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1.
The three-dimensional structure of Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase from spinach leaves has been determined by X-ray crystal structure analysis. The atomic coordinates were refined at 2.0 A resolution using the Hendrickson and Konnert program for stereochemically restrained refinement against structure factors, which allowed the use of non-crystallographic symmetry. The crystallographic residual error for the refined model was 24.9%, with a root mean square deviation of 0.03 A from the ideal bond length and an average atomic temperature factor of 9.6 A. A dimeric molecule of the enzyme is comprised of two identical subunits related by a non-crystallographic 2-fold axis. Each subunit of 154 amino acid residues is composed primarily of eight anti-parallel beta-strands that form a flattened cylinder, plus three external loops. The main-chain hydrogen bonds primarily link the beta-strands. The overall structure of this enzyme is quite similar to that of the bovine dismutase except for some parts. The single disulfide bridge (Cys57-Cys146) and the salt bridge (Arg79-Asp101) may stabilize the loop regions of the structure. The Cu2+ and Zn2+ ions in the active site lie 6.1 A apart at the bottom of the long channel. The Cu2+ ligands (ND1 of His-46, and NE2 of His-48, -63, and -120) show an uneven tetrahedral distortion from a square plane. The Zn2+ ligands (ND1 of His-63, -71, and -80 and OD1 of Asp-83) show an almost tetrahedral geometry. The imidazole ring of His-63 forms a bridge between the Cu2+ and Zn2+ ions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The structure of the catalytic site in one subunit of bovine CuZn superoxide dismutase is shown to be highly variable. A series of crystal structures at approximately 1.7 A have been determined using data collected from different crystals. Several conformations are observed for the copper site from one of the subunits. These conformations lie between those expected for the Cu(II) and Cu(I) forms of the enzyme and may represent a slow positional rearrangement of the Cu site during the crystallisation process due to the presence of a trace reductant in the mother liquor. These states perhaps indicate some functionally relevant structural steps that ultimately result in the breakage of the imidazolate bridge between the two metal sites.This behaviour is not observed for the second subunit of the dimeric enzyme, which remains in the five-coordinate, distorted square planar geometry in all cases. We suggest that this asymmetric behaviour may be caused by the lack of mobility for the Glu119-Leu142 loop region in the second subunit caused by crystal contacts. This region forms one wall of the active-site cavity, and its mobility has been suggested, via molecular dynamics studies, to be important for the catalytic mechanism.  相似文献   

3.
The high-resolution X-ray structure of wild-type staphylococcal nuclease (E43 SNase) suggests that Glu 43 acts a general basic catalyst to assist the attack of water on a phosphodiester substrate [Loll, P., & Lattman, E. E. (1989) Proteins: Struct., Funct., Genet. 5, 183]. Glu 43 is located at the base of the solvent-exposed and conformationally mobile omega-loop in the active site of E43 SNase having the sequence Glu43-Thr44-Lys45-His46-Pro47-Lys48- Lys49-Gly50-Val51-Glu52, where the gamma-carboxylate of Glu 52 is hydrogen bonded to the amide hydrogen of Glu 43. With a metabolic selection for SNase activity produced in an Escherichia coli host, we detected an unexpected deletion of residues 44-49 of the omega-loop of E43 SNase in cassette mutagenesis experiments designed to randomize codons 44 and 45 in the omega-loop and increase the activity of the previously described E43D mutation (D43 SNase). A high-resolution X-ray structure of D43 SNase has revealed that the E43D substitution significantly changes the structure of the omega-loop, reduces the interaction of the essential Ca2+ ion with its active-site ligands, and diminishes the network of hydrogen-bonded water molecules in the active site [Loll, P., & Lattman, E. E. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 6866]. This deletion of six amino acids from the omega-loop generates a protein (E43 delta SNase) having a partially solvent-exposed, surface beta-turn with the sequence Glu43-Gly50-Val51-Glu52; the structure of this beta-turn is addressed in the following article [Baldisseri et al. (1991) Biochemistry (following paper in this issue)].(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Refined structure of dimeric diphtheria toxin at 2.0 A resolution.   总被引:5,自引:4,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The refined structure of dimeric diphtheria toxin (DT) at 2.0 A resolution, based on 37,727 unique reflections (F > 1 sigma (F)), yields a final R factor of 19.5% with a model obeying standard geometry. The refined model consists of 523 amino acid residues, 1 molecule of the bound dinucleotide inhibitor adenylyl 3'-5' uridine 3' monophosphate (ApUp), and 405 well-ordered water molecules. The 2.0-A refined model reveals that the binding motif for ApUp includes residues in the catalytic and receptor-binding domains and is different from the Rossmann dinucleotide-binding fold. ApUp is bound in part by a long loop (residues 34-52) that crosses the active site. Several residues in the active site were previously identified as NAD-binding residues. Glu 148, previously identified as playing a catalytic role in ADP-ribosylation of elongation factor 2 by DT, is about 5 A from uracil in ApUp. The trigger for insertion of the transmembrane domain of DT into the endosomal membrane at low pH may involve 3 intradomain and 4 interdomain salt bridges that will be weakened at low pH by protonation of their acidic residues. The refined model also reveals that each molecule in dimeric DT has an "open" structure unlike most globular proteins, which we call an open monomer. Two open monomers interact by "domain swapping" to form a compact, globular dimeric DT structure. The possibility that the open monomer resembles a membrane insertion intermediate is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Shi W  Tanaka KS  Crother TR  Taylor MW  Almo SC  Schramm VL 《Biochemistry》2001,40(36):10800-10809
Adenine phosphoribosyltransferase (APRTase) is a widely distributed enzyme, and its deficiency in humans causes the accumulation of 2,8-dihydroxyadenine. It is the sole catalyst for adenine recycling in most eukaryotes. The most commonly expressed APRTase has subunits of approximately 187 amino acids, but the only crystal structure is from Leishmania donovani, which expresses a long form of the enzyme with 237 residues. Saccharomyces cerevisiae APRTase was selected as a representative of the short APRTases, and the structure of the apo-enzyme and sulfate bound forms were solved to 1.5 and 1.75 A, respectively. Yeast APRTase is a dimeric molecule, and each subunit is composed of a central five-stranded beta-sheet surrounded by five alpha-helices, a structural theme found in all known purine phosphoribosyltransferases. The structures reveal several important features of APRTase function: (i) sulfate ions bound at the 5'-phosphate and pyrophosphate binding sites; (ii) a nonproline cis peptide bond (Glu67-Ser68) at the pyrophosphate binding site in both apo-enzyme and sulfate-bound forms; and (iii) a catalytic loop that is open and ordered in the apo-enzyme but open and disordered in the sulfate-bound form. Alignment of conserved amino acids in short-APRTases from 33 species reveals 13 invariant and 15 highly conserved residues present in hinges, catalytic site loops, and the catalytic pocket. Mutagenesis of conserved residues in the catalytic loop, subunit interface, and phosphoribosylpyrophosphate binding site indicates critical roles for the tip of the catalytic loop (Glu106) and a catalytic site residue Arg69, respectively. Mutation of one loop residue (Tyr103Phe) increases k(cat) by 4-fold, implicating altered dynamics for the catalytic site loop.  相似文献   

6.
The structure of rat carboxypeptidase A2 (CPA2), which has a unique specificity for tryptophan-containing COOH-terminal peptides, has been determined in an unliganded state at 1.9-A resolution and refined to a crystallographic R-factor of 18.3%. Comparison of the structure of CPA2 with that of bovine carboxypeptidase A (referred to here as CPA1) reveals that the specificity of the former for larger amino acids probably arises from two amino acid replacements within the binding cavity (Thr268----Ala and Leu203----Met), coupled with differences in the positions of conserved residues in a surface loop on one face of the specificity pocket. The position of the reactive-site surface loop may be affected also by a disulfide bridge between Cys210 and Cys244. In this unliganded form of the enzyme, Tyr248 takes up a position interior to the specificity pocket and is distinct from that observed in bovine CPA1. The structural differences between CPA1 and CPA2 correlate strongly with crystallographically determined temperature factors and thus appear to be largest where the enzyme is flexible.  相似文献   

7.
《Free radical research》2013,47(1):349-361
Copper/zinc superoxide dismutase is typically an enzyme of eukaryotes. The presence of the enzyme in the ponyfish symbiont Photobocterium leiognothi and some free living bacteria does not have an immediate explanation. Amino acid sequence alignment of 19 Cu/Zn superoxide disrnutases shows 21 invariant residues in key positions related to maintenance of the β-barrel fold, the active site structure including the electrostatic channel loop, and dimer contacts. Nineteen other residues are invariant in 18 of the 19 sequences. Thirteen of these nearly invariant residues show substitutions in Photobocterium Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase. Copper/zinc superoxide disrnutase from the trematode Schisiosoma mansoni shows an N-terminal sub-domain with a hydrophobic leader peptide. as in human extracellular superoxide dismutase which is a Cu/Zn enzyme. The latter also has a C-terminal sub-domain with preponderance of hydrophilic and positively charged residues. The amino acid sequence of this superoxide dismutase between the N-terminal and C-terminal regions shares many features of cytosolic Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase. including 20 of the 21 invariant residues found in 19 Cu/Zn enzymes, suggesting a similar type of β-barrel fold and active site structure for the extracellular enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
Binding of Zn2+ has been shown previously to inhibit the ubiquinol cytochrome c oxidoreductase (cyt bc1 complex). X-ray diffraction data in Zn-treated crystals of the avian cyt bc1 complex identified two binding sites located close to the catalytic Qo site of the enzyme. One of them (Zn01) might interfere with the egress of protons from the Qo site to the aqueous phase. Using Zn K-edge x-ray absorption fine-structure spectroscopy, we report here on the local structure of Zn2+ bound stoichiometrically to noncrystallized cyt bc1 complexes. We performed a comparative x-ray absorption fine-structure spectroscopy study by examining avian, bovine, and bacterial enzymes. A large number of putative clusters, built by combining information from first-shell analysis and metalloprotein databases, were fitted to the experimental spectra by using ab initio simulations. This procedure led us to identify the binding clusters with high levels of confidence. In both the avian and bovine enzyme, a tetrahedral ligand cluster formed by two His, one Lys, and one carboxylic residue was found, and this ligand attribution fit the crystallographic Zn01 location of the avian enzyme. In the chicken enzyme, the ligands were the His121, His268, Lys270, and Asp253 residues, and in the homologous bovine enzyme they were the His121, His267, Lys269, and Asp254 residues. Zn2+ bound to the bacterial cyt bc1 complex exhibited quite different spectral features, consistent with a coordination number of 6. The best-fit octahedral cluster was formed by one His, two carboxylic acids, one Gln or Asn residue, and two water molecules. It was interesting that by aligning the crystallographic structures of the bacterial and avian enzymes, this group of residues was found located in the region homologous to that of the Zn01 site. This cluster included the His276, Asp278, Glu295, and Asn279 residues of the cyt b subunit. The conserved location of the Zn2+ binding sites at the entrance of the putative proton release pathways, and the presence of His residues point to a common mechanism of inhibition. As previously shown for the photosynthetic bacterial reaction center, zinc would compete with protons for binding to the His residues, thus impairing their function as proton donors/acceptors.  相似文献   

9.
The three-dimensional structure of bovine lens leucine aminopeptidase (EC 3.4.11.1) complexed with bestatin, a slow-binding inhibitor, has been solved to 3.0 A resolution by the multiple isomorphous replacement method with phase combination and density modification. In addition, this structure and the structure of the isomorphous native enzyme have been refined at 2.25 and 2.32 A resolution, respectively, with crystallographic R-factors of 0.180 and 0.159, respectively. The current structural model for the enzyme includes the two zinc ions and 481 of the 487 amino acid residues comprising the asymmetric unit. The enzyme is physiologically active as a hexamer, which has 32 symmetry, and is triangular in shape with a triangle edge length of 115 A and maximal thickness of 90 A. Monomers are crystallographically equivalent. Each is folded into two unequal alpha/beta domains connected by an alpha-helix to give a comma-like shape with approximate maximal dimensions of 90 A x 55 A x 55 A. The secondary structural composition is 35% alpha-helix and 23% beta-strand. The N-terminal domain (160 amino acid residues) mediates trimer-trimer interactions and does not appear to participate directly in catalysis, while the C-terminal domain (327 amino acid residues) is responsible for catalysis and binds the two zinc ions, which are less than 3 A apart. These two metal ions are located near the edge of an eight-stranded, saddle-shaped beta-sheet. The zinc ion that has the lower temperature factor is co-ordinated by one carboxylate oxygen atom from each of Asp255, Asp332 and Glu334, and the carbonyl oxygen of Asp332. The other zinc ion, presumed to be readily exchangeable, is co-ordinated by one carboxylate oxygen atom of each of Asp273 and Glu334 and the side-chain amino group of Lys250. The active site also contains two positively charged residues, Lys262 and Arg336. The six active sites are themselves located in the interior of the hexamer, where they line a disk-shaped cavity of radius 15 A and thickness 10 A. Access to this cavity is provided by solvent channels that run along the 2-fold symmetry axes. Bestatin binds to one of the active site zinc ions, and its phenylalanine and leucine side-chains occupy hydrophobic pockets adjacent to the active site. Finally, the relationship between bovine lens leucine aminopeptidase and the homologous enzyme pepA from Escherichia coli is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Endonuclease I is a junction-resolving enzyme encoded by bacteriophage T7, that selectively binds and cleaves four-way DNA junctions. We have recently solved the structure of this dimeric enzyme at atomic resolution, and identified the probable catalytic residues. The putative active site comprises the side-chains of three acidic amino acids (Glu20, Asp55 and Glu65) together with a lysine residue (Lys67), and shares strong similarities with a number of type II restriction enzymes. However, it differs from a typical restriction enzyme as the proposed catalytic residues in both active sites are contributed by both polypeptides of the dimer. Mutagenesis experiments confirm the importance of all the proposed active site residues. We have carried out in vitro complementation experiments using heterodimers formed from mutants in different active site residues, showing that Glu20 is located on a different monomer from the remaining amino acid residues comprising the active site. These experiments confirm that the helix-exchanged architecture of the enzyme creates a mixed active site in solution. Such a composite active site structure should result in unilateral cleavage by the complemented heterodimer; this has been confirmed by the use of a cruciform substrate. Based upon analogy with closely similar restriction enzyme active sites and our mutagenesis experiments, we propose a two-metal ion mechanism for the hydrolytic cleavage of DNA junctions.  相似文献   

11.
Tonin is a mammalian serine protease that is capable of generating the vasoconstrictive agent, angiotensin II, directly from its precursor protein, angiotensinogen, a process that normally requires two enzymes, renin and angiotensin-converting enzyme. The X-ray crystallographic structure determination and refinement of tonin at 1.8 A resolution and the analysis of the resulting model are reported. The initial phases were obtained by the method of molecular replacement using as the search model the structure of bovine trypsin. The refined model of tonin consists of 227 amino acid residues out of the 235 in the complete molecule, 149 water molecules, and one zinc ion. The R-factor (R = sigma Fo - Fc/sigma Fo) is 0.196 for the 14,997 measured data between 8 and 1.8 A resolution with I greater than or equal to sigma (I). It is estimated that the overall root-mean-square error in the coordinates is about 0.3 A. The structure of tonin that has been determined is not in its active conformation, but one that has been perturbed by the binding of Zn2+ in the active site. Zn2+ was included in the buffer to aid the crystallization. Nevertheless, the structure of tonin that is described is for the most part similar to its native form as indicated by the close tertiary structural homology with kallikrein. The differences in the structures of the two enzymes are concentrated in several loop regions; these structural differences are probably responsible for the differences in their reactivities and specificities.  相似文献   

12.
Triosephosphate isomerase (TIM) is a dimeric glycolytic enzyme. TIM from Trypanosoma brucei brucei has been crystallized at pH 7.0 in 2.4 M-ammonium sulphate. The well-diffracting crystals have one dimer per asymmetric unit. The structure has been refined at 1.83 A resolution with an R-factor of 18.3% for all data between 6 A and 1.83 A (37,568 reflections). The model consists of 3778 protein atoms and 297 solvent atoms. Subunit 1 is involved in considerably more crystal contacts than subunit 2. Correlated with these differences in crystal packing is the observation that only in the active site of subunit 2 is a sulphate ion bound. Furthermore, significant differences with respect to structure and flexibility are observed in three loops near the active site. In particular, there is a 7 A positional difference of the tip of the flexible loop (loop 6) when comparing subunit 1 and subunit 2. Also, the neighbouring loops (loop 5 and loop 7) have significantly different conformations and flexibility. In subunit 1, loop 6 is in an "open" conformation, in subunit 2, loop 6 is in an "almost closed" conformation. Only in the presence of a phosphate-containing ligand, such as glycerol-3-phosphate, does loop 6 take up the "closed" conformation. Loop 6 and loop 7 (and also to some extent loop 5) are rather flexible in the almost closed conformation, but well defined in the open and closed conformations. The closing of loop 6 (167 to 180), as observed in the almost closed conformation, slightly changes the main-chain conformation of the catalytic glutamate, Glu167, leading to a change of the chi 1 angle of this residue from approximately -60 degrees to approximately 60 degrees and the weakening of the hydrogen bonds between its polar side-chain atoms and Ser96. In the closed conformation, in the presence of glycerol-3-phosphate, the main-chain atoms of Glu167 remain in the same position as in the almost closed conformation, but the side-chain has rotated around the CA-CB bond changing chi 1 from approximately 60 degrees to approximately -60 degrees. In this new position the hydrogen bonding to Ser96 is completely lost and also a water-mediated salt bridge between OE2(Glu167) and NE(Arg99) is lost. Comparison of the two independently refined subunits, showed that the root-mean-square deviation for all 249 CA atoms is 0.9 A; for the CA atoms of the beta-strands this is only 0.2 A. The average B-factor for all subunit 1 and subunit 2 atoms is 20 A2 and 25 A2, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
We have solved the 2.5-A crystal structure of 1-deoxy-D-xylulose-5-phosphate reductoisomerase, an enzyme involved in the mevalonate-independent 2-C-methyl-D-erythritol-4-phosphate pathway of isoprenoid biosynthesis. The structure reveals that the enzyme is present as a homodimer. Each monomer displays a V-like shape and is composed of an amino-terminal dinucleotide binding domain, a connective domain, and a carboxyl-terminal four-helix bundle domain. The connective domain is responsible for dimerization and harbors most of the active site. The strictly conserved acidic residues Asp(150), Glu(152), Glu(231), and Glu(234) are clustered at the putative active site and are probably involved in the binding of divalent cations mandatory for enzyme activity. The connective and four-helix bundle domains show significant mobility upon superposition of the dinucleotide binding domains of the three conformational states present in the asymmetric unit of the crystal. A still more pronounced flexibility is observed for a loop spanning residues 186 to 216, which adopts two completely different conformations within the three protein conformers. A possible involvement of this loop in an induced fit during substrate binding is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Class II fructose 1,6-bisphosphate aldolases (FBP-aldolases) catalyse the zinc-dependent, reversible aldol condensation of dihydroxyacetone phosphate (DHAP) and glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate (G3P) to form fructose 1,6-bisphosphate (FBP). Analysis of the structure of the enzyme from Escherichia coli in complex with a transition state analogue (phosphoglycolohydroxamate, PGH) suggested that substrate binding caused a conformational change in the beta5-alpha7 loop of the enzyme and that this caused the relocation of two glutamate residues (Glu181 and Glu182) into the proximity of the active site. Site-directed mutagenesis of these two glutamate residues (E181A and E182A) along with another active site glutamate (Glu174) was carried out and the mutant enzymes characterised using steady-state kinetics. Mutation of Glu174 (E174A) resulted in an enzyme which was severely crippled in catalysis, in agreement with its position as a zinc ligand in the enzyme's structure. The E181A mutant showed the same properties as the wild-type enzyme indicating that the residue played no major role in substrate binding or enzyme catalysis. In contrast, mutation of Glu182 (E182A) demonstrated that Glu182 is important in the catalytic cycle of the enzyme. Furthermore, the measurement of deuterium kinetic isotope effects using [1(S)-(2)H]DHAP showed that, for the wild-type enzyme, proton abstraction was not the rate determining step, whereas in the case of the E182A mutant this step had become rate limiting, providing evidence for the role of Glu182 in abstraction of the C1 proton from DHAP in the condensation direction of the reaction. Glu182 lies in a loop of polypeptide which contains four glycine residues (Gly176, Gly179, Gly180 and Gly184) and a quadruple mutant (where each glycine was converted to alanine) showed that flexibility of this loop was important for the correct functioning of the enzyme, probably to change the microenvironment of Glu182 in order to perturb its pK(a) to a value suitable for its role in proton abstraction. These results highlight the need for further studies of the dynamics of the enzyme in order to fully understand the complexities of loop closure and catalysis in this enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
Phospholipase A(2) catalyses hydrolysis of the ester bond at the C2 position of 3-sn-phosphoglycerides. Here we report the 1.9A resolution crystal structure of the triple mutant K56,120,121M of bovine pancreatic phospholipase A(2). The structure was solved by molecular replacement method using the orthorhombic form of the recombinant phospholipase A(2). The final protein model contains all the 123 amino acid residues, two calcium ions, 125 water molecules and one 2-methyl-2-4-pentanediol molecule. The model has been refined to a crystallographic R-factor of 19.6% (R(free) of 25.9%) for all data between 14.2A and 1.9A. The residues 62-66, which are in a surface loop, are always disordered in the structures of bovine pancreatic phospholipase A(2) and its mutants. It is interesting to note that the residues 62-66 in the present structure is ordered and the conformation varies substantially from those in the previously published structures of this enzyme. An unexpected and interesting observation in the present structure is that, in addition to the functionally important calcium ion in the active site, one more calcium ion is found near the N terminus. Detailed structural analyses suggest that binding of the second calcium ion could be responsible for the conformational change and the ordering of the surface loop. Furthermore, the results suggest a structural reciprocity between the k(cat)(*) allosteric site and surface loop at the i-face, which represents a newly identified structural property of secreted phospholipase A(2).  相似文献   

16.
Bacterial and eukaryotic Cu,Zn superoxide dismutases show remarkable differences in the active site region and in their quaternary structure organization. We report here a functional comparison between four Cu,Zn superoxide dismutases from Gram-negative bacteria and the eukaryotic bovine enzyme. Our data indicate that bacterial dimeric variants are characterized by catalytic rates higher than that of the bovine enzyme, probably due to the solvent accessibility of their active site. Prokaryotic Cu,Zn superoxide dismutases also show higher resistance to hydrogen peroxide inactivation and lower HCO3- -dependent peroxidative activity. Moreover, unlike the eukaryotic enzyme, all bacterial variants are susceptible to inactivation by chelating agents and show variable sensitivity to proteolytic attack, with the E. coli monomeric enzyme showing higher rates of inactivation by EDTA and proteinase K. We suggest that differences between individual bacterial variants could be due to the influence of modifications at the dimer interface on the enzyme conformational flexibility.  相似文献   

17.
A mutant of bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI) has been constructed and expressed in Escherichia coli in order to probe the kinetic and structural consequences of truncating the binding loop residues to alanine. In addition to two such mutations (Thr11Ala and Pro13Ala), it has a conservative Lys15Arg substitution at position P(1) and an unrelated Met52Leu change. In spite of the binding loop modification, the affinity for trypsin is only 30 times lower than that of the wild-type protein. At pH 7.5 the protein can be crystallized on the time-scale of hours, yielding very stable crystals of a new (tetragonal) form of BPTI. Conventional source X-ray data collected to 1.4 A at room temperature allowed anisotropic structure refinement characterized by R=0.1048. The structure reveals all 58 residues, including the complete C terminus, which is in a salt-bridge contact with the N terminus. The Cys14-Cys38 disulfide bridge is observed in two distinct chiralities. This bridge, together with an internal water molecule, contributes to the stabilization of the binding loop. The Ala mutations have only an insignificant and localized effect on the binding loop, which retains its wild-type conformation (maximum deviation of loop C(alpha) atoms of 0.7 A at Ala13). Four (instead of the typical three) additional water molecules are buried in an internal cleft and connected to the surface via a sulfate anion. Three more SO(4)(2-) anions are seen in the electron density, one of them located on a 2-fold axis. It participates in the formation of a dimeric structure between symmetry-related BPTI molecules, in which electrostatic and hydrogen bonding interactions resulting from the mutated Lys15Arg substitution are of central importance. This dimeric interaction involves direct recognition loop-recognition loop contacts, part of which are hydrophobic interactions of the patches created by the alanine mutations. Another 2-fold symmetric interaction between the BPTI molecules involves the formation of an antiparallel intermolecular beta-sheet that, together with the adjacent intramolecular beta-hairpin loops, creates a four-stranded structure.  相似文献   

18.
The structure of toxic monomeric diphtheria toxin (DT) was determined at 2.3 A resolution by molecular replacement based on the domain structures in dimeric DT and refined to an R factor of 20.7%. The model consists of 2 monomers in the asymmetric unit (1,046 amino acid residues), including 2 bound adenylyl 3'-5' uridine 3' monophosphate molecules and 396 water molecules. The structures of the 3 domains are virtually identical in monomeric and dimeric DT; however, monomeric DT is compact and globular as compared to the "open" monomer within dimeric DT (Bennett MJ, Choe S, Eisenberg D, 1994b, Protein Sci 3:0000-0000). Detailed differences between monomeric and dimeric DT are described, particularly (1) changes in main-chain conformations of 8 residues acting as a hinge to "open" or "close" the receptor-binding (R) domain, and (2) a possible receptor-docking site, a beta-hairpin loop protruding from the R domain containing residues that bind the cell-surface DT receptor. Based on the monomeric and dimeric DT crystal structures we have determined and the solution studies of others, we present a 5-step structure-based mechanism of intoxication: (1) proteolysis of a disulfide-linked surface loop (residues 186-201) between the catalytic (C) and transmembrane (T) domains; (2) binding of a beta-hairpin loop protruding from the R domain to the DT receptor, leading to receptor-mediated endocytosis; (3) low pH-triggered open monomer formation and exposure of apolar surfaces in the T domain, which insert into the endosomal membrane; (4) translocation of the C domain into the cytosol; and (5) catalysis by the C domain of ADP-ribosylation of elongation factor 2.  相似文献   

19.
The crystal structure of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) integrase that contains in a single polypeptide the core and the C-terminal deoxyoligonucleotide binding domain has been determined at 3 A resolution with an R-value of 0.203 in the space group P2(1)2(1)2(1). Four integrase core domains and one C-terminal domain are found to be well defined in the asymmetric unit. The segment extending from residues 114 to 121 assumes the same position as seen in the integrase core domain of avian sarcoma virus as well as human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1) crystallized in the absence of sodium cacodylate. The flexible loop in the active site, composed of residues 141-151, remains incompletely defined, but the location of the essential Glu152 residue is unambiguous. The residues from 210-218 that link the core and C-terminal domains can be traced as an extension from the core with a short gap at residues 214-215. The C(alpha) folding of the C-terminal domain is similar to the solution structure of this domain from HIV-1 integrase. However, the dimeric form seen in the NMR structure cannot exist as related by the non-crystallographic symmetry in the SIV integrase crystal. The two flexible loops of the C-terminal domain, residues 228-236 and residues 244-249, are much better fixed in the crystal structure than in the NMR structure with the former in the immediate vicinity of the flexible loop of the core domain. The interface between the two domains encompasses a solvent-exclusion area of 1500 A(2). Residues from both domains purportedly involved in DNA binding are narrowly distributed on the same face of the molecule. They include Asp64, Asp116, Glu152 and Lys159 from the core and Arg231, Leu234, Arg262, Arg263 and Lys264 from the C-terminal domain. A model for DNA binding is proposed to bridge the two domains by tethering the 228-236 loop of the C-terminal domain and the flexible loop of the core.  相似文献   

20.
Gether U  Norregaard L  Loland CJ 《Life sciences》2001,68(19-20):2187-2198
The dopamine transporter is member of a large family of Na+/Cl- dependent neurotransmitter and amino acid transporters. Little is known about the molecular basis for substrate translocation in this class of transporters as well as their tertiary structure remains elusive. In this report, we provide the first crude insight into the structural organization of the human dopamine transporter (hDAT) based on the identification of an endogenous high affinity Zn2+ binding site followed by engineering of an artificial Zn2+ binding site. By binding to the endogenous site, Zn2+ acts as a potent non-competitive inhibitor of dopamine uptake mediated by the hDAT transiently expressed in COS-7 cells. Systematic mutagenesis of potential Zn2+ coordinating residues lead to the identification of three residues on the predicted extracellular face of the transporter, 193His in the second extracellular loop, 375His at the external end of the putative transmembrane segment (TM) 7, and 396Glu at the external end of TM 8, forming three coordinates in the endogenous Zn2+ binding site. The three residues are separate in the primary structure but their common participation in binding the small Zn(II) ion define their spatial proximity in the tertiary structure of the transporter. Finally, an artificial inhibitory Zn2+ binding site was engineered between TM 7 and TM 8. This binding site both verify the proximity between the two domains as wells as it supports an alpha-helical configuration at the top of TM 8 in the hDAT.  相似文献   

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