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1.
High-resolution crystal structures are reported for apo, holo, and substrate-bound forms of a toxoflavin-degrading metalloenzyme (TflA). In addition, the degradation reaction is shown to be dependent on oxygen, Mn(II), and dithiothreitol in vitro. Despite its low sequence identity with proteins of known structure, TflA is structurally homologous to proteins of the vicinal oxygen chelate superfamily. Like other metalloenzymes in this superfamily, the TflA fold contains four modules that associate to form a metal binding site; however, the fold displays a rare rearrangement of the structural modules indicative of domain permutation. Moreover, unlike the 2-His-1-carboxylate facial triad commonly utilized by vicinal oxygen chelate dioxygenases and other dioxygen-activating non-heme Fe(II) enzymes, the metal center in TflA consists of a 1-His-2-carboxylate facial triad. The substrate-bound complex shows square-pyramidal geometry in which one position is occupied by O5 of toxoflavin. The open coordination site is predicted to be the dioxygen binding site. TflA appears to stabilize the reduced form of toxoflavin through second-sphere interactions. This anionic species is predicted to be the electron source responsible for reductive activation of oxygen to produce a peroxytoxoflavin intermediate.  相似文献   

2.
J M Moore  G H Reed 《Biochemistry》1985,24(20):5328-5333
The structure of the MnIIADP complex at the active site of 3-phosphoglycerate kinase from yeast has been investigated by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. Inhomogeneous broadening in the EPR signals for Mn(II) resulting from unresolved superhyperfine coupling to 17O regiospecifically incorporated into ADP shows that Mn(II) is coordinated to the alpha- and beta-phosphate groups of ADP at the active site of the enzyme. The EPR pattern for the enzyme-MnIIADP complex is characteristic of a predominantly axially symmetric zero-field splitting tensor. The symmetry and magnitude of the zero-field splitting interaction suggest that there is an additional negatively charged oxygen ligand in the coordination sphere of Mn(II). EPR measurements for solutions of the enzyme-MnIIADP complex in 17O-enriched water indicate that there are also two or three water molecules in the coordination sphere of the metal ion. EPR data for complexes with the two epimers of [alpha-17O]ADP have been used to determine the stereochemical configuration of the MnIIADP complex at the active site. EPR spectra for Mn(II) in the enzymic complex with (Rp)-[alpha-17O]ADP show an inhomogeneous broadening due to superhyperfine coupling with 17O whereas spectra for (Sp)-[alpha-17O]ADP complexes are indistinguishable from those for matched samples with unlabeled ADP. These results show that 3-phosphoglycerate kinase selectivity binds the alpha configuration of the alpha, beta chelate of MnIIADP. Addition of 3-phosphoglycerate to form the dead-end complex (enzyme-MnIIADP-3-phosphoglycerate) does not alter the EPR spectrum, but addition of vanadate to this complex causes marked changes in the spectral parameters.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
The disulfide bond forming DsbA enzymes and their DsbB interaction partners are attractive targets for development of antivirulence drugs because both are essential for virulence factor assembly in Gram-negative pathogens. Here we characterize PmDsbA from Proteus mirabilis, a bacterial pathogen increasingly associated with multidrug resistance. PmDsbA exhibits the characteristic properties of a DsbA, including an oxidizing potential, destabilizing disulfide, acidic active site cysteine, and dithiol oxidase catalytic activity. We evaluated a peptide, PWATCDS, derived from the partner protein DsbB and showed by thermal shift and isothermal titration calorimetry that it binds to PmDsbA. The crystal structures of PmDsbA, and the active site variant PmDsbAC30S were determined to high resolution. Analysis of these structures allows categorization of PmDsbA into the DsbA class exemplified by the archetypal Escherichia coli DsbA enzyme. We also present a crystal structure of PmDsbAC30S in complex with the peptide PWATCDS. The structure shows that the peptide binds non-covalently to the active site CXXC motif, the cis-Pro loop, and the hydrophobic groove adjacent to the active site of the enzyme. This high-resolution structural data provides a critical advance for future structure-based design of non-covalent peptidomimetic inhibitors. Such inhibitors would represent an entirely new antibacterial class that work by switching off the DSB virulence assembly machinery.  相似文献   

4.
J L Kofron  D E Ash  G H Reed 《Biochemistry》1988,27(13):4781-4787
Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy has been used to investigate the structure of the complex of manganous ion with the phosphorylated form of pyruvate,phosphate dikinase (Ep) and the inhibitor oxalate. Oxalate, an analogue of the enolate of pyruvate, is competitive with respect to pyruvate in binding to the phosphorylated form of the enzyme [Michaels, G., Milner, Y., & Reed, G.H. (1975) Biochemistry 14, 3213-3219]. Superhyperfine coupling between the unpaired electrons of Mn(II) and ligands specifically labeled with 17O has been used to identify oxygen ligands to Mn(II) in the complex with oxalate and the phosphorylated form of the enzyme. Oxalate binds at the active site as a bidentate chelate with Mn(II). An oxygen from the 3'-N-phosphohistidyl residue of the protein is in the coordination sphere of Mn(II), and at least two water molecules are also bound to Mn(II) in the complex. Oxalate also binds directly to Mn(II) in a complex with nonphosphorylated enzyme. The structure for the Ep-Mn(II)-oxalate complex implies that simultaneous coordination of a phospho group and of the attacking nucleophile to the divalent cation is likely an important factor in catalysis of this phospho-transfer reaction.  相似文献   

5.
6.
We present evidence that the oxidation of Mn(II) in a zone above the O2/H2S interface in the water column of Saanich Inlet, British Columbia, Canada, is microbially catalyzed. We measured the uptake of 54Mn(II) in water samples under in situ conditions of pH and temperature and in the presence and absence of oxygen. Experiments in the absence of oxygen provided a measure of the exchange of the tracer between the dissolved and solid pools of Mn(II); we interpret the difference between experiments in the presence and absence of oxygen to be a measure of Mn(II) oxidation. Using this method we examined the effect of oxygen tension, Mn(II) concentration, and temperature on the initial in situ Mn(II) oxidation rate (V0). Mn(II) oxidation was almost twice as fast under conditions of 67% air saturation (V0=5.5 nM h−1) as with the in situ concentration of 15 μM (5% air saturation; V0=3.1 nM h−1). Additions of ca. 18 μM Mn(II) completely inhibited all Mn(II) oxidation at three different depths in the oxidizing zone, and there was a temperature optimum for Mn(II) oxidation of around 20°C. These results are consistent with biologically mediated Mn(II) oxidation and indicate that the rate is limited by both oxygen and the concentration of microbial binding sites in this environment.  相似文献   

7.
G H Reed  T S Leyh 《Biochemistry》1980,19(24):5472-5480
The complete coordination scheme for Mn(II) in transition-state-analogue complexes with creatine kinase has been determined by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. Perturbations in the EPR spectra for Mn(II) due to superhyperfine coupling to 17O of selectively labeled ligands have been used to identify oxygen ligands in the first coordination sphere of the metal ion. The results show that in the complex of enzyme-MnADP-formate-creatine, Mn(II) is bound to oxygen ligands from both the alpha- and beta-phosphate groups of ADP, to an oxygen from the carboxylate group of formate, and to three water molecules. In the complex with thiocyanate replacing formate as the stabilizing anion, previous infrared experiments [Reed, G. H., Barlow, C. H., & Burns, R. A., Jr. (1978) J. Biol. Chem. 253, 4153-4158] indicated that the nitrogen from thiocyanate was bound to the Mn(II). The magnitudes of the 17O superphyperfine coupling constants from the O- ligands of the ADP phosphate groups and from the formate carboxylate are approximately equal and are larger than that for the water ligands. The symmetry of the zero-field-splitting tensor for Mn(II) indicates that the oxygens from the alpha- and beta-phosphate groups of ADP and the ligand donor atom from the anion occupy mutually cis positions in the octahedral coordination geometry. Water proton relaxation time measurements show that the three water molecules which are bound to Mn(II) are not in free exchange with the bulk solvent. Hence, an enclosed structure at the active site is indicated. The results suggest that for creatine kinase the activating metal ion is bound to all three phosphate groups in the transition state of the reaction.  相似文献   

8.
Microorganisms catalyze the formation of naturally occurring Mn oxides, but little is known about the biochemical mechanisms of this important biogeochemical process. We used tandem mass spectrometry to directly analyze the Mn(II)-oxidizing enzyme from marine Bacillus spores, identified as an Mn oxide band with an in-gel activity assay. Nine distinct peptides recovered from the Mn oxide band of two Bacillus species were unique to the multicopper oxidase MnxG, and one peptide was from the small hydrophobic protein MnxF. No other proteins were detected in the Mn oxide band, indicating that MnxG (or a MnxF/G complex) directly catalyzes biogenic Mn oxide formation. The Mn(II) oxidase was partially purified and found to be resistant to many proteases and active even at high concentrations of sodium dodecyl sulfate. Comparative analysis of the genes involved in Mn(II) oxidation from three diverse Bacillus species revealed a complement of conserved Cu-binding regions not present in well-characterized multicopper oxidases. Our results provide the first direct identification of a bacterial enzyme that catalyzes Mn(II) oxidation and suggest that MnxG catalyzes two sequential one-electron oxidations from Mn(II) to Mn(III) and from Mn(III) to Mn(IV), a novel type of reaction for a multicopper oxidase.  相似文献   

9.
As a light-driven water-plastoquinone oxidoreductase, Photosystem II produces molecular oxygen as an enzymatic product. Additionally, under a variety of stress conditions, reactive oxygen species are produced at or near the active site for oxygen evolution. In this study, Fourier-transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry was used to identify oxidized amino acid residues located in several core Photosystem II proteins (D1, D2, CP43, and CP47) isolated from spinach Photosystem II membranes. While the majority of these oxidized residues (81%) are located on the oxygenated solvent-exposed surface of the complex, several residues on the CP43 protein ((354)E, (355)T, (356)M, and (357)R) which are in close proximity (<15 ?) to the Mn(4)CaO(5) active site are also modified. These residues appear to be associated with putative oxygen/reactive oxygen species exit channel(s) in the photosystem. These results are discussed within the context of a number of computational studies which have identified putative oxygen channels within the photosystem.  相似文献   

10.
Lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases (LPMOs) are a recently discovered class of enzymes that employ a copper-mediated, oxidative mechanism to cleave glycosidic bonds. The LPMO catalytic mechanism likely requires that molecular oxygen first binds to Cu(I), but the oxidation state in many reported LPMO structures is ambiguous, and the changes in the LPMO active site required to accommodate both oxidation states of copper have not been fully elucidated. Here, a diffraction data collection strategy minimizing the deposited x-ray dose was used to solve the crystal structure of a chitin-specific LPMO from Enterococcus faecalis (EfaCBM33A) in the Cu(II)-bound form. Subsequently, the crystalline protein was photoreduced in the x-ray beam, which revealed structural changes associated with the conversion from the initial Cu(II)-oxidized form with two coordinated water molecules, which adopts a trigonal bipyramidal geometry, to a reduced Cu(I) form in a T-shaped geometry with no coordinated water molecules. A comprehensive survey of Cu(II) and Cu(I) structures in the Cambridge Structural Database unambiguously shows that the geometries observed in the least and most reduced structures reflect binding of Cu(II) and Cu(I), respectively. Quantum mechanical calculations of the oxidized and reduced active sites reveal little change in the electronic structure of the active site measured by the active site partial charges. Together with a previous theoretical investigation of a fungal LPMO, this suggests significant functional plasticity in LPMO active sites. Overall, this study provides molecular snapshots along the reduction process to activate the LPMO catalytic machinery and provides a general method for solving LPMO structures in both copper oxidation states.  相似文献   

11.
Bovine brain hexokinase enhances the effect of Mn(II) on the longitudinal relaxation rate of water protons. Direct interaction of Mn(II) with the enzyme has been studied using electron spin resonance and proton relaxation rate enhancement methods. The results indicate that brain hexokinase has 1.05 ± 0.13 tight binding sites and 7 ± 2 weak binding sites with a dissociation constant, KD = 25 ± 4 μM and KD = 1050 ± 290 μM, respectively, at pH 8.0, 23 °C. The characteristic enhancement ?b) for hexokinase-Mn(II) complex evaluated from proton relaxation rate enhancement studies, gave ?b = 3.5 ± 0.4 for tight binding sites and an average ?b = 2.3 ± 0.5 per site for weak binding sites at 9 MHZ. The dissociation constant of Mn(II) for tight binding sites on the enzyme exhibits strong temperature dependence. In the low-temperature region (5–12 °C) brain hexokinase probably undergoes a conformational change. Frequency dependence of the normalized relaxation rate for bound water at various temperatures has shown that the number of exchangeable water molecules left in the first coordination sphere of bound Mn(II) is about one at 30 °C and about two at 18 °C. Binding of glucose 6-phosphate to hexokinase results in large-line broadening of the resonances of anomeric protons of the sugar. However, no such effect was observed in the case of glucose binding. These results suggest different modes of interaction of these two sugars to hexokinase. Line broadening of the C-(1) hydrogen resonances of glucose caused by Mn(II) in the presence of hexokinase suggests the proximity of the Mn(II) binding site to that of glucose. A lower limit of 1330 ± 170 s?1 for the rate of dissociation of glucose from enzyme-Mn(II)-glucose complex has been obtained from these studies.  相似文献   

12.
The ability of micro‐organisms to oxidize manganese (Mn) from Mn(II) to Mn(III/IV) oxides transcends boundaries of biological clade or domain. Many bacteria and fungi oxidize Mn(II) to Mn(III/IV) oxides directly through enzymatic activity or indirectly through the production of reactive oxygen species. Here, we determine the oxygen isotope fractionation factors associated with Mn(II) oxidation via various biotic (bacteria and fungi) and abiotic Mn(II) reaction pathways. As oxygen in Mn(III/IV) oxides may be derived from precursor water and molecular oxygen, we use a twofold approach to determine the isotope fractionation with respect to each oxygen source. Using both 18O‐labeled water and closed‐system Rayleigh distillation approaches, we constrain the kinetic isotope fractionation factors associated with O atom incorporation during Mn(II) oxidation to ?17.3‰ to ?25.9‰ for O2 and ?1.9‰ to +1.8‰ for water. Results demonstrate that stable oxygen isotopes of Mn(III/IV) oxides have potential to distinguish between two main classes of biotic Mn(II) oxidation: direct enzymatic oxidation in which O2 is the oxidant and indirect enzymatic oxidation in which superoxide is the oxidant. The fraction of Mn(III/IV) oxide‐associated oxygen derived from water varies significantly (38%–62%) among these bio‐oxides with only weak relationship to Mn oxidation state, suggesting Mn(III) disproportionation may account for differences in the fraction of mineral‐bound oxygen from water and O2. Additionally, direct incorporation of molecular O2 suggests that Mn(III/IV) oxides contain a yet untapped proxy of of environmental O2, a parameter reflecting the integrated influence of global respiration, photorespiration, and several other biogeochemical reactions of global significance.  相似文献   

13.
Bacterial spores are renowned for their longevity, ubiquity, and resistance to environmental insults, but virtually nothing is known regarding whether these metabolically dormant structures impact their surrounding chemical environments. In the present study, a number of spore-forming bacteria that produce dormant spores which enzymatically oxidize soluble Mn(II) to insoluble Mn(IV) oxides were isolated from coastal marine sediments. The highly charged and reactive surfaces of biogenic metal oxides dramatically influence the oxidation and sorption of both trace metals and organics in the environment. Prior to this study, the only known Mn(II)-oxidizing sporeformer was the marine Bacillus sp. strain SG-1, an extensively studied bacterium in which Mn(II) oxidation is believed to be catalyzed by a multicopper oxidase, MnxG. Phylogenetic analysis based on 16S rRNA and mnxG sequences obtained from 15 different Mn(II)-oxidizing sporeformers (including SG-1) revealed extensive diversity within the genus Bacillus, with organisms falling into several distinct clusters and lineages. In addition, active Mn(II)-oxidizing proteins of various sizes, as observed in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide electrophoresis gels, were recovered from the outer layers of purified dormant spores of the isolates. These are the first active Mn(II)-oxidizing enzymes identified in spores or gram-positive bacteria. Although extremely resistant to denaturation, the activities of these enzymes were inhibited by azide and o-phenanthroline, consistent with the involvement of multicopper oxidases. Overall, these studies suggest that the commonly held view that bacterial spores are merely inactive structures in the environment should be revised.  相似文献   

14.
The scavenging of superoxide radical by manganous complexes: in vitro   总被引:22,自引:0,他引:22  
Dialyzable manganese has been shown to be present in millimolar concentrations within cells of Lactobacillus plantarum and related lactic acid bacteria. This unusual accumulation of Mn appears to serve the same function as Superoxide dismutase (SOD), conferring hyperbaric oxygen and Superoxide tolerance on these SOD-free organisms. The form of the Mn in the lactic acid bacteria and the mechanisms whereby it protects the cell from oxygen damage are unknown. This report examines the mechanisms by which Mn catalytically scavenges O2?, both in the xanthine oxidase/cytochrome c SOD assay and in a number of in vitro systems relevant to the in vivo situation. In all the reaction mixtures examined, Mn(II) is first oxidized by O2? to Mn(III), and H2O2 is formed. In pyrophosphate buffer the Mn(III) thus formed is re-reduced to Mn(II) by a second O2?, making the reaction a true metal-catalyzed dismutation like that catalyzed by SOD. Alternatively, if the reaction takes place in orthophosphate or a number of other buffers, the Mn(III) is preferentially reduced largely by reductants other than O2?, such as thiols, urate, hydroquinone, or H2O2. H2O2, a common product of the lactic acid bacteria, reacted rapidly with Mn(III) to form O2, apparently without intermediate O2 release. Free hexaquo Mn(II) ions were shown by electron spin resonance spectroscopy and activity assays in noncomplexing buffers to be poorly reactive with O2?. In contrast, Mn(II) formed complexes having a high catalytic activity in scavenging O2? with a number of organic acids, including malate, pyruvate, propionate, succinate, and lactate, with the Mn-lactate complex showing the greatest activity.  相似文献   

15.
A homologous series of β-brominated porphyrins derived from meso-tetrakis(4-carbomethoxyphenyl)porphyrinatomanganese(III) chloride, i.e., Mn(III)(BrxTCMPP)Cl (x = 0, 2, 4, 6, and 8), was prepared and investigated as cytochrome P450 models. Hydroxylations of cyclohexane by iodosylbenzene (PhIO) and iodobenzene diacetate (PhI(OAc)2) in the presence or absence of water were carried out as P450 model reactions. The influence of the degree of β-bromination of the macrocycle on the UV-vis spectra, the Mn(III)/Mn(II) reduction potential, and the catalytic properties of the Mn(III)(BrxTCMPP)Cl (x = 0, 2, 4, 6, and 8) series were examined. The catalytic efficiency does not correlate with the Mn(III)/Mn(II) reduction potential and shows a bell-shaped behavior, where the best results are achieved with the hexabrominated complex. Better hydroxylation yields were achieved by using PhI(OAc)2 as oxygen donor, but at expenses of catalyst recovery; addition of water to this system resulted in a increase in the reaction rate. Recycling of the more oxidatively robust complexes Mn(III)(Br6TCMPP)Cl and Mn(III)(Br8TCMPP)Cl is feasible when using PhIO as oxygen donor. Selectivity and UV-vis data suggested that hydroxylation by both PhIO and PhI(OAc)2 share closely related active species and mechanism. We also show that the Mn(III)/Mn(II) reduction potentials are inappropriate predictors of P450-type activity of Mn porphyrin-catalyzed oxidations.  相似文献   

16.
Photosystem II complex (PSII) of thylakoid membranes uses light energy to oxidise extremely stable water and produce oxygen (2H(2)O-->O(2)+4H(+)+4e(-)). PSII is compared with cytochrome c oxidase that catalyses the opposite reaction coupled to proton translocation. Cytochrome c oxidase has proton and water channels, and a tentative oxygen channel. I propose that functional PSII complexes also need a specific oxygen channel to direct O(2) from the water molecules bound to specific Mn atoms of the Mn cluster within PSII out to the membrane surface. The function of this channel will be to prevent oxygen being accessible to the radical pair P680(+)Pheo(-), thereby preventing singlet oxygen generation from the triplet P680 state in functional PSII. The important role of singlet oxygen in structurally perturbed non-functional photosystem II is also discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Global cycling of environmental manganese requires catalysis by bacteria and fungi for MnO2 formation, since abiotic Mn(II) oxidation is slow under ambient conditions. Genetic evidence from several bacteria indicates that multicopper oxidases (MCOs) are required for MnO2 formation. However, MCOs catalyze one-electron oxidations, whereas the conversion of Mn(II) to MnO2 is a two-electron process. Trapping experiments with pyrophosphate (PP), a Mn(III) chelator, have demonstrated that Mn(III) is an intermediate in Mn(II) oxidation when mediated by exosporium from the Mn-oxidizing bacterium Bacillus SG-1. The reaction of Mn(II) depends on O2 and is inhibited by azide, consistent with MCO catalysis. We show that the subsequent conversion of Mn(III) to MnO2 also depends on O2 and is inhibited by azide. Thus, both oxidation steps appear to be MCO-mediated, likely by the same enzyme, which is indicated by genetic evidence to be the MnxG gene product. We propose a model of how the manganese oxidase active site may be organized to couple successive electron transfers to the formation of polynuclear Mn(IV) complexes as precursors to MnO2 formation.  相似文献   

18.
Protein phosphatase 1 (PP1) is a dinuclear metalloenzyme that catalyzes the dephosphorylation of serine and threonine residues. In this work, the catalytic reaction mechanism of PP1 was theoretically investigated by hybrid density functional theory. Firstly, an initial model of the Mn(II)–Mn(II) active site of PP1 was constructed on the basis of the high-resolution crystal structure, and stationary points along the reaction pathway were optimized and analyzed. The calculations provide strong support for the mechanism of the dephosphorylation by PP1 and suggest that His125 plays the role of donating a proton to the leaving group. Furthermore, reaction models with the Mn–Mn centers at different oxidation states [Mn(III)–Mn(II) and Mn(III)–Mn(III) centers] were designed. Our calculations show that increasing the oxidation state of one or both Mn(II) can shorten the bond lengths between the metal ions and the ligands, and increase the energy barrier of the related reactions. We found it interesting that artificially adding a negatively charged hydroxy ligand into the Mn(III)–Mn(II) center can recover the shortened coordination bonds and lower the increased energy barrier. Our investigation suggests that the definite oxidation states of the metal centers should be significantly correlated to the negative charges of the ligands not only in phosphoprotein phosphatases, but also in purple acid phosphatases and Escherichia coli 5′-nucleotidase. This means that all the members of phosphoprotein phosphatases adopt homodivalent centers, and suggests the heterovalent active sites of purple acid phosphatases have evolved from homodivalent ones.  相似文献   

19.
Metals and their complexes have an increasing number of medical applications. Sitagliptin (STG) acts as an antidiabetic drug. Mn(II) and Co(II) complexes were studied and characterized based on physical characterization, FT-IR, DG/TG, XRD, ESM, and TEM. Data revealed that STG acts as a bidentate ligand through the oxygen atom of a carbonyl group and the nitrogen atom of an amino group. Magnetic measurement data revealed that the Mn/STG metal complex has a square planner geometry. The experiment was performed on 40 male albino rats who were divided into four groups: the control group, STG group, group treated with STG/Mn, and group treated with Co/STG. Biomarkers for hepatic enzymes and antioxidants were found in the blood, and hepatic tissue histology was evaluated. STG in combination with Mn and Co administration showed potent protective effects against hepatic biochemical alterations induced by STG alone, as well as suppressing oxidative stress and structural alterations. These complexes prevented any stress and improved hepatic enzymatic levels more than STG alone. The STG/Mn complex was highly effective against Bacillus subtilis and Streptococcus pneumonia, while STG/Co was highly effective against Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Staphylococcus aureas. Therefore, STG combined with Mn and Co produced a synergistic effect against oxidative stress and improved the histological structure of the liver tissues. STG metal complexes with Mn and Co showed the most potential ameliorative antioxidant and hepatoprotective effects.  相似文献   

20.
Metallo beta-lactamase enzymes confer antibiotic resistance to bacteria by catalyzing the hydrolysis of beta-lactam antibiotics. This relatively new form of resistance is spreading unchallenged as there is a current lack of potent and selective inhibitors of metallo beta-lactamases. Reported here are the crystal structures of the native IMP-1 metallo beta-lactamase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa and its complex with a mercaptocarboxylate inhibitor, 2-[5-(1-tetrazolylmethyl)thien-3-yl]-N-[2-(mercaptomethyl)-4 -(phenylb utyrylglycine)]. The structures were determined by molecular replacement, and refined to 3.1 A (native) and 2.0 A (complex) resolution. Binding of the inhibitor in the active site induces a conformational change that results in closing of the flap and transforms the active site groove into a tunnel-shaped cavity enclosing 83% of the solvent accessible surface area of the inhibitor. The inhibitor binds in the active site through interactions with residues that are conserved among metallo beta-lactamases; the inhibitor's carboxylate group interacts with Lys161, and the main chain amide nitrogen of Asn167. In the "oxyanion hole", the amide carbonyl oxygen of the inhibitor interacts through a water molecule with the side chain of Asn167, the inhibitor's thiolate bridges the two Zn(II) ions in the active site displacing the bridging water, and the phenylbutyryl side chain binds in a hydrophobic pocket (S1) at the base of the flap. The flap is displaced 2.9 A compared to the unbound structure, allowing Trp28 to interact edge-to-face with the inhibitor's thiophene ring. The similarities between this inhibitor and the beta-lactam substrates suggest a mode of substrate binding and the role of the conserved residues in the active site. It appears that the metallo beta-lactamases bind their substrates by establishing a subset of binding interactions near the catalytic center with conserved characteristic chemical groups of the beta-lactam substrates. These interactions are complemented by additional nonspecific binding between the more variable groups in the substrates and the flexible flap. This unique mode of binding of the mercaptocarboxylate inhibitor in the enzyme active site provides a binding model for metallo beta-lactamase inhibition with utility for future drug design.  相似文献   

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