were examined as substrates for porcine pancreatic α-amylase (PPA). Cyclomaltoheptaose containing single 2-deoxy-d-glucose residues, synthesized by incubation of 2-deoxyglucosylglycogen with cyclomaltodextrin glucanotransferase in the presence of Triton X-100, was hydrolyzed by PPA to produce 2-deoxy-d-glucose; two isomers of 2-deoxymaltose, and a mixture of modified maltotrioses. These results indicate that 2-deoxy-d-glucose may be productively bound at all five subsites of the PPA active site. Reaction kinetics and the distribution of products formed suggest, however, that productive binding of the modified residue does not occur readily at the point of catalytic attack (subsite 3) and that the preferred position of hydrolysis of modified substrates may be different from that of unmodified substrates. Results of PPA hydrolysis of glycogen containing [14C]-2-amino-2-deoxy-d-glucose showed that a modified trisaccharide and a modified disaccharide were the smallest substituted products formed. Analysis of these products indicated that they did not contain modified residues at their reducing ends. Formation of the observed 2-amino-2-deoxy-maltooligosaccharides is consistent with a scheme where productive binding of 2-amino-2-deoxy-d-glucose is allowed at subsites 1, 2, 4, and 5, but not at subsite 3, the subsite at which hydrolysis occurs.  相似文献   

9.
Isoforms AMY1, AMY2-1 and AMY2-2 of barley alpha-amylase were purified from malt. AMY2-1 and AMY2-2 are both susceptible to barley alpha-amylase/subtilisin inhibitor. The action of these isoforms is compared using substrates ranging from p-nitrophenylmaltoside through p-nitrophenylmaltoheptaoside. The kcat/Km values are calculated from the substrate consumption. The relative cleavage frequency of different substrate bonds is given by the product distribution. AMY2-1 is 3-8-fold more active than AMY1 toward p-nitrophenylmaltotrioside through p-nitrophenylmaltopentaoside. AMY2-2 is 10-50% more active than AMY2-1. The individual subsite affinities are obtained from these data. The resulting subsite maps of the isoforms are quite similar. They comprise four and six glucosyl-binding subsites towards the reducing and the non-reducing end, respectively. Towards the non-reducing end, the sixth and second subsites have a high affinity, the third has very low or even lack of affinity and the first (catalytic subsite) has a large negative affinity. The affinity declines from moderate to low for subsites 1 through 4 toward the reducing end. AMY1 has clearly a more negative affinity at the catalytic subsite, but larger affinities at both the fourth subsites, compared to AMY2. AMY2-1 has lower affinity than AMY2-2 at subsites adjacent to the catalytic site, and otherwise mostly higher affinities than AMY2-2. Theoretical kcat/Km values show excellent agreement with experimental values.  相似文献   

10.
A previously described endo-(1----4)-beta-D-xylanase produced by Aspergillus niger was allowed to react with linear unlabeled and labeled D-xylo-oligosaccharides ranging from D-xylotriose to D-xylo-octaose. No evidence of multiple attack or of condensation and trans-D-xylosylation reactions was found. Maximum rates and Michaelis constants were measured at 40 degrees and pH 4.85. The former increased with increasing chain-length from D-xylotriose through D-xylohexaose to approximately 70% of that on soluble larchwood D-xylan, and then decreased slightly for D-xyloheptaose and D-xylo-octaose. Michaelis constants decreased monotonically with increasing chain-length. Bond-cleavage frequencies were highest near the reducing end of short substrates, with the locus of highest frequencies moving towards the middle of larger substrates. These data indicated that the endo-D-xylanase has five main subsites, with the catalytic site located between the third and fourth subsites, counting from the nonreducing end of the bound substrate. The subsite to the nonreducing side of the catalytic site strongly repels its corresponding D-xylosyl residue, while the two subsites farther towards the nonreducing end of the substrate strongly attract their corresponding residues. The subsite to the reducing side of the catalytic site moderately attracts D-xylosyl residues, while the next one towards the reducing end has a high affinity for them. The residual error of the numerical estimation was allocated largely to the Michaelis constants of the different D-xylo-oligosaccharides, whose calculated values were appreciably smaller than measured values, especially for shorter substrates. This suggests that the subsite model cannot fully account for the experimental data. Estimated and measured values of maximum rates, bond-cleavage frequencies, and dissociation constant when the active site is fully occupied by substrate agreed more closely with each other.  相似文献   

11.
Subsite structure and ligand binding mechanism of glucoamylase   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
1. The basic concept and outline of the subsite theory were described, which correlates quantitatively the subsite structure (the arrangement of subsite affinities) to the action pattern of amylases in a unified manner. 2. The subsite structures of several amylases including glucoamylase were summarized. 3. In parallel with the theoretical prediction obtained therefrom, the binding subsites of glucose, gluconolactone and linear substrates to Rhizopus glucoamylase were investigated experimentally, by using steady-state inhibition kinetics, difference absorption spectrophotometry, and fluorometric titration. 4. From several lines of evidence, it was concluded that gluconolactone, a transition state analogue, is bound at Subsite 1 (nonreducing end side) where a tryptophan residue is located. 5. The stopped-flow kinetic studies have revealed that all the ligand bindings studied consist of two-step mechanism in which a bimolecular association between the enzyme and a ligand to form a loosely bound complex (EL) followed by the unimolecular isomerization process in which EL converts to the final firmly bound EL complex. For substrates the EL may be the productive complex and the fluorescence of the tryptophan located at Subsite 1 is quenched in their isomerization process, most probably a relocation of ligand to occupy this subsite.  相似文献   

12.
The role in activity of outer regions in the substrate binding cleft in alpha-amylases is illustrated by mutational analysis of Tyr(105) and Thr(212) localized at subsites -6 and +4 (substrate cleavage occurs between subsites -1 and +1) in barley alpha-amylase 1 (AMY1). Tyr(105) is conserved in plant alpha-amylases whereas Thr(212) varies in these and related enzymes. Compared with wild-type AMY1, the subsite -6 mutant Y105A has 140, 15, and <1% activity (k(cat)/K(m)) on starch, amylose DP17, and 2-chloro-4-nitrophenyl beta-d-maltoheptaoside, whereas T212Y at subsite +4 has 32, 370, and 90% activity, respectively. Thus engineering of aromatic stacking interactions at the ends of the 10-subsite long binding cleft affects activity very differently, dependent on the substrate. Y105A dominates in dual subsite -6/+4 [Y105A/T212(Y/W)]AMY1 mutants having almost retained and low activity on starch and oligosaccharides, respectively. Bond cleavage analysis of oligosaccharide degradation by wild-type and mutant AMY1 supports that Tyr(105) is critical for binding at subsite -6. Substrate binding is improved by T212(Y/W) introduced at subsite +4 and the [Y105A/T212(Y/W)]AMY1 double mutants synergistically enhanced productive binding of the substrate aglycone. The enzymatic properties of the series of AMY1 mutants suggest that longer substrates adopt several binding modes. This is in excellent agreement with computed distinct multiple docking solutions observed for maltododecaose at outer binding areas of AMY1 beyond subsites -3 and +3.  相似文献   

13.
To assess the subsites involved in substrate binding in Aspergillus niger endopolygalacturonase II, residues located in the potential substrate binding cleft stretching along the enzyme from the N to the C terminus were subjected to site-directed mutagenesis. Mutant enzymes were characterized with respect to their kinetic parameters using polygalacturonate as a substrate and with respect to their mode of action using oligogalacturonates of defined length (n = 3-6). In addition, the effect of the mutations on the hydrolysis of pectins with various degrees of esterification was studied. Based on the results obtained with enzymes N186E and D282K it was established that the substrate binds with the nonreducing end toward the N terminus of the enzyme. Asn(186) is located at subsite -4, and Asp(282) is located at subsite +2. The mutations D183N and M150Q, both located at subsite -2, affected catalysis, probably mediated via the sugar residue bound at subsite -1. Tyr(291), located at subsite +1 and strictly conserved among endopolygalacturonases appeared indispensable for effective catalysis. The mutations E252A and Q288E, both located at subsite +2, showed only slight effects on catalysis and mode of action. Tyr(326) is probably located at the imaginary subsite +3. The mutation Y326L affected the stability of the enzyme. For mutant E252A, an increased affinity for partially methylesterified substrates was recorded. Enzyme N186E displayed the opposite behavior; the specificity for completely demethylesterified regions of substrate, already high for the native enzyme, was increased. The origin of the effects of the mutations is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
The structure of the complex between a catalytically compromised family 10 xylanase and a xylopentaose substrate has been determined by X-ray crystallography and refined to 3.2 A resolution. The substrate binds at the C-terminal end of the eightfold betaalpha-barrel of Pseudomonas fluorescens subsp. cellulosa xylanase A and occupies substrate binding subsites -1 to +4. Crystal contacts are shown to prevent the expected mode of binding from subsite -2 to +3, because of steric hindrance to subsite -2. The loss of accessible surface at individual subsites on binding of xylopentaose parallels well previously reported experimental measurements of individual subsites binding energies, decreasing going from subsite +2 to +4. Nine conserved residues contribute to subsite -1, including three tryptophan residues forming an aromatic cage around the xylosyl residue at this subsite. One of these, Trp 313, is the single residue contributing most lost accessible surface to subsite -1, and goes from a highly mobile to a well-defined conformation on binding of the substrate. A comparison of xylanase A with C. fimi CEX around the +1 subsite suggests that a flatter and less polar surface is responsible for the better catalytic properties of CEX on aryl substrates. The view of catalysis that emerges from combining this with previously published work is the following: (1) xylan is recognized and bound by the xylanase as a left-handed threefold helix; (2) the xylosyl residue at subsite -1 is distorted and pulled down toward the catalytic residues, and the glycosidic bond is strained and broken to form the enzyme-substrate covalent intermediate; (3) the intermediate is attacked by an activated water molecule, following the classic retaining glycosyl hydrolase mechanism.  相似文献   

15.
To elucidate how temperature effects subsite mapping of a thermostable alpha-amylase from Bacillus licheniformis (BLA), a comparative study was performed by using 2-chloro-4-nitrophenyl (CNP) beta-maltooligosides with degree of polymerisation (DP) 4-10 as model substrates. Action patterns, cleavage frequencies and subsite binding energies were determined at 50 degrees C, 80 degrees C and 100 degrees C. Subsite map at 80 degrees C indicates more favourable bindings compared to the hydrolysis at 50 degrees C. Hydrolysis at 100 degrees C resulted in a clear shift in the product pattern and suggests significant differences in the active site architecture. Two preferred cleavage modes were seen for all substrates in which subsite (+2) and (+3) were dominant, but CNP-G1 was never formed. In the preferred binding mode of shorter oligomers, CNP-G2 serves as the leaving group (79%, 50%, 59% and 62% from CNP-G4, CNP-G5, CNP-G6 and CNP-G7, respectively), while CNP-G3 is the dominant hydrolysis product from CNP-G8, CNP-G9, and CNP-Gl0 (62%, 68% and 64%, respectively). The high binding energy value (-17.5 kJ/mol) found at subsite (+2) is consistent with the significant formation of CNP-G2. Subsite mapping at 80 degrees C and 100 degrees C confirms that there are no further binding sites despite the presence of longer products.  相似文献   

16.
A modified amylose containing 10% of tritiated D-allose residues has been hydrolyzed by porcine pancreatic alpha amylase (PPA). This reaction produced a number of radioactive oligosaccharides of low molecular weight, including modified mono-, di-, and tri-saccharides, as well as larger products. Analysis of these products by chemical and enzymic methods identified D-allose, two isomers of modified maltose, and isomers of modified maltotriose. These results may be interpreted in terms of current PPA models to indicate that D-allose residues may be productively bound at all five subsites of the active site of the enzyme. The distribution of modified residues in these products, however, further suggests that productive binding of D-allose at the subsite where catalytic attack occurs (subsite 3) is less favorable than binding of D-glucose. These results are compared with results of a series of PPA substrates having modifications at C-3 and at other positions. Trends observed in enzyme hydrolysis of these modified substrates reflect factors that contribute to PPA catalysis, with respect to steric, electronic, and hydrogen-bonding interactions between enzyme and substrate.  相似文献   

17.
A thorough investigation of the mode of action of Aspergillus niger (4M-147) pectin lyase A (PLA) on differently C(6)-substituted oligogalacturonides is described. PLA appeared to be very specific for fully methyl-esterified oligogalacturonides: removal of the methyl-ester or changing the type of ester (ethyl esterification) or transamidation resulted in (almost) complete loss of conversion. The PLA activity increased with increasing length of the substrate up to a degree of polymerization (DP) of 8 indicating the presence of at least eight subsites on the enzyme. Product analysis demonstrated the formation of several Delta 4,5 unsaturated products and their saturated counterparts. The Delta 4,5 unsaturated trimer was the main product up to DP 8. For DP 9 and 10 Delta 4,5 unsaturated tetramer was the major product. Based upon the bond cleavage frequencies, a provisional subsite map was calculated, which supports the presence of eight subsites. By limited alkaline de-esterification of fully methyl-esterified pentamer and hexamer two sets of partially methyl-esterified pentamers (x and y methyl groups) and hexamers (a and b methyl groups) were prepared. Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time of flight mass spectroscopy (MALDI-TOF MS) analysis demonstrated that the methyl-ester distribution was fully random. Using these partially methyl-esterified oligogalacturonides as substrates for PLA a 10-fold decrease in reaction rate was recorded compared with the fully methyl-esterified counterparts. Analysis of the methyl-ester distribution of the products showed that PLA tolerates carboxyl groups in the substrate binding cleft. At either subsite +2, +4, or -1 to -4 a free carboxyl group could be tolerated, whereas methyl-esters were obligatory at subsite +1 and +3. So PLA is capable to cleave the bond between a methyl-esterified and a non-esterified galacturonic acid residue, where the newly formed Delta 4,5 unsaturated non-reducing end residue always contains a methyl-ester.  相似文献   

18.
Reaction patterns for the hydrolysis of chromophoric glycosides from cello-oligosaccharides and lactose by the cellobiohydrolases (CBH I and CBH II) purified from Trichoderma reesei and Penicillium pinophilum were determined. They coincide with those found for the parent unsubstituted sugars. CBH I enzyme from both organisms attacks these substrates in a random manner. Turnover numbers are, however, low and do not increase appreciably as a function of the degree of polymerization of the substrates. The active-site topology of the CBH I from T. reesei was further probed by equilibrium binding experiments with cellobiose, cellotriose, lactose and some of their derivatives. These point to a single interaction site (ABC), spatially restricted as deduced from the apparent independency of the thermodynamic parameters. It appears that the putative subsite A can accommodate a galactopyranosyl or glucopyranosyl group, and subsite B a glucopyranosyl group, whereas in subsite C either a glucopyranosyl or a chromophoric group can be bound, scission occurring between subsites B and C. The apparent kinetic parameters (turnover numbers) for the hydrolysis of cello-oligosaccharides (and their derivatives) by the CBH II type enzyme increase as a function of chain length, indicative of an extended binding site (A-F). Its architecture allows for specific binding of beta-(1----4)-glucopyranosyl groups in subsites A, B and C. Binding of a chromophore in subsite C produces a non-hydrolysable complex. The thermodynamic interaction parameters of some ligands common to both type of enzyme were compared: these substantiate the conclusions reached above.  相似文献   

19.
Subsite affinity maps of long substrate binding clefts in barley alpha-amylases, obtained using a series of maltooligosaccharides of degree of polymerization of 3-12, revealed unfavorable binding energies at the internal subsites -3 and -5 and at subsites -8 and +3/+4 defining these subsites as binding barriers. Barley alpha-amylase 1 mutants Y105A and T212Y at subsite -6 and +4 resulted in release or anchoring of bound substrate, thus modifying the affinities of other high-affinity subsites (-2 and +2) and barriers. The double mutant Y105A-T212Y displayed a hybrid subsite affinity profile, converting barriers to binding areas. These findings highlight the dynamic binding energy distribution and the versatility of long maltooligosaccharide derivatives in mapping extended binding clefts in alpha-amylases.  相似文献   

20.
3'-Azido-3'-deoxythymidine (AZT) is the first clinically effective drug for the treatment of human immunodeficiency virus infection. The drug interaction with human serum albumin (HSA) has been an important component in understanding its mechanism of action, especially in drug distribution and in drug-drug interaction on HSA in the case of multi-drug therapy. We present here crystal structures of a ternary HSA-Myr-AZT complex and a quaternary HSA-Myr-AZT-SAL complex (Myr, myristate; SAL, salicylic acid). From this study, a new drug binding subsite on HSA Sudlow site 1 was identified. The presence of fatty acid is needed for the creation of this subsite due to fatty acid induced conformational changes of HSA. Thus, the Sudlow site 1 of HSA can be divided into three non-overlapped subsites: a SAL subsite, an indomethacin subsite and an AZT subsite. Binding of a drug to HSA often influences simultaneous binding of other drugs. From the HSA-Myr-AZT-SAL complex structure, we observed the coexistence of two drugs (AZT and SAL) in Sudlow site 1 and the competition between these two drugs in subdomain IB. These results provide new structural information on HSA-drug interaction and drug-drug interaction on HSA.  相似文献   

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