首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 364 毫秒
1.
Enzymatic degradation processes of microbial copolyesters, poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-3-hydroxyvalerate): P(3HB-co-3HV) and poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-4-hydroxybutyrate): P(3HB-co-4HB), were studied by the weight loss (erosion) of copolyester films. These studies employed three extracellular depolymerases which degrade poly(3-hydroxybutyrate): P(3HB). Two enzymes were purified from the culture supernatant of Pseudomonas lemoignei and one from Alcaligenes faecalis T1. The rate of enzymatic degradation of microbial copolyester films with various compositions showed an almost similar tendency to three different P(3HB) depolymerases, and decreased in the following order: P(3HB-co-4HB) greater than P(3HB) greater than P(3HB-co-3HV). An inhibitory protein of P(3HB) depolymerases in the succinate culture medium of P. lemoignei was isolated and characterized. The molecular weight of P(3HB) depolymerase inhibitor was 35,000 as determined by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulphate. This inhibitor of a single polypeptide chain may reversibly bind the serine residues at the active site of P(3HB) depolymerase. This inhibitory protein was not induced in the culture medium when P. lemoignei was grown on P(3HB) as the sole carbon source.  相似文献   

2.
A haloalkane dehalogenase (DppA) from Plesiocystis pacifica SIR-1 was identified by sequence comparison in the NCBI database, cloned, functionally expressed in Escherichia coli, purified, and biochemically characterized. The three-dimensional (3D) structure was determined by X-ray crystallography and has been refined at 1.95 Å resolution to an R-factor of 21.93%. The enzyme is composed of an α/β-hydrolase fold and a cap domain and the overall fold is similar to other known haloalkane dehalogenases. Active site residues were identified as Asp123, His278, and Asp249 and Trp124 and Trp163 as halide-stabilizing residues. DppA, like DhlA from Xanthobacter autotrophicus GJ10, is a member of the haloalkane dehalogenase subfamily HLD-I. As a consequence, these enzymes have in common the relative position of their catalytic residues within the structure and also show some similarities in the substrate specificity. The enzyme shows high preference for 1-bromobutane and does not accept chlorinated alkanes, halo acids, or halo alcohols. It is a monomeric protein with a molecular mass of 32.6 kDa and exhibits maximum activity between 33 and 37°C with a pH optimum between pH 8 and 9. The Km and kcat values for 1-bromobutane were 24.0 mM and 8.08 s?1. Furthermore, from the 3D-structure of DppA, it was found that the enzyme possesses a large and open active site pocket. Docking experiments were performed to explain the experimentally determined substrate preferences.  相似文献   

3.
Z I Randhawa  S Smith 《Biochemistry》1987,26(5):1365-1373
The complete amino acid sequence of the medium-chain S-acyl fatty acid synthetase thio ester hydrolase (thioesterase II) from rat mammary gland is presented. Most of the sequence was derived by analysis of peptide fragments produced by cleavage at methionyl, glutamyl, lysyl, arginyl, and tryptophanyl residues. A small section of the sequence was deduced from a previously analyzed cDNA clone. The protein consists of 260 residues and has a blocked amino-terminal methionine and calculated Mr of 29,212. The carboxy-terminal sequence, verified by Edman degradation of the carboxy-terminal cyanogen bromide fragment and carboxypeptidase Y digestion of the intact thioesterase II, terminates with a serine residue and lacks three additional residues predicted by the cDNA sequence. The native enzyme contains three cysteine residues but no disulfide bridges. The active site serine residue is located at position 101. The rat mammary gland thioesterase II exhibits approximately 40% homology with a thioesterase from mallard uropygial gland, the sequence of which was recently determined by cDNA analysis [Poulose, A.J., Rogers, L., Cheesbrough, T. M., & Kolattukudy, P. E. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 15953-15958]. Thus the two enzymes may share similar structural features and a common evolutionary origin. The location of the active site in these thioesterases differs from that of other serine active site esterases; indeed, the enzymes do not exhibit any significant homology with other serine esterases, suggesting that they may constitute a separate new family of serine active site enzymes.  相似文献   

4.
A novel type of hydrolase was purified from culture fluid of Paucimonas (formerly Pseudomonas) lemoignei. Biochemical characterization revealed an unusual substrate specificity of the purified enzyme for amorphous poly((R)-3-hydroxyalkanoates) (PHA) such as native granules of natural poly((R)-3-hydroxybutyrate) (PHB) or poly((R)-3-hydroxyvalerate) (PHV), artificial cholate-coated granules of natural PHB or PHV, atactic poly((R,S)-3-hydroxybutyrate), and oligomers of (R)-3-hydroxybutyrate (3HB) with six or more 3HB units. The enzyme has the unique property to recognize the physical state of the polymeric substrate by discrimination between amorphous PHA (good substrate) and denatured, partially crystalline PHA (no substrate). The pentamers of 3HB or 3HV were identified as the main products of enzymatic hydrolysis of native PHB or PHV, respectively. No activity was found with any denatured PHA, oligomers of (R)-3HB with five or less 3HB units, poly(6-hydroxyhexanoate), substrates of lipases such as tributyrin or triolein, substrates for amidases/nitrilases, DNA, RNA, casein, N-alpha-benzoyl-l-arginine-4-nitranilide, or starch. The purified enzyme (M(r) 36,209) was remarkably stable and active at high temperature (60 degrees C), high pH (up to 12.0), low ionic strength (distilled water), and in solvents (e.g. n-propyl alcohol). The depolymerase contained no essential SH groups or essential disulfide bridges and was insensitive to high concentrations of ionic (SDS) and nonionic (Triton and Tween) detergents. Characterization of the cloned structural gene (phaZ7) and the DNA-deduced amino acid sequence revealed no homologies to any PHB depolymerase or any other sequence of data banks except for a short sequence related to the active site serine of serine hydrolases. A classification of the enzyme into a new family (family 9) of carboxyesterases (Arpigny, J. L., and Jaeger, K.-E. (1999) Biochem. J. 343, 177-183) is suggested.  相似文献   

5.
Lipases, which are conserved from bacteria to mammals, catalyze the hydrolysis of acylglycerol to free fatty acids and glycerol. Monoacylglycerol lipase (MGL) specifically catalyzes the hydrolysis of monoacylglycerol. Although there have been numerous studies of the structure of lipases, there have been few studies of MGL. Here, we report the crystal structure of authentic MGL isolated from Bacillus sp. H257 (bMGL). The crystal diffracts to 1.96 Å resolution. It belongs to space group P21212, and the unit cell parameters are a = 99.7 Å, b = 106.1 Å and c = 43.0 Å. As in other lipases, three structural features for lipase activity are conserved in bMGL: the glycine-X-serine-X-glycine motif, catalytic triad and cap region. The structure of bMGL appears to be closed, as the cap region covers the active site entrance. The isolated bMGL hydrolyzed 2-AG, a known human MGL-specific substrate. Based on a 2-AG bound model, we discuss the substrate selectivity. The functional and structural features of bMGL provide insight how its substrate selectivity is determined and how specific inhibitors of bacterial MGL could be designed, which may be useful for development of novel antibiotics.  相似文献   

6.
The α-lytic protease was isolated from an extracellular filtrate of the soil microorganism Myxobacter 495. Trigonal crystals (space group, P3221) of this serine enzyme were grown from 1·3 m-Li2SO4 at pH 7·2. X-ray reflections from crystals of the native enzyme, comprising the 2·8 Å limiting sphere, were phased by the multiple isomorphous replacement technique. Five heavy-atom derivatives were used and the overall mean figure of merit 〈m?〉 is 0·83. The resulting native electron density map of α-lytic protease has been interpreted in conjunction with the published sequence (Olson et al., 1970) of 198 amino-acid residues.α-Lytic protease has a structural core similar to that of the pancreatic serine proteases (108 α-carbon atom positions are topologically equivalent (within 2·0 Å) to residues of porcine elastase) and its tertiary structure is even more closely related to the two other bacterial serine protease structures previously determined (James et al., 1978; Brayer et al., 1978b; Delbaere et al., 1979a). α-Lytic protease has the following distinctive features in common with the bacterial serine enzymes, Streptomyces griseus proteases A and B: an amino terminus that is exposed to solvent on the enzyme surface, a considerably shortened uranyl loop (residues 65 to 84), a major segment of polypeptide chain from the autolysis loop deleted (residues 144 to 155), a buried guanidinium group of Arg138 in an ion-pair bond with Asp194, and an altered conformation of the methionine loop (residues 168 to 182) relative to the pancreatic enzymes.At the present resolution, the members of the catalytic quartet (Ser214, Asp102, His57 and Ser195) adopt the conformation found in all members of the Gly-Asp-Ser-Gly-Gly serine protease family. The carboxylate of Asp102 is in a highly polar environment, as it is the recipient of four hydrogen bonds. The interaction between the Nε2 atom of the imidazole ring in His57 and Oγ atom of Ser195 is very weak (3·3 Å) and supports the concept that there is little, if any, enhanced nucleophilicity of the side-chain of Ser195 in the native enzyme.The molecular basis for the observed substrate specificity of α-lytic protease is clear from the distribution of amino acid side-chains in the neighborhood of the active site. An insertion of five residues at position 217, and the conformation of the side-chain of Met192 account for the fact that the specificity pocket can bind only small residues, such as Ala, Ser or Val.  相似文献   

7.
Phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) is a non-heme iron enzyme that catalyzes oxidation of phenylalanine to tyrosine, a reaction that must be kept under tight regulatory control. Mammalian PAH has a regulatory domain in which binding of the substrate leads to allosteric activation of the enzyme. However, the existence of PAH regulation in evolutionarily distant organisms, for example some bacteria in which it occurs, has so far been underappreciated. In an attempt to crystallographically characterize substrate binding by PAH from Chromobacterium violaceum, a single-domain monomeric enzyme, electron density for phenylalanine was observed at a distal site 15.7 Å from the active site. Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) experiments revealed a dissociation constant of 24 ± 1.1 μM for phenylalanine. Under the same conditions, ITC revealed no detectable binding for alanine, tyrosine, or isoleucine, indicating the distal site may be selective for phenylalanine. Point mutations of amino acid residues in the distal site that contact phenylalanine (F258A, Y155A, T254A) led to impaired binding, consistent with the presence of distal site binding in solution. Although kinetic analysis revealed that the distal site mutants suffer discernible loss of their catalytic activity, X-ray crystallographic analysis of Y155A and F258A, the two mutants with the most noticeable decrease in activity, revealed no discernible change in the structure of their active sites, suggesting that the effect of distal binding may result from protein dynamics in solution.  相似文献   

8.
Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) is one of the most-consumed synthetic polymers, with an annual production of 50 million tons. Unfortunately, PET accumulates as waste and is highly resistant to biodegradation. Recently, fungal and bacterial thermophilic hydrolases were found to catalyze PET hydrolysis with optimal activities at high temperatures. Strikingly, an enzyme from Ideonella sakaiensis, termed PETase, was described to efficiently degrade PET at room temperature, but the molecular basis of its activity is not currently understood. Here, a crystal structure of PETase was determined at 2.02 Å resolution and employed in molecular dynamics simulations showing that the active site of PETase has higher flexibility at room temperature than its thermophilic counterparts. This flexibility is controlled by a novel disulfide bond in its active site, with its removal leading to destabilization of the catalytic triad and reduction of the hydrolase activity. Molecular docking of a model substrate predicts that PET binds to PETase in a unique and energetically favorable conformation facilitated by several residue substitutions within its active site when compared to other enzymes. These computational predictions are in excellent agreement with recent mutagenesis and PET film degradation analyses. Finally, we rationalize the increased catalytic activity of PETase at room temperature through molecular dynamics simulations of enzyme-ligand complexes for PETase and other thermophilic PET-degrading enzymes at 298, 323, and 353 K. Our results reveal that both the binding pose and residue substitutions within PETase favor proximity between the catalytic residues and the labile carbonyl of the substrate at room temperature, suggesting a more favorable hydrolytic reaction. These results are valuable for enabling detailed evolutionary analysis of PET-degrading enzymes and for rational design endeavors aiming at increasing the efficiency of PETase and similar enzymes toward plastic degradation.  相似文献   

9.
Enzymatic degradability has been investigated for a series of bacterial poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-3-hydroxypropionate)s (P(3HB-co-3HP)s) with 3-hydroxypropionate (3HP) unit contents from 11 to 86 mol % as well as poly(3-hydroxybutyrate) (P(3HB)) and chemosynthesized poly(3-hydroxypropionate) (P(3HP)). The behavior of degradation by two types of extracellular poly(3-hydroxyalkanoate) (PHA) depolymerases purified from Ralstonia pikettii T1 and Acidovorax Sp. TP4, defined respectively as PHA depolymerase types I and II according to the position of the lipase box in the catalytic domain, were compared in relation to the thermal properties and crystalline structures of the PHA samples elucidated by differential scanning calorimetry and wide-angle X-ray diffraction. The degradation products were characterized by high-performance liquid chromatography and one- (1D) and two-dimension (2D) (1)H NMR spectroscopy. It was found that the PHA depolymerase of Acidovorax Sp. TP4 showed degradation behavior different from that shown by depolymerase of R. pikettii T1. PHA depolymerase from Acidovorax Sp. TP4 degraded the P(3HB-co-3HP) films with lower crystallinity in higher rates than those with higher crystallinity, no matter what kinds of crystalline structures they formed. In contrast, PHA depolymerase from R. pikettii T1 degraded P(3HB-co-3HP) films forming P(3HB) crystalline structure in higher rates than those forming P(3HP)s. The increase in amorphous nature of the P(3HB-co-3HP) films with P(3HB)-homopolymer-like crystalline structure increases and then decreases the rate of degradation by depolymerase from R. pikettii T1. The 3-hydroxybutyrate (3HB) monomer was produced as a major product by the hydrolysis of P(3HB) film by PHA depolymerase from Acidovorax Sp. TP4. The P(3HB-co-3HP) films could be degraded into 3HB and 3-hydroxypropionate (3HP) monomer at last, indicating that the catalytic domain of the enzyme recognized at least two monomeric units as substrates. While the PHA depolymerase from R. pikettii T1 hydrolyzed P(3HB) film into 3HB dimer as a major product, and the catalytic domain recognized at least three monomeric units. The degradation behavior of P(3HB-co-3HP) films by the PHA depolymerase of Acidovorax Sp. TP4 could be distinguished from that by the depolymerase of R. pikettii T1.  相似文献   

10.
A model for the interfacial orientation and the mode of action of lipase is proposed. Lipase is oriented so that its active site is near the oil-water boundary. This orientation is achieved by oil-enzyme bonding at the “hydrophobic head” of the enzyme, a region free of electric charges and relatively resistant to unfolding. The measured KM is a complex constant including the dissociation constant of this oil-enzyme “complex”. The interfacial orientation of lipase is further aided by hydrophilic negative charges on the “back” of the enzyme and by a hydrophilic carbohydrate “tail”.It is suggested that similar hydrophobic heads and hydrophilic tails and asymmetric charge distributions establish the orientation of many enzymes which act at interfaces. Many phospholipases, for instance, appear to be charge-oriented, and the carbohydrate residues of ribonucleases and many other glycoproteins may be hydrophilic tails.Lipase is probably a serine enzyme with a catalytic center similar to that of chymotrypsin, but more hindered, perhaps owing to the presence of a leucine residue, and there is no binding of substrate lipid chains in the “active complex”. The substrate molecule is fixated on the enzyme in a two-dimensional orientation, because its leaving alkoxy group must be received by the serine hydroxyl hydrogen which is directed towards the imidazol ring of the reactive histidine through a hydrogen bond. The high turnover rate of lipolysis, 5 × 105/min, exceptional even for an enzyme, results from the extremely high substrate concentration near the active site, and from an almost complete extrusion of water because of the hydrophobicity of both the active site and the substrate. In addition, both substrate and enzyme, because of their polarity, are already so favorably positioned at the interface that the formation of the “active complex” requires only a proper two-dimensional alignment, perhaps with partial extraction of the substrate molecule from the lipid phase.  相似文献   

11.
The cell wall envelope of staphylococci and other Gram-positive pathogens is coated with surface proteins that interact with human host tissues. Surface proteins of Staphylococcus aureus are covalently linked to the cell wall envelope by a mechanism requiring C-terminal sorting signals with an LPXTG motif. Sortase (SrtA) cleaves surface proteins between the threonine (T) and the glycine (G) of the LPXTG motif and catalyzes the formation of an amide bond between threonine at the C-terminal end of polypeptides and cell wall cross-bridges. The active site architecture and catalytic mechanism of sortase A has hitherto not been revealed. Here we present the crystal structures of native SrtA, of an active site mutant of SrtA, and of the mutant SrtA complexed with its substrate LPETG peptide and describe the substrate binding pocket of the enzyme. Highly conserved proline (P) and threonine (T) residues of the LPXTG motif are held in position by hydrophobic contacts, whereas the glutamic acid residue (E) at the X position points out into the solvent. The scissile T-G peptide bond is positioned between the active site Cys(184) and Arg(197) residues and at a greater distance from the imidazolium side chain of His(120). All three residues, His(120), Cys(184), and Arg(197), are conserved in sortase enzymes from Gram-positive bacteria. Comparison of the active sites of S. aureus sortase A and sortase B provides insight into substrate specificity and suggests a universal sortase-catalyzed mechanism of bacterial surface protein anchoring in Gram-positive bacteria.  相似文献   

12.
Cytochrome P450 27A1 (P450 27A1 or CYP27A1) is an important enzyme that participates in different pathways of cholesterol degradation as well as in the activation of vitamin D(3). Several approaches were utilized to investigate how two physiological substrates, cholesterol and 5beta-cholestane-3alpha,7alpha,12alpha-triol, interact with CYP27A1. The enzyme active site was first probed spectrally by assessing binding of the two substrates and five substrate analogues followed by computer modeling and site-directed mutagenesis. The computer models suggest that the spatial positions and orientations of cholesterol and 5beta-cholestane-3alpha,7alpha,12alpha-triol are different in the enzyme active site. As a result, some of the active site residues interact with both substrates, although they are situated differently relative to each steroid, and some residues bind only one substrate. Mutation of the overlapping substrate-contact residues (W100, H103, T110, M301C, V367, I481, and V482) affected CYP27A1 binding and enzyme activity in a substrate-dependent manner and allowed identification of several important side chains. T110 is proposed to interact with the 12alpha-hydroxyl of 5beta-cholestane-3alpha,7alpha,12alpha-triol, whereas V367 seems to be crucial for correct positioning of the cholesterol C26 methyl group and for regioselective hydroxylation of this substrate. Distinct binding of the CYP27A1 substrates may provide insight into why phenotypic manifestations of cerebrotendinous xanthomatosis, a disease associated with CYP27A1 deficiency, are so diverse.  相似文献   

13.
A novel cold-adapted lipolytic enzyme gene, est97, was identified from a high Arctic intertidal zone sediment metagenomic library. The deduced amino acid sequence of Est97 showed low similarity with other lipolytic enzymes, the maximum being 30 % identity with a putative lipase from Vibrio caribbenthicus. Common features of lipolytic enzymes, such as the GXSXG sequence motif, were detected. The gene product was over-expressed in Escherichia coli and purified. The recombinant Est97 (rEst97) hydrolysed various ρ-nitrophenyl esters with the best substrate being ρ-nitrophenyl hexanoate (K m and k cat of 39 μM and 25.8 s?1, respectively). This esterase activity of rEst97 was optimal at 35 °C and pH 7.5 and the enzyme was unstable at temperatures above 25 °C. The apparent melting temperature, as determined by differential scanning calorimetry was 39 °C, substantiating Est97 as a cold-adapted esterase. The crystal structure of rEst97 was determined by the single wavelength anomalous dispersion method to 1.6 Å resolution. The protein was found to have a typical α/β-hydrolase fold with Ser144-His226-Asp197 as the catalytic triad. A suggested, relatively short lid domain of rEst97 is composed of residues 80–114, which form an α-helix and a disordered loop. The cold adaptation features seem primarily related to a high number of methionine and glycine residues and flexible loops in the high-resolution structures.  相似文献   

14.
The seven antigenically distinct serotypes of Clostridium botulinum neurotoxins, the causative agents of botulism, block the neurotransmitter release by specifically cleaving one of the three SNARE proteins and induce flaccid paralysis. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has declared them as Category A biowarfare agents. The most potent among them, botulinum neurotoxin type A (BoNT/A), cleaves its substrate synaptosome-associated protein of 25 kDa (SNAP-25). An efficient drug for botulism can be developed only with the knowledge of interactions between the substrate and enzyme at the active site. Here, we report the crystal structures of the catalytic domain of BoNT/A with its uncleavable SNAP-25 peptide (197)QRATKM(202) and its variant (197)RRATKM(202) to 1.5 A and 1.6 A, respectively. This is the first time the structure of an uncleavable substrate bound to an active botulinum neurotoxin is reported and it has helped in unequivocally defining S1 to S5' sites. These substrate peptides make interactions with the enzyme predominantly by the residues from 160, 200, 250 and 370 loops. Most notably, the amino nitrogen and carbonyl oxygen of P1 residue (Gln197) chelate the zinc ion and replace the nucleophilic water. The P1'-Arg198, occupies the S1' site formed by Arg363, Thr220, Asp370, Thr215, Ile161, Phe163 and Phe194. The S2' subsite is formed by Arg363, Asn368 and Asp370, while S3' subsite is formed by Tyr251, Leu256, Val258, Tyr366, Phe369 and Asn388. P4'-Lys201 makes hydrogen bond with Gln162. P5'-Met202 binds in the hydrophobic pocket formed by the residues from the 250 and 200 loop. Knowledge of interactions between the enzyme and substrate peptide from these complex structures should form the basis for design of potent inhibitors for this neurotoxin.  相似文献   

15.
Reaction processes of poly[(R)-3-hydroxybutyric acid] (P(3HB)) with two types of poly(hydroxybutyric acid) (PHB) depolymerases secreted from Ralstonia pickettii T1 and Penicillium funiculosum were characterized by means of atomic force microscopy (AFM) and quartz crystal microbalance (QCM). The PHB depolymerase from R. pickettii T1 consists of catalytic, linker, and substrate-binding domains, whereas the one from P. funiculosum lacks a substrate-binding domain. We succeeded in observing the adsorption of single molecules of the PHB depolymerase from R. pickettii T1 onto P(3HB) single crystals and the degradation of the single crystals in a phosphate buffer solution at 37 degrees C by real-time AFM. On the contrary, the enzyme molecule from P. funiculosum was hardly observed at the surface of P(3HB) single crystals by real-time AFM, even though the enzymatic degradation of the single crystals was surely progressed. On the basis of the AFM observations in air of the P(3HB) single crystals after the enzymatic treatments, however, not only the PHB depolymerase from R. pickettii T1 but also that from P. funiculosum adsorbed onto the surface of P(3HB) crystals, and both concentrations of the enzymes on the surface were nearly identical. This means both enzymes were adsorbed onto the surface of P(3HB) single crystals. Moreover, QCM measurements clarified quantitatively the differences in detachment behavior between two types of PHB depolymerases, namely the enzyme from R. pickettii T1 was hardly detached but the enzyme from P. funiculosum was released easily from the surface of P(3HB) crystals under an aqueous condition.  相似文献   

16.
Penicillin acylases are industrially important enzymes for the production of 6‐APA, which is used extensively in the synthesis of secondary antibiotics. The enzyme translates into an inactive single chain precursor that subsequently gets processed by the removal of a spacer peptide connecting the chains of the mature active heterodimer. We have cloned the penicillin G acylase from Kluyvera citrophila (KcPGA) and prepared two mutants by site‐directed mutagenesis. Replacement of N‐terminal serine of the β‐subunit with cysteine (Serβ1Cys) resulted in a fully processed but inactive enzyme. The second mutant in which this serine is replaced by glycine (Serβ1Gly) remained in the unprocessed and inactive form. The crystals of both mutants belonged to space group P1 with four molecules in the asymmetric unit. The three‐dimensional structures of these mutants were refined at resolutions 2.8 and 2.5 Å, respectively. Comparison of these structures with similar structures of Escherichia coli PGA (EcPGA) revealed various conformational changes that lead to autocatalytic processing and consequent removal of the spacer peptide. The large displacements of residues such as Arg168 and Arg477 toward the N‐terminal cleavage site of the spacer peptide or the conformational changes of Arg145 and Phe146 near the active site in these structures suggested probable steps in the processing dynamics. A comparison between the structures of the processed Serβ1Cys mutant and that of the processed form of EcPGA showed conformational differences in residues Argα145, Pheα146, and Pheβ24 at the substrate binding pocket. Three conformational transitions of Argα145 and Pheα146 residues were seen when processed and unprocessed forms of KcPGA were compared with the substrate bound structure of EcPGA. Structure mediation in activity difference between KcPGA and EcPGA toward acyl homoserine lactone (AHL) is elucidated.  相似文献   

17.
Weight loss is a well known systemic manifestation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). A Gly80Ser mutation on human group IID secretory phospholipase A2 (sPLA2) enhances expression of the cytokines that are responsible for weight loss. In this study, we seek to establish a structural correlation of wild type sPLA2 and the Gly80Ser mutation with function. sPLA2 with glycine and serine at the 80th positions and the M-type receptor were modelled. The enzymes were docked to the receptor and molecular dynamics was carried out to 70 ns. Structural analysis revealed the enzymes to comprise three helices (H1–H3), two short helices (SH1 and SH2), and five loops including a calcium binding loop (L1–L5), and to be stabilized by seven disulfide bonds. The overall backbone folds of the two models are very similar, with main chain RMSD of less than 1 Å. The active site within the substrate binding channel shows a catalytic triad of water–His67–Asp112, showing a hydrogen bonded network. Major structural differences between wild type and mutant enzymes were observed locally at the site of the mutation and in their global conformations. These differences include: (1) loop-L3 between H2 and H3, which bears residue Gly80 in the wild type, is in a closed conformation with respect to the channel opening, while in the mutant enzyme it adopts a relatively open conformation; (2) the mutant enzyme is less compact and has higher solvent accessible surface area; and (3) interfacial binding contact surface area is greater, and the quality of interactions with the receptor is better in the mutant enzyme as compared to the wild type. Therefore, the structural differences delineated in this study are potential biophysical factors that could determine the increased potency of the mutant enzyme with macrophage receptor for cytokine secreting function, resulting in exacerbation of cachexia in COPD.  相似文献   

18.
In cynobacteria and higher plants, salinity is known to inhibit the activity of several enzymes involved in photosynthesis and hence decreases the overall photosynthetic rate. This gave us an impetus to search for a protease, which may be involved in the turnover of non-functional enzymes produced under salinity stress. Taking the possible changes in pH gradient of the chloroplast under consideration, we have tried to identify a protease, which is induced under salinity and characterized it as an alkaline protease using spinach (Spinacia oleracea) leaves as a model system. The HIC-HPLC purified homogeneous alkaline serine protease from the isolated spinach chloroplasts had two subunits of molecular weight 63 and 32 kDa. The enzyme was maximally active at pH 8.5 and 50°C. The enzyme showed the property to hydrolyze the synthetic substrate like azocaesin and had sufficient proteolytic activity in gelatin bound native PAGE. The enzyme activity was also dependent upon the presence of divalent cations and reduced environment. The active site residues were identified and the homogeneous alkaline serine protease had cysteine, lysine and tryptophan residues at its active site.  相似文献   

19.
The three-dimensional structure of duodenase, a serine protease from bovine duodenum mucosa, has been determined at 2.4A resolution. The enzyme, which has both trypsin-like and chymotrypsin-like activities, most closely resembles human cathepsin G with which it shares 57% sequence identity and similar specificity. The catalytic Ser195 in duodenase adopts the energetically favored conformation typical of serine proteinases and unlike the strained state typical of lipase/esterases. Of several waters in the active site of duodenase, the one associated with Ser214 is found in all serine proteinases and most lipase/esterases. The conservation of the Ser214 residue in serine proteinase, its presence in the active site, and participation in a hydrogen water network involving the catalytic triad (His57, Asp107, and Ser195) argues for its having an important role in the mechanism of action. It may be referred to as a fourth member of the catalytic triad. Duodenase is one of a growing family of enzymes that possesses trypsin-like and chymotrypsin-like activity. Not long ago, these activities were considered to be mutually exclusive. Computer modeling reveals that the S1 subsite of duodenase has structural features compatible with effective accommodation of P1 residues typical of trypsin (Arg/Lys) and chymotrypsin (Tyr/Phe) substrates. The determination of structural features associated with functional variation in the enzyme family may permit design of enzymes with a specific ratio of trypsin and chymotrypsin activities.  相似文献   

20.
The crystal structure of poly(3-hydroxybutyrate) (PHB) depolymerase PhaZ7 purified from Paucimonas lemoignei was determined at 1.90 Å resolution. The structure consists of a single domain with an α/β hydrolase fold in its core. The active site is analogous to that of serine esterases/lipases and is characterized by the presence of a catalytic triad comprising Ser136, Asp242, and His306. Comparison with other structures in the Protein Data Bank showed a high level of similarity with the Bacillus subtilis lipase LipA (RMSD, 1.55 Å). Structural comparison with Penicillium funiculosum PHB depolymerase, the only PHB depolymerase whose structure is already known, revealed significant differences, resulting in an RMSD of 2.80-3.58 Å. The two enzymes appear to utilize different types of solvent-exposed residues for biopolymer binding, with aliphatic and hydroxyl residues used in P. funiculosum PHB depolymerase and aromatic residues in PhaZ7. Moreover, the active site of P. funiculosum PHB depolymerase is accessible to the substrate in contrast to the active site of PhaZ7, which is buried. Hence, considerable conformational changes are required in PhaZ7 for the creation of a channel leading to the active site. Taken together, the structural data suggest that PhaZ7 and P. funiculosum PHB depolymerase have adopted different strategies for effective substrate binding in response to their diverse substrate specificity and the lack of a substrate-binding domain.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号