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1.
The structures of des 1-6 bovine neurophysin-II in the unliganded state and as its complex with lysine vasopressin were determined crystallographically at resolutions of 2.4 A and 2.3 A, respectively. The structure of the protein component of the vasopressin complex was, with some local differences, similar to that determined earlier of the full-length protein complexed with oxytocin, but relatively large differences, probably intrinsic to the hormones, were observed between the structures of bound oxytocin and bound vasopressin at Gln 4. The structure of the unliganded protein is the first structure of an unliganded neurophysin. Comparison with the liganded state indicated significant binding-induced conformational changes that were the largest in the loop region comprising residues 50-58 and in the 7-10 region. A subtle binding-induced tightening of the subunit interface of the dimer also was shown, consistent with a role for interface changes in neurophysin allosteric mechanism, but one that is probably not predominant. Interface changes are suggested to be communicated from the binding site through the strands of beta-sheet that connect these two regions, in part with mediation by Gly 23. Comparison of unliganded and liganded states additionally reveals that the binding site for the hormone alpha-amino group is largely preformed and accessible in the unliganded state, suggesting that it represents the initial site of hormone protein recognition. The potential molecular basis for its thermodynamic contribution to binding is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Antibody AZ-28 was generated against the chairlike transition-state analogue (TSA) 1 and catalyzes the oxy-Cope rearrangement of substrate 2 to product 3. The germline precursor to AZ-28 catalyzes the reaction with a 35-fold higher rate (k(cat)/k(uncat) = 163 000), despite a 40-fold lower binding affinity for TSA.1 (K(D) = 670 nM). To determine the structural basis for the differences in the binding and catalytic properties of the germline and affinity-matured antibodies, the X-ray crystal structures of the unliganded and TSA.1 complex of antibody AZ-28 have been determined at 2.8 and 2.6 A resolution, respectively; the structures of the unliganded and TSA.1 complex of the germline precursor to AZ-28 were both determined at 2. 0 A resolution. In the affinity-matured antibody.hapten complex the TSA is fixed in a catalytically unfavorable conformation by a combination of van der Waals and hydrogen-bonding interactions. The 2- and 5-phenyl substituents of TSA.1 are almost perpendicular to the cyclohexyl ring, leading to decreased orbital overlap and decreased stabilization of the putative transition state. The active site of the germline antibody appears to have an increased degree of flexibility-CDRH3 moves 4.9 A outward from the active site upon binding of TSA.1. We suggest that this conformational flexibility in the germline antibody, which results in a lower binding affinity for TSA.1, allows dynamic changes in the dihedral angle of the 2-phenyl substituent along the reaction coordinate. These conformational changes in turn lead to enhanced orbital overlap and increased catalytic rate. These studies suggest that protein and substrate dynamics play a key role in this antibody-catalyzed reaction.  相似文献   

3.
Carbonmonoxy hemoglobin Ypsilanti (beta 99 Asp-Tyr) exhibits a quaternary form distinctly different from any structures previously observed for human hemoglobins. The relative orientation of alpha beta dimers in the new quaternary form lies well outside the range of values observed for normal unliganded and liganded tetramers (Baldwin, J., Chothia, C., J. Mol. Biol. 129:175-220, 1979). Despite this large quaternary structural difference between carbonmonoxy hemoglobin Ypsilanti and the two canonical structures, the new quaternary structure's hydrogen bonding interactions in the "switch" region, and packing interactions in the "flexible joint" region, show noncovalent interactions characteristic of the alpha 1 beta 2 contacts of both unliganded and liganded normal hemoglobins. In contrast to both canonical structures, the beta 97 histidine residue in carbonmonoxy hemoglobin Ypsilanti is disengaged from quaternary packing interactions that are generally believed to enforce two-state behavior in ligand binding. These features of the new quaternary structure, denoted Y, may therefore be representative of quaternary states that occur transiently along pathways between the normal unliganded, T, and liganded, R, hemoglobin structures.  相似文献   

4.
The crystal structure of leishmania triosephosphate isomerase (TIM) complexed with 2-(N-formyl-N-hydroxy)-aminoethyl phosphonate (IPP) highlights the importance of Asn11 for binding and catalysis. IPP is an analogue of the substrate D-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate, and it is observed to bind with its aldehyde oxygen in an oxyanion hole formed by ND2 of Asn11 and NE2 of His95. Comparison of the mode of binding of IPP and the transition state analogue phosphoglycolohydroxamate (PGH) suggests that the Glu167 side chain, as well as the triose part of the substrate, adopt different conformations as the catalysed reaction proceeds. Comparison of the TIM-IPP and the TIM-PGH structures with other liganded and unliganded structures also highlights the conformational flexibility of the ligand and the active site, as well as the conserved mode of ligand binding.  相似文献   

5.
Current evidence indicates that the ligand-facilitated dimerization of neurophysin is mediated in part by dimerization-induced changes at the hormone binding site of the unliganded state that increase ligand affinity. To elucidate other contributory factors, we investigated the potential role of neurophysin's short interdomain loop (residues 55-59), particularly the effects of loop residue mutation and of deleting amino-terminal residues 1-6, which interact with the loop and adjacent residues 53-54. The neurophysin studied was bovine neurophysin-I, necessitating determination of the crystal structures of des 1-6 bovine neurophysin-I in unliganded and liganded dimeric states, as well as the structure of its liganded Q58V mutant, in which peptide was bound with unexpectedly increased affinity. Increases in dimerization constant associated with selected loop residue mutations and with deletion of residues 1-6, together with structural data, provided evidence that dimerization of unliganded neurophysin-I is constrained by hydrogen bonding of the side chains of Gln58, Ser56, and Gln55 and by amino terminus interactions, loss or alteration of these hydrogen bonds, and probable loss of amino terminus interactions, contributing to the increased dimerization of the liganded state. An additional intersubunit hydrogen bond from residue 81, present only in the liganded state, was demonstrated as the largest single effect of ligand binding directly on the subunit interface. Comparison of bovine neurophysins I and II indicates broadly similar mechanisms for both, with the exception in neurophysin II of the absence of Gln55 side chain hydrogen bonds in the unliganded state and a more firmly established loss of amino terminus interactions in the liganded state. Evidence is presented that loop status modulates dimerization via long-range effects on neurophysin conformation involving neighboring Phe22 as a key intermediary.  相似文献   

6.
Serine hydroxymethyltransferase (EC 2.1.2.1), a member of the alpha-class of pyridoxal phosphate enzymes, catalyzes the reversible interconversion of serine and glycine, changing the chemical bonding at the C(alpha)-C(beta) bond of the serine side-chain mediated by the pyridoxal phosphate cofactor. Scission of the C(alpha)-C(beta) bond of serine substrate produces a glycine product and most likely formaldehyde, which reacts without dissociation with tetrahydropteroylglutamate cofactor. Crystal structures of the human and rabbit cytosolic serine hydroxymethyltransferases (SHMT) confirmed their close similarity in tertiary and dimeric subunit structure to each other and to aspartate aminotransferase, the archetypal alpha-class pyridoxal 5'-phosphate enzyme. We describe here the structure at 2.4 A resolution of Escherichia coli serine hydroxymethyltransferase in ternary complex with glycine and 5-formyl tetrahydropteroylglutamate, refined to an R-factor value of 17.4 % and R(free) value of 19.6 %. This structure reveals the interactions of both cofactors and glycine substrate with the enzyme. Comparison with the E. coli aspartate aminotransferase structure shows the distinctions in sequence and structure which define the folate cofactor binding site in serine hydroxymethyltransferase and the differences in orientation of the amino terminal arm, the evolution of which was necessary for elaboration of the folate binding site. Comparison with the unliganded rabbit cytosolic serine hydroxymethyltransferase structure identifies changes in the conformation of the enzyme, similar to those observed in aspartate aminotransferase, that probably accompany the binding of substrate. The tetrameric quaternary structure of liganded E. coli serine hydroxymethyltransferase also differs in symmetry and relative disposition of the functional tight dimers from that of the unliganded eukaryotic enzymes. SHMT tetramers have surface charge distributions which suggest distinctions in folate binding between eukaryotic and E. coli enzymes. The structure of the E. coli ternary complex provides the basis for a thorough investigation of its mechanism through characterization and structure determination of site mutants.  相似文献   

7.
The effect of neurophysin dimerization on Tyr-49, a residue adjacent to the hormone-binding site, was investigated by proton NMR in order to analyze the basis of the dimerization-induced increase in neurophysin hormone affinity. Dimerization-induced changes in Tyr-49 resonances, in two unliganded bovine neurophysins, suggested that Tyr-49 perturbation is an intrinsic consequence of dimerization, although Tyr-49 is distant from the monomer-monomer interface in the crystalline liganded state. To determine whether this perturbation reflects a conformational difference between liganded and unliganded states that places Tyr-49 at the interface in the unliganded state, or a dimerization-induced change in secondary (2 degrees) or tertiary (3 degrees) structure, the more general structural consequences of dimerization were further analyzed. No change in 2 degrees structure upon dimerization was demonstrable by CD. On the other hand, a general similarity of regions involved in dimerization in unliganded and liganded states was indicated by NMR evidence of participation of His-80 and Phe-35 in dimerization in the unliganded state; both residues are at the interface in the crystal structure and distant from Tyr-49. Consistent with a lack of direct participation of Tyr-49 at the monomer-monomer interface, dimerization induced at least two distinct slowly exchanging environmental states for the 3.5 ring protons of Tyr-49 without significantly increased dipolar broadening relative to the monomer. Two environments were also found in the dimer of des-1-8 neurophysin-I for the methyl protons of Thr-9, another residue distant from the monomer-monomer interface and close to the binding site in the liganded state.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Cancer-associated mutations in the BRCT domain of BRCA1 (BRCA1-BRCT) abolish its tumor suppressor function by disrupting interactions with other proteins such as BACH1. Many cancer-related mutations do not cause sufficient destabilization to lead to global unfolding under physiological conditions, and thus abrogation of function probably is due to localized structural changes. To explore the reasons for mutation-induced loss of function, the authors performed molecular dynamics simulations on three cancer-associated mutants, A1708E, M1775R, and Y1853ter, and on the wild type and benign M1652I mutant, and compared the structures and fluctuations. Only the cancer-associated mutants exhibited significant backbone structure differences from the wild-type crystal structure in BACH1-binding regions, some of which are far from the mutation sites. Backbone differences of the A1708E mutant from the liganded wild type structure in these regions are much larger than those of the unliganded wild type X-ray or molecular dynamics structures. These BACH1-binding regions of the cancer-associated mutants also exhibited increases in their fluctuation magnitudes compared with the same regions in the wild type and M1562I mutant, as quantified by quasiharmonic analysis. Several of the regions of increased fluctuation magnitude correspond to correlated motions of residues in contact that provide a continuous path of fluctuating amino acids in contact from the A1708E and Y1853ter mutation sites to the BACH1-binding sites with altered structure and dynamics. The increased fluctuations in the disease-related mutants suggest an increase in vibrational entropy in the unliganded state that could result in a larger entropy loss in the disease-related mutants upon binding BACH1 than in the wild type. To investigate this possibility, vibrational entropies of the A1708E and wild type in the free state and bound to a BACH1-derived phosphopeptide were calculated using quasiharmonic analysis, to determine the binding entropy difference DeltaDeltaS between the A1708E mutant and the wild type. DeltaDeltaS was determined to be -4.0 cal mol(-1) K(-1), with an uncertainty of 2 cal mol(-1) K(-1); that is, the entropy loss upon binding the peptide is 4.0 cal mol(-1) K(-1) greater for the A1708E mutant, corresponding to an entropic contribution to the DeltaDeltaG of binding (-TDeltaDeltaS) 1.1 kcal mol(-1) more positive for the mutant. The observed differences in structure, flexibility, and entropy of binding likely are responsible for abolition of BACH1 binding, and illustrate that many disease- related mutations could have very long-range effects. The methods described here have potential for identifying correlated motions responsible for other long-range effects of deleterious mutations.  相似文献   

9.
A key step in plant photorespiration, the oxidation of glycolate to glyoxylate, is carried out by the peroxisomal flavoprotein glycolate oxidase (EC 1.1.3.15). The three-dimensional structure of this alpha/beta barrel protein has been refined to 2 A resolution (Lindqvist Y. 1989. J Mol Biol 209:151-166). FMN dependent glycolate oxidase is a member of the family of alpha-hydroxy acid oxidases. Here we describe the crystallization and structure determination of two inhibitor complexes of the enzyme, TKP (3-Decyl-2,5-dioxo-4-hydroxy-3-pyrroline) and TACA (4-Carboxy-5-(1-pentyl)hexylsulfanyl-1,2,3-triazole). The structure of the TACA complex has been refined to 2.6 A resolution and the TKP complex, solved with molecular replacement, to 2.2 A resolution. The Rfree for the TACA and TKP complexes are 24.2 and 25.1%, respectively. The overall structures are very similar to the unliganded holoenzyme, but a closer examination of the active site reveals differences in the positioning of the flavin isoalloxazine ring and a displaced flexible loop in the TKP complex. The two inhibitors differ in binding mode and hydrophobic interactions, and these differences are reflected by the very different Ki values for the inhibitors, 16 nM for TACA and 4.8 microM for TKP. Implications of the structures of these enzyme-inhibitor complexes for the model for substrate binding and catalysis proposed from the holo-enzyme structure are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
The HIV-1 gp120 exterior envelope glycoprotein undergoes a series of conformational rearrangements while sequentially interacting with the receptor CD4 and coreceptor CCR5 or CXCR4 on the surface of host cells to initiate virus entry. Both the crystal structures of the HIV-1 gp120 core bound by the CD4 and antigen 17b, and the SIV gp120 core pre-bound by the CD4 are known. We have performed dynamic domain studies on the homology models of the CD4-bound and unliganded HIV-1 gp120 with modeled V3 and V4 loops to explore details of conformational changes, hinge axes, and hinge bending regions in the gp120 structures upon CD4 binding. Four dynamic domains were clustered and intricately motional modes for domain pairs were discovered. Together with the detailed comparative analyses of geometrical properties between the unliganded and liganded gp120 models, an induced fit model was proposed to explain events accompanying the CD4 engagement to the gp120, which provided new insight into the dynamics of the molecular induced binding mechanism that complements the molecular dynamics and crystallographic studies.  相似文献   

11.
Nonstandard nucleotide triphosphate pyrophosphatase (NTPase) can efficiently hydrolyze nonstandard purine nucleotides in the presence of divalent cations. The crystal structures of the NTPase from Pyrococcus horikoshii OT3 (PhNTPase) have been determined in two unliganded forms and in three liganded forms with inosine 5′-monophosphate (IMP), ITP and Mn2+, which visualize the recognition of these ligands unambiguously. The overall structure of PhNTPase is similar to that of previously reported crystal structures of the NTPase from Methanococcus jannaschii and the human ITPase. They share a similar protomer folding with two domains and a similar homodimeric quaternary structure. The dimeric interface of NTPase is well conserved, and the dimeric state might be important to constitute the active site of this enzyme. A conformational analysis of the five snapshots of PhNTPase structures using the multiple superposition method reveals that IMP, ITP and Mn2+ bind to the active site without inducing large local conformational changes, indicating that a combination of interdomain and interprotomer rigid-body shifts mainly describes the conformational change of PhNTPase. The interdomain and interprotomer conformations of the ITP liganded form are essentially the same as those observed in the unliganded form 1, indicating that ITP binding to PhNTPase in solution may follow the selection mode in which ITP binds to the subunit that happens to be in the conformation observed in the unliganded form 1. In contrast to the human ITPase inducing a large domain closure upon ITP binding, the interdomain active site cleft is generally closed in PhNTPase and only the IMP binding form shows a remarkable domain opening by 14° only in the B subunit. The interprotomer rigid-body rotation of PhNTPase has a tendency to keep the dimeric 2-fold symmetry, which is also true in human ITPase, thereby suggesting its relevance to the positive cooperativity of the dimeric NTPases. The exception of this rule is observed in the IMP liganded form in which the dimeric 2-fold symmetry is broken by a 3° interprotomer rotation in an unusual direction. A combination of the exceptional interdomain and interprotomer relocations is most likely the reason for the observed asymmetric IMP binding that might be necessary for PhNTPase to release the reaction product IMP.  相似文献   

12.
Analysis of the tertiary structural alterations in hemoglobin induced by ligand binding demonstrates that an allosteric core composed of the heme, histidine F8, the FG corner and part of the F-helix plays an essential role in co-operativity. This conclusion is based on structural and spectroscopic data and theoretical studies of hemoglobin chains. The methodology employed in the calculations is presented with details of the empirical energy function. Energy minimized structures of the unliganded hemoglobin chains, which serve as reference systems for the analysis, are described. To determine the structural changes induced by ligand binding, the effects of FeN bond shortening and of heme translation and tilting perturbations are examined. Energy minimization in the presence of the perturbations serves to provide information concerning the globin structural modifications produced by them. The validity of the results is supported by comparisons with the X-ray data of Anderson, Pulsinelli, Baldwin and Chothia on tertiary changes in the hemoglobin subunits.Internal to the allosteric core, there appear to be two stable positions for its elements: one of these corresponds to the liganded and the other to the unliganded species. The unliganded geometry fits without strain into the deoxy tetramer, while the liganded one fits without strain into the oxy tetramer. On ligation of a subunit in the deoxy tetramer, the structural changes within the allosteric core are in the direction of those found in going from the unliganded deoxy to the liganded oxy system, although they are reduced by the presence of constraints due to the other subunits in the deoxy tetramer. In addition, the quaternary constraints in the deoxy tetramer prevent the large overall displacement of the allosteric core that occurs in the transition to the liganded oxy tetramer. The coupling between the changes internal to the allosteric core, produced on ligation and the overall displacement of the core that accompanies the quaternary transition, is an essential element of the co-operative mechanism. As shown in previous work (Gelin & Karplus, 1977), the proximal histidine serves as the link between the position of the heme and the F-helix; the asymmetric orientation of the histidine in the deoxy structure, coupled with contributions from other heme-protein interactions, appears to initiate the tertiary structural changes induced by ligand binding. The reduced oxygen affinity of hemoglobin results not from tension on the heme in the unliganded structure (there is none) but instead from strain in the liganded subunit of the tetramer within the deoxy quaternary structure. Further, the changes in the allosteric core provide a relatively localized reaction path for transmitting information concerning ligand binding from the heme group to the surface of the subunit; particularly in the α-chain, the residue Val FG5 appears to play an important role in the reaction path.The present analysis has important implications for realistic statistical thermodynamic models of hemoglobin co-operativity. It suggests that the previously formulated model (Szabo & Karplus, 1972) should be generalized by the introduction of two different subunit tertiary structures in the deoxy and in the oxy tetramer; they would be associated with the unliganded and the liganded allosteric core, respectively, and would take account of steric constraints that reduce the ligand affinity of the deoxy tetramer.  相似文献   

13.
Hemoglobin Alberta has an amino acid substitution at position 101 (Glu----Gly), a residue involved in the alpha 1 beta 2 contact region of both the deoxy and oxy conformers of normal adult hemoglobin. Oxygen equilibrium measurements of stripped hemoglobin Alberta at 20 degrees C in the absence of phosphate revealed a high affinity (P50 = 0.75 mm Hg at pH 7), co-operative hemoglobin variant (n = 2.3 at pH 7) with a normal Bohr effect (- delta log P50/delta pH(7-8) = 0.65). The addition of inositol hexaphosphate resulted in a decrease in oxygen affinity (P50 = 8.2 mm Hg at pH 7), a slight increase in the value of n and an enhanced Bohr effect. Rapid mixing experiments reflected the equilibrium results. A rapid rate of carbon monoxide binding (l' = 7.0 X 10(5) M-1 S-1) and a slow rate of overall oxygen dissociation (k = 15 s-1) was seen at pH7 and 20 degrees C in the absence of phosphate. Under these experimental conditions the tetramer stability of liganded and unliganded hemoglobin Alberta was investigated by spectrophotometric kinetic techniques. The 4K4 value (the liganded tetramer-dimer equilibrium dissociation constant) for hemoglobin Alberta was found to be 0.83 X 10(-6) M compared to a 4K4 value for hemoglobin A of 2.3 X 10(-6) M, indicating that the Alberta tetramer was less dissociated into dimers than the tetramer of hemoglobin A. The values of 0K4 (the unliganded tetramer-dimer equilibrium dissociation constant) for hemoglobin Alberta and hemoglobin A were also measured and found to be 2.5 X 10(-8) M and 1.5 X 10(-10) M, respectively, demonstrating a greatly destabilized deoxyhemoglobin tetramer for hemoglobin Alberta compared to deoxyhemoglobin A. The functional and subunit dissociation properties of hemoglobin Alberta appear to be directly related to the dual role of the beta 101 residue in stabilizing the tetrameric form of the liganded structure, while concurrently destabilizing the unliganded tetramer molecule.  相似文献   

14.
The 2.1A crystal structure of the unliganded type II restriction endonuclease, HincII, is described. Although the asymmetric unit contains only a single monomer, crystal lattice contacts bring two monomers together to form a dimer very similar to that found in the DNA bound form. Comparison with the published DNA bound structure reveals that the DNA binding pocket is expanded in the unliganded structure. Comparison of the unliganded and DNA liganded structures reveals a simple rotation of subunits by 11 degrees each, or 22 degrees total, to a more closed structure around the bound DNA. Comparison of this conformational change to that observed in the other type II restriction endonucleases where DNA bound and unliganded forms have both been characterized, shows considerable variation in the types of conformational changes that can occur. The conformational changes in three can be described by a simple rotation of subunits, while in two others both rotation and translation of subunits relative to one another occurs. In addition, the endonucleases having subunits that undergo the greatest amount of rotation upon DNA binding are found to be those that distort the bound DNA the least, suggesting that DNA bending may be less facile in dimers possessing greater flexibility.  相似文献   

15.
Bug proteins form a large family of periplasmic solute-binding proteins well represented in beta-proteobacteria. They adopt a characteristic Venus flytrap fold with two globular domains bisected by a ligand-binding cleft. The structures of two liganded Bug proteins have revealed that the family is specific for carboxylated solutes, with a characteristic mode of binding involving two highly conserved beta strand-beta turn-alpha helix motifs originating from each domain. These two motifs form hydrogen bonds with a carboxylate group of the ligand, both directly and via conserved water molecules, and have thus been termed the carboxylate pincers. In both crystallized Bug proteins, the ligands were found enclosed between the two domains and inaccessible to solvent, suggesting an inter-domain hinge-bending motion upon ligand binding. We report here the first structures of an open, unliganded Bug protein and of the same protein with a citrate ion bound in the open cavity. One of the ligand carboxylate groups is bound to one half of the carboxylate pincers by the beta strand-beta turn-alpha helix motif from domain 1, and the citrate ion forms several additional interactions with domain 1. The ligand is accessible to solvent and has very few contacts with domain 2. In this open, liganded structure, the second part of the carboxylate pincers originating from domain 2 is not stabilized by ligand binding, and a loop replaces the beta turn. In the unliganded structure, both motifs of the carboxylate pincers are highly mobile, and neither of the two beta turns is formed. Thus, ligand recognition is performed by domain 1, with the carboxylate group serving as an initial anchoring point. Stabilization of the closed conformation requires proper interactions to be established with domain 2, and thus domain 2 discriminates between productively and non-productively bound ligands.  相似文献   

16.
The hotdog-fold enzyme 4-hydroxybenzoyl-coenzyme A (4-HB-CoA) thioesterase from Arthrobacter sp. strain AU catalyzes the hydrolysis of 4-HB-CoA to form 4-hydroxybenzoate (4-HB) and coenzyme A (CoA) in the final step of the 4-chlorobenzoate dehalogenation pathway. Guided by the published X-ray structures of the liganded enzyme (Thoden, J. B., Zhuang, Z., Dunaway-Mariano, D., and Holden H. M. (2003) J.Biol. Chem. 278, 43709-43716), a series of site-directed mutants were prepared for testing the roles of active site residues in substrate binding and catalysis. The mutant thioesterases were subjected to X-ray structure determination to confirm retention of the native fold, and in some cases, to reveal changes in the active site configuration. In parallel, the wild-type and mutant thioesterases were subjected to transient and steady-state kinetic analysis, and to (18)O-solvent labeling experiments. Evidence is provided that suggests that Glu73 functions in nucleophilic catalysis, that Gly65 and Gln58 contribute to transition-state stabilization via hydrogen bond formation with the thioester moiety and that Thr77 orients the water nucleophile for attack at the 4-hydroxybenzoyl carbon of the enzyme-anhydride intermediate. The replacement of Glu73 with Asp was shown to switch the function of the carboxylate residue from nucleophilic catalysis to base catalysis and thus, the reaction from a two-step process involving a covalent enzyme intermediate to a single-step hydrolysis reaction. The E73D/T77A double mutant regained most of the catalytic efficiency lost in the E73D single mutant. The results from (31)P NMR experiments indicate that the substrate nucleotide unit is bound to the enzyme surface. Kinetic analysis of site-directed mutants was carried out to determine the contributions made by Arg102, Arg150, Ser120, and Thr121 in binding the nucleotide unit. Lastly, we show by kinetic and X-ray analyses of Asp31, His64, and Glu78 site-directed mutants that these three active site residues are important for productive binding of the substrate 4-hydroxybenzoyl ring.  相似文献   

17.
Small-angle x-ray scattering data on the unliganded full-length fully glycosylated HIV-1 gp120, the soluble CD4 (domains 1-2) receptor, and their complex in solution are presented. Ab initio structure restorations using these data provides the first look at the envelope shape for the unliganded and the complexed gp120 molecule. Fitting known crystal structures of the unliganded SIV and the complexed HIV gp120 core regions within our resultant shape constraints reveals movement of the V3 loop upon binding.  相似文献   

18.
A common feature in the structures of GT-A-fold-type glycosyltransferases is a mobile polypeptide loop that has been observed to participate in substrate recognition and enclose the active site upon substrate binding. This is the case for the human ABO(H) blood group B glycosyltransferase GTB, where amino acid residues 177-195 display significantly higher levels of disorder in the unliganded state than in the fully liganded state. Structural studies of mutant enzymes GTB/C80S/C196S and GTB/C80S/C196S/C209S at resolutions ranging from 1.93 to 1.40 Å display the opposite trend, where the unliganded structures show nearly complete ordering of the mobile loop residues that is lost upon substrate binding. In the liganded states of the mutant structures, while the UDP moiety of the donor molecule is observed to bind in the expected location, the galactose moiety is observed to bind in a conformation significantly different from that observed for the wild-type chimeric structures. Although this would be expected to impede catalytic turnover, the kinetics of the transfer reaction are largely unaffected. These structures demonstrate that the enzymes bind the donor in a conformation more similar to the dominant solution rotamer and facilitate its gyration into the catalytically competent form. Further, by preventing active-site closure, these structures provide a basis for recently observed cooperativity in substrate binding. Finally, the mutation of C80S introduces a fully occupied UDP binding site at the enzyme dimer interface that is observed to be dependent on the binding of H antigen acceptor analog.  相似文献   

19.
The catalytic antibody 6D9, which was raised against a transition-state analogue (TSA), catalyzes the hydrolysis of a non-bioactive chloramphenicol monoester to generate chloramphenicol. It has been shown that 6D9 utilizes the binding affinity in the catalysis; the differential affinity of the TSA relative to the substrate is equal to the rate enhancement. To reveal the recognition mechanism of 6D9 for the TSA and the substrate, we performed NMR analysis of the Fv fragment of 6D9 (6D9-Fv), together with site-directed mutagenesis and stopped-flow kinetic analyses. Among six 6D9-Fv mutants, Y58(H)A and W100i(H)A displayed significant reductions in their affinities to the TSA, while their substrate-binding affinities were identical with that of the wild-type 6D9-Fv. The stopped-flow kinetic studies revealed that the TSA binding to 6D9-Fv occurred by an induced-fit mechanism. In contrast, no induced-fit type of TSA-binding mechanism was observed for Y58(H)A and W100i(H)A. From NMR experiments, we identified the residues with chemical shifts that were perturbed by the ligand-binding. The residues affected by the TSA binding were located on the TSA-binding site determined by the X-ray study, and on the regions far from the binding site. On the other hand, the residues affected by the substrate binding were localized on the TSA-binding site. As for W100i(H)A, no residue other than those in the binding site was affected by the ligand binding. On the basis of these results and the crystal structure, we concluded that the TSA binding induced a conformational change involving the formation of aromatic-aromatic interactions and a hydrogen bond. These interactions can account for the differential affinity for the TSA relative to the substrate. W100i(H) probably plays an important role in inducing the conformational changes. The present NMR studies have enabled us to visualize the concept of transition-state stabilization in enzymatic catalysis, in which the transition-state contacts are better than those of the substrate.  相似文献   

20.
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