首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
The crystal structure of the nitrile hydratase (NHase) from Bacillus smithii SC-J05-1 was determined. Our analysis of the structure shows that some residues that seem to be responsible for substrate recognition are different from those of other NHases. In particular, the Phe52 in the beta subunit of NHase from B. smithii covers the metal center partially like a small lid and narrows the active site cleft. It is well known that the NHase from B. smithii especially prefers aliphatic nitriles for its substrate rather than aromatic ones, and we can now infer that the Phe52 residue may play a key role in the substrate specificity for this enzyme. This finding leads us to suggest that substitution of these residues may alter the substrate specificity of the enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
Thiocyanate hydrolase (SCNase) of Thiobacillus thioparus THI115 is a cobalt(III)-containing enzyme catalyzing the degradation of thiocyanate to carbonyl sulfide and ammonia. We determined the crystal structures of the apo- and native SCNases at a resolution of 2.0 A. SCNases in both forms had a conserved hetero-dodecameric structure, (alphabetagamma)(4). Four alphabetagamma hetero-trimers were structurally equivalent. One alphabetagamma hetero-trimer was composed of the core domain and the betaN domain, which was located at the center of the molecule and linked the hetero-trimers with novel quaternary interfaces. In both the apo- and native SCNases, the core domain was structurally conserved between those of iron and cobalt-types of nitrile hydratase (NHase). Native SCNase possessed the post-translationally modified cysteine ligands, gammaCys131-SO(2)H and gammaCys133-SOH like NHases. However, the low-spin cobalt(III) was found to be in the distorted square-pyramidal geometry, which had not been reported before in any protein. The size as well as the electrostatic properties of the substrate-binding pocket was totally different from NHases with respect to the charge distribution and the substrate accessibility, which rationally explains the differences in the substrate preference between SCNase and NHase.  相似文献   

3.
Jiang W  Ghosh D 《PloS one》2012,7(2):e32565
The crystal structures of human placental aromatase in complex with the substrate androstenedione and exemestane have revealed an androgen-specific active site and the structural basis for higher order organization. However, X-ray structures do not provide accounts of movements due to short-range fluctuations, ligand binding and protein-protein association. In this work, we conduct normal mode analysis (NMA) revealing the intrinsic fluctuations of aromatase, deduce the internal modes in membrane-free and membrane-integrated monomers as well as the intermolecular modes in oligomers, and propose a quaternary organization for the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane integration. Dynamics of the crystallographic oligomers from NMA is found to be in agreement with the isotropic thermal factors from the X-ray analysis. Calculations of the root mean square fluctuations of the C-alpha atoms from their equilibrium positions confirm that the rigid-core structure of aromatase is intrinsic regardless of the changes in steroid binding interactions, and that aromatase self-association does not deteriorate the rigidity of the catalytic cleft. Furthermore, NMA on membrane-integrated aromatase shows that the internal modes in all likelihood contribute to breathing of the active site access channel. The collective intermolecular hinge bending and twisting modes provide the flexibility in the quaternary association necessary for membrane integration of the aromatase oligomers. Taken together, fluctuations of the active site, the access channel, and the heme-proximal cavity, and a dynamic quaternary organization could all be essential components of the functional aromatase in its role as an ER membrane-embedded steroidogenic enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
HIV-1 protease (PR) is the target for several important antiviral drugs used in AIDS therapy. The drugs bind inside the active site cavity of PR where normally the viral polyprotein substrate is bound and hydrolyzed. We report two high-resolution crystal structures of wild-type PR (PRWT) and the multi-drug-resistant variant with the I54V mutation (PRI54V) in complex with a peptide at 1.46 and 1.50 A resolution, respectively. The peptide forms a gem-diol tetrahedral reaction intermediate (TI) in the crystal structures. Distinctive interactions are observed for the TI binding in the active site cavity of PRWT and PRI54V. The mutant PRI54V/TI complex has lost water-mediated hydrogen bond interactions with the amides of Ile50 and Ile50' in the flap. Hence, the structures provide insight into the mechanism of drug resistance arising from this mutation. The structures also illustrate an intermediate state in the hydrolysis reaction. One of the gem-diol hydroxide groups in the PRWT complex forms a very short (2.3 A) hydrogen bond with the outer carboxylate oxygen of Asp25. Quantum chemical calculations based on this TI structure are consistent with protonation of the inner carboxylate oxygen of Asp25', in contrast to several theoretical studies. These TI complexes and quantum calculations are discussed in relation to the chemical mechanism of the peptide bond hydrolysis catalyzed by PR.  相似文献   

5.
M Nakasako  M Odaka  M Yohda  N Dohmae  K Takio  N Kamiya  I Endo 《Biochemistry》1999,38(31):9887-9898
The crystal structure analysis of the Fe-type nitrile hydratase from Rhodococcus sp. N-771 revealed the unique structure of the enzyme composed of the alpha- and beta-subunits and the unprecedented structure of the non-heme iron active center [Nagashima, S., et al. (1998) Nat. Struct. Biol. 5, 347-351]. A number of hydration water molecules were identified both in the interior and at the exterior of the enzyme. The study presented here investigated the roles of the hydration water molecules in stabilizing the tertiary and the quaternary structures of the enzyme, based on the crystal structure and the results from a laser light scattering experiment for the enzyme in solution. Seventy-six hydration water molecules between the two subunits significantly contribute to the alphabeta heterodimer formation by making up the surface shape, forming extensive networks of hydrogen bonds, and moderating the surface charge of the beta-subunit. In particular, 20 hydration water molecules form the extensive networks of hydrogen bonds stabilizing the unique structure of the active center. The amino acid residues hydrogen-bonded to those hydration water molecules are highly conserved among all known nitrile hydratases and even in the homologous enzyme, thiocyanate hydrolase, suggesting the structural conservation of the water molecules in the NHase family. The crystallographic asymmetric unit contained two heterodimers connected by 50 hydration water molecules. The heterotetramer formation in crystallization was clearly explained by the concentration-dependent aggregation state of NHase found in the light scattering measurement. The measurement proved that the dimer-tetramer equilibrium shifted toward the heterotetramer dominant state in the concentration range of 10(-2)-1.0 mg/mL. In the tetramer dominant state, 50 water molecules likely glue the two heterodimers together as observed in the crystal structure. Because NHase exhibits a high abundance in bacterial cells, the result suggests that the heterotetramer is physiologically relevant. In addition, it was revealed that the substrate specificity of this enzyme, recognizing small aliphatic substrates rather than aromatic ones, came from the narrowness of the entrance channel from the bulk solvent to the active center. This finding may give a clue for changing the substrate specificity of the enzyme. Under the crystallization condition described here, one 1,4-dioxane molecule plugged the channel. Through spectroscopic and crystallographic experiments, we found that the molecule prevented the dissociation of the endogenous NO molecule from the active center even when the crystal was exposed to light.  相似文献   

6.
7.
We report herein the functional expression of an Fe-type nitrile hydratase (NHase) without the co-expression of an activator protein or the Escherichia coli chaperone proteins GroES/EL. Soluble protein was obtained when the α- and β-subunit genes of the Fe-type NHase Comamonas testosteroni Ni1 (CtNHase) were synthesized with optimized E. coli codon usage and co-expressed. As a control, the Fe-type NHase from Rhodococcus equi TG328–2 (ReNHase) was expressed with (ReNHase+Act) and without (ReNHase?Act) its activator protein, establishing that expression of a fully functional, metallated ReNHase enzyme requires the co-expression of its activator protein, similar to all other Fe-type NHase enzymes reported to date, whereas the CtNHase does not. The X-ray crystal structure of CtNHase was determined to 2.4 Å resolution revealing an αβ heterodimer, similar to other Fe-type NHase enzymes, except for two important differences. First, two His residues reside in the CtNHase active site that are not observed in other Fe-type NHase enzymes and second, the active site Fe(III) ion resides at the bottom of a wide solvent exposed channel. The solvent exposed active site, along with the two active site histidine residues, are hypothesized to play a role in iron incorporation in the absence of an activator protein.  相似文献   

8.
Nitrile hydratase (NHase) from Rhodococcus N-771 is a novel enzyme that is inactive in the dark due to an enodogenous nitric oxide (NO) molecule bound to the non-heme iron center, and is activated by its photodissociation. FTIR spectra in the NO stretching region of the dark-inactive NHase were recorded in the temperature range of 270-80 K. Two NO peaks were observed at 1854 and 1846 cm-1 at 270 K, and both frequencies upshifted as the temperature was lowered, retaining the peak separation of 8-9 cm-1. The relative intensity of the lower-frequency peak increased with decreasing temperature up to ~120 K, whereas it was mostly unchanged below this temperature. This observation indicates that two distinct conformations with slightly different NO structures are thermally equilibrated in the dark-inactive NHase above ~120 K, and the interconversion is frozen-in at lower temperatures. The intensity ratio of the NO bands changed gradually upon increasing the pH from 5.5 to 11.0, but no specific pKa value was found. This result, together with the comparison of the light-induced FTIR difference spectra measured at pH 6.5 and 9.0, suggests that the protonation/deprotonation of a specific amino acid group in the active site of NHase is not a direct cause of the occurrence of the two conformations, although several protonatable groups in the protein may influence the energetics of the two conformers. From the previous observation that the isolated alpha subunit of NHase exhibited a single broad NO peak, it is suggested that interaction of the beta subunit forming the reactive cavity is essential for the double-minimum potential of the active-site structure. The frequencies and widths of the two NO bands changed upon addition of propionamide, 1,4-dioxane, and cyclohexyl isocyanide, indicating that these compounds are bound to the active pocket and change the interactions of the iron center or the dielectric environments around the NO molecule. Thus, the NO bands of NHase can also be a useful probe to monitor the binding of substrates and their analogues to the active pocket.  相似文献   

9.
BACE1 is a key protease involved in the proteolysis of amyloid precursor protein (APP) that generates a toxic peptide amyloid beta (Aβ), a pathological feature of Alzheimer's disease (AD). The enzyme is believed to possess an open and a closed conformation that corresponds to its free and inhibitor-bound form respectively. Here, we study the dynamic transition of BACE1 employing normal mode analysis (NMA) using a simplified elastic network model (ENM). Estimation of the catalytic cavity volume on the structures of BACE1 encoded by the lowest frequency normal mode reveals the dynamical transition of the enzyme from the open to the closed conformer. Detailed analysis reveals that concerted movement of different loop segments in the active site of the protein, namely flap regions, 10s loop, A loop and F loop, squeeze the catalytic cavity between the N-terminal and C-terminal lobe of the substrate binding domain of BACE1. We also propose that the NMA encoded multiple receptor conformations (MRC) of BACE1 elucidate the pharmacophoric feature necessary to inhibit the enzyme by a polyphenol, myricetin. van der Waals interaction is found to be the main driving force that guides the ligand induced conformational switching to the closed conformer. We suggest that NMA derived MRC of BACE1 is an efficient way to treat the receptor flexibility in docking and thus can be further applied in virtual screening and structure based drug design.  相似文献   

10.
Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations have been performed on quercetin 2,3 dioxygenase (2,3QD) to study the mobility and flexibility of the substrate cavity. 2,3QD is the only firmly established Cu-containing dioxygenase known so far. It catalyses the breakage of the O-heterocycle of flavonols. The substrates occupy a shallow and overall hydrophobic cavity proximal to the metal centre of the homo-dimeric enzyme. The linker connecting the C-terminal and N-terminal domains in the monomer is partly disordered in the crystal structure and part of it forms a flexible lid at the entrance of the substrate cavity. This loop has been tentatively assigned a role in the enzyme mechanism: it helps lock the substrate into place. The dynamics of this loop has been investigated by MD simulation. The initial coordinates were taken from the crystal structure of 2,3QD in the presence of the substrate kaempferol (KMP). After equilibration and simulation over 7.2ns the substrate was removed and another equilibration and simulation of 7.2ns was performed. The results show that the structures of the free enzyme as well as of the enzyme-substrate complex are stable in MD simulation. The linker shows strongly enhanced mobility in the loop region that is close to the entrance to the substrate cavity (residues 154-169). Movement of the loop takes place on a timescale of 5-10ns. To confirm the conclusions about the loop dynamics drawn from the 7.2ns simulation, the simulation was extended with another 8ns. When substrate binds into the cavity the loop orders remarkably, although mobility is retained by residues 155-158. Some regions of the loop (residues 154-160 and 164-176) move over a considerable distance and approach the substrate closely, reinforcing the idea that they lock the substrate in the substrate cavity. The enthalpic component of the interaction of the loop with the protein and the KMP appears to favour the locking of the substrate. Two water molecules were found immobilised in the cavity, one of which exhibited rotation on the picosecond timescale. When the substrate is removed, the empty cavity fills up with water within 200ps.  相似文献   

11.
Alditol oxidase (AldO) from Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) is a soluble monomeric flavin-dependent oxidase that performs selective oxidation of the terminal primary hydroxyl group of several alditols. Here, we report the crystal structure of the recombinant enzyme in its native state and in complex with both six-carbon (mannitol and sorbitol) and five-carbon substrates (xylitol). AldO shares the same folding topology of the members of the vanillyl-alcohol oxidase family of flavoenzymes and exhibits a covalently linked FAD which is located at the bottom of a funnel-shaped pocket that forms the active site. The high resolution of the three-dimensional structures highlights a well-defined hydrogen-bonding network that tightly constrains the substrate in the productive conformation for catalysis. Substrate binding occurs through a lock-and-key mechanism and does not induce conformational changes with respect to the ligand-free protein. A network of charged residues is proposed to favor catalysis through stabilization of the deprotonated form of the substrate. A His side chain acts as back door that "pushes" the substrate-reactive carbon atom toward the N5-C4a locus of the flavin. Analysis of the three-dimensional structure reveals possible pathways for diffusion of molecular oxygen and a small cavity on the re side of the flavin that may host oxygen during FAD reoxidation. These features combined with the tight shape of the catalytic site provide insights into the mechanism of AldO-mediated regioselective oxidation reactions and its substrate specificity.  相似文献   

12.
Xie SX  Kato Y  Komeda H  Yoshida S  Asano Y 《Biochemistry》2003,42(41):12056-12066
An enzyme "alkylaldoxime dehydratase (OxdRG)" was purified and characterized from Rhodococcus globerulus A-4, in which nitrile hydratase (NHase) and amidase coexisted with the enzyme. The enzyme contains heme b as a prosthetic group, requires reducing reagents for the reaction, and is most active at a neutral pH and at around 30 degrees C, similar to the phenylacetaldoxime dehydratase from Bacillus sp. OxB-1 (OxdB). However, some differences were seen in subunit structure, substrate specificity, and effects of activators and inhibitors. The corresponding gene, oxd, encoding a 1059-base pair ORF consisting of 353 codons, was cloned, sequenced, and overexpressed in Escherichia coli. The predicted polypeptide showed 30.3% identity to OxdB. The gene is mapped just upstream of the gene cluster encoding the enzymes involved in the metabolism of aliphatic nitriles, i.e., NHase and amidase, and their regulatory and activator proteins. We report here the existence of an aldoxime dehydratase genetically linked with NHase and amidase, and responsible for the metabolism of alkylaldoxime in R. globerulus.  相似文献   

13.
X-ray crystal structures of CYP102A1 (P450BM-3) have shown that PHE87 rotates upon substrate binding and is in contact with the heme cofactor. Analysis of substrate binding data combined with DFT calculations suggest that the ring is rotated into an unfavorable interaction with the heme and this could drive active site rearrangement.  相似文献   

14.
Mutants of a cobalt-containing nitrile hydratase (NHase, EC 4.2.1.84) from Pseudonocardia thermophila JCM 3095 involved in substrate binding, catalysis and formation of the active center were constructed, and their characteristics and crystal structures were investigated. As expected from the structure of the substrate binding pocket, the wild-type enzyme showed significantly lower K(m) and K(i) values for aromatic substrates and inhibitors, respectively, than aliphatic ones. In the crystal structure of a complex with an inhibitor (n-butyric acid) the hydroxyl group of betaTyr68 formed hydrogen bonds with both n-butyric acid and alphaSer112, which is located in the active center. The betaY68F mutant showed an elevated K(m) value and a significantly decreased k(cat) value. The apoenzyme, which contains no detectable cobalt atom, was prepared from Escherichia coli cells grown in medium without cobalt ions. It showed no detectable activity. A disulfide bond between alphaCys108 and alphaCys113 was formed in the apoenzyme structure. In the highly conserved sequence motif in the cysteine cluster region, two positions are exclusively conserved in cobalt-containing or iron-containing nitrile hydratases. Two mutants (alphaT109S and alphaY114T) were constructed, each residue being replaced with an iron-containing one. The alphaT109S mutant showed similar characteristics to the wild-type enzyme. However, the alphaY114T mutant showed a very low cobalt content and catalytic activity compared with the wild-type enzyme, and oxidative modifications of alphaCys111 and alphaCys113 residues were not observed. The alphaTyr114 residue may be involved in the interaction with the nitrile hydratase activator protein of P. thermophila.  相似文献   

15.
Noguchi T  Nojiri M  Takei K  Odaka M  Kamiya N 《Biochemistry》2003,42(40):11642-11650
Nitrile hydratase (NHase) from Rhodococcus N-771, which catalyzes hydration of nitriles to the corresponding amides, exhibits novel photosensitivity; in the dark, it is in the inactive form that binds an endogenous nitric oxide (NO) molecule at the non-heme iron center, and photodissociation of the NO activates the enzyme. NHase is also known to have a unique active site structure. Two cysteine ligands to the iron center, alphaCys112 and alphaCys114, are post-translationally modified to sulfinic acid (Cys-SO(2)H) and sulfenic acid (Cys-SOH), respectively, which are thought to play a crucial role in the catalytic reaction. Here, we have determined the protonation structures of these Cys-SO(2)H and Cys-SOH groups using Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy in combination with density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The light-induced FTIR difference spectrum of NHase between the dark inactive and light active forms exhibited two prominent signals at (1154-1148)/1126 and (1040-1034)/1019 cm(-1), which downshifted to 1141/1114 and 1026/1012 cm(-1), respectively, in the uniformly (34)S-labeled NHase. In addition, a minor signal at 915/908 cm(-1) also showed a considerable downshift upon (34)S labeling. These (34)S-sensitive signals were basically conserved in D(2)O buffer with only slight shifts. Vibrational frequencies of methanesulfenic acid (CH(3)SOH) and methanesulfinic acid (CH(3)SO(2)H), simple model compounds of Cys-SOH and Cys-SO(2)H, respectively, were calculated using the DFT method in both the protonated and deprotonated forms and in metal complexes. Comparison of the calculated frequencies and isotope shifts with the observed ones provided the assignment of the two major signals around 1140 and 1030 cm(-1) to the asymmetric and symmetric SO(2) stretching vibrations, respectively, of the S-bonded Cys-SO(2)(-) complex, and the assignment of the minor signal around 910 cm(-1) most likely to the SO stretch of the S-bonded Cys-SO(-) complex. These assignments and the small frequency shifts upon deuteration are consistent with the view that the deprotonated alphaCys112-SO(2)(-) and alphaCys114-SO(-) are hydrogen-bonded with the protons from betaArg56 and/or betaArg141, forming a reactive cavity at the interface of the alpha and beta subunits. There is further speculation that either of these groups is hydrogen bonded to a reactant water molecule, increasing its basicity to facilitate the nucleophilic attack on the nitrile substrate bound to the iron center.  相似文献   

16.
Bacteria species involved in degradation of cellulosic substrates produce a variety of enzymes for processing related compounds along the hydrolytic pathway. Paenibacillus polymyxa encodes two homologous beta-glucosidases, BglA and BglB, presenting different quaternary structures and substrate specificities. We previously reported the 3D-structure of BglA, which is highly specific against cellobiose. Here, we present structural analysis of BglB, a monomeric enzyme that acts as an exo-beta-glucosidase hydrolyzing cellobiose and cellodextrins of higher degree of polymerization. The crystal structure of BglB shows that several polar residues narrow the active site pocket and contour additional subsites. The structure of the BglB-cellotetraose complex confirms these subsites, revealing the substrate-binding mode, and shows the oligosaccharide-enzyme recognition pattern in detail. Comparison between BglA and BglB crystal structures suggests that oligomerization in BglA can assist in fine-tuning the specificity of the active centre by modulating the loops surrounding the cavity. We have solved the crystal structure of BglB with bound thiocellobiose, a competitive inhibitor, which together with the BglB-cellotetraose complex delineate the general features of the aglycon site. The detailed characterization of the atomic interactions at the aglycon site show a recognition pattern common to all bacterial beta-glucosidases, and presents some differences with the aglycon site in plant beta-glycosidases essentially by means of a different orientation of the basal Trp. The crystal structures of of BglB with a covalently bound inhibitor (derived from 2-fluoroglucoside) and glucose (produced by hydrolysis of the substrate in the crystal), provide additional pictures of the binding events and the intermediates formed during the reaction. Altogether, this information can assist in the understanding of subtle differences of the enzyme mechanism and substrate recognition within this family of enzymes, and consequently it can help in the development of new enzymes with improved activity or specificity.  相似文献   

17.
The crystal structures of dithionite-reduced bovine Cu(I),Zn superoxide dismutase and of its adducts with the inorganic anions azide and thyocyanide have been determined in a C2221 crystal form obtained at pH?5.0. This crystal form is characterized by a high solvent content (72%) and by having the two Cu,ZnSOD monomers (A and B) in different crystal environments. One of them (B) is involved in few intermolecular crystal contacts so that it is in a more "solution like" environment, as indicated by average temperature factors which are about twice those of the other monomer. The differences in crystal packing affect the active site structures. While in the A monomer the Cu(I) is coordinated to all four histidine residues, in the B monomer the bridging His61 side chain is found disordered, implying partial detachment from copper. The same effect occurs in the structures of the anion complexes. The inorganic anions are found bound in the active site cavity, weakly interacting with copper at distances ranging from 2.5 to 2.8?Å. The copper site in the A subunit of the native enzyme structure displays significant electron density resembling a diatomic molecule, bound side-on at about 2.8?Å from the metal, which cannot be unambiguously interpreted. The crystallographic data suggest that the existence of the His61 bridge between copper and zinc is dominated by steric more than electronic factors and that the solution state favors the His61 detachment. These structures confirm the existence of an energetically available state for Cu(I) in Cu,ZnSOD where the histidinato bridge to zinc is maintained. This state appears to be favored by tighter crystal contacts. The binding of the anions in the active site cavity is different from that observed in the oxidized enzyme and it appears to be dominated by electrostatic interactions within the cavity. The anion binding mode observed may model the substrate interaction with the reduced enzyme during catalysis.  相似文献   

18.
Venkatraman V  Ritchie DW 《Proteins》2012,80(9):2262-2274
Modeling conformational changes in protein docking calculations is challenging. To make the calculations tractable, most current docking algorithms typically treat proteins as rigid bodies and use soft scoring functions that implicitly accommodate some degree of flexibility. Alternatively, ensembles of structures generated from molecular dynamics (MD) may be cross-docked. However, such combinatorial approaches can produce many thousands or even millions of docking poses, and require fast and sensitive scoring functions to distinguish them. Here, we present a novel approach called "EigenHex," which is based on normal mode analyses (NMAs) of a simple elastic network model of protein flexibility. We initially assume that the proteins to be docked are rigid, and we begin by performing conventional soft docking using the Hex polar Fourier correlation algorithm. We then apply a pose-dependent NMA to each of the top 1000 rigid body docking solutions, and we sample and re-score multiple perturbed docking conformations generated from linear combinations of up to 20 eigenvectors using a multi-threaded particle swarm optimization algorithm. When applied to the 63 "rigid body" targets of the Protein Docking Benchmark version 2.0, our results show that sampling and re-scoring from just one to three eigenvectors gives a modest but consistent improvement for these targets. Thus, pose-dependent NMA avoids the need to sample multiple eigenvectors and it offers a promising alternative to combinatorial cross-docking.  相似文献   

19.
Wang S  Eisenberg D 《Biochemistry》2006,45(6):1554-1561
Pantothenate synthetase (PS) from Mycobacterium tuberculosis represents a potential target for antituberculosis drugs. PS catalyzes the ATP-dependent condensation of pantoate and beta-alanine to form pantothenate. Previously, we determined the crystal structure of PS from M. tuberculosis and its complexes with AMPCPP, pantoate, and pantoyl adenylate. Here, we describe the crystal structure of this enzyme complexed with AMP and its last substrate, beta-alanine, and show that the phosphate group of AMP serves as an anchor for the binding of beta-alanine. This structure confirms that binding of beta-alanine in the active site cavity can occur only after formation of the pantoyl adenylate intermediate. A new crystal form was also obtained; it displays the flexible wall of the active site cavity in a conformation incapable of binding pantoate. Soaking of this crystal form with ATP and pantoate gives a fully occupied complex of PS with ATP. Crystal structures of these complexes with substrates, the reaction intermediate, and the reaction product AMP provide a step-by-step view of the PS-catalyzed reaction. A detailed reaction mechanism and its implications for inhibitor design are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Plant ns-LTPs display an original structure with four helices and a flexible C-terminus, maintained together by four disulphide bridges and delineating an elongated central hydrophobic cavity. In order to relate these structural features to the protein stability and plasticity, combined molecular mechanics and simulated annealing calculations were undertaken on a wheat ns-LTP "mutant" with Cys-Ala replacement and with the application of core inter-residue restraints up to 2 A, reducing the cross-section size of the hydrophobic cavity. Analysis of the energy-minimized structures shows that removal of the disulphide bridges results in structures with a lower total energy and a smaller cavity volume. A 1-ns MD simulation at 300K in water, underlines that, despite the absence of a well-packed hydrophobic core, the native structure is extremely stable at room temperature and the cavity is not hydrated. This confirms that the disulphide bridges are essential for the existence of the cavity, whereas its plasticity depends both on the hydrophobic chain lining the cavity and on the C-terminal flexibility. A high temperature (500K) MD simulation confirms the stability of the secondary structure elements and the flexibility of the loops and of the C-terminal segment. Two important structural transitions during this simulation are discussed and possible routes for the insertion and release of hydrophobic ligands are suggested.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

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