9hnc
From Proteopedia
Crystal structure of potassium-independent L-asparaginase from Phaseolus vulgaris (PvAIII, PvAspG2)
Structural highlights
FunctionPublication Abstract from PubMedCommon bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) encodes three class 2 L-asparaginase enzymes: two potassium-dependent enzymes [PvAIII(K)-1 and PvAIII(K)-2] and a potassium-independent enzyme (PvAIII). Here, we present the crystal structure of PvAIII, which displays a rare P2 space-group symmetry and a unique pseudosymmetric 4(1)-like double-helical packing. The asymmetric unit contains 32 protein chains (16 alphabeta units labeled A-P) organized into two right-handed coiled arrangements, each consisting of four PvAIII (alphabeta)(2) dimers. Detailed analysis of the crystal structure revealed that this unusual packing originates from three factors: (i) the ability of the PvAIII molecules to form extended intermolecular beta-sheets, a feature enabled by the PvAIII sequence and secondary structure, (ii) incomplete degradation of the flexible linker remaining at the C-terminus of alpha subunits of protein chain C after the autoproteolytic cleavage (maturation) of the PvAIII precursor and (iii) intermolecular entanglement between protein chains from the two helices to create ;hydrogen-bond linchpins' that connect adjacent protein chains. The K(m) value of PvAIII for L-asparagine is approximately five times higher than for beta-peptides, suggesting that the physiological role of PvAIII may be more related to the removal of toxic beta-peptides than to basic L-asparagine metabolism. A comparison of the active sites of PvAIII and PvAIII(K)-1 shows that the proteins have nearly identical residues in the catalytic center, except for Thr219, which is unique to PvAIII. To test whether the residue type at position 219 affects the enzymatic activity of PvAIII, we designed and produced a T219S mutant. The kinetic parameters determined for L-asparagine hydrolysis indicate that the T/S residue type at position 219 does not affect the L-asparaginase activity of PvAIII. Unique double-helical packing of protein molecules in the crystal of potassium-independent L-asparaginase from common bean.,Loch JI, Pierog I, Imiolczyk B, Barciszewski J, Marsolais F, Gilski M, Jaskolski M Acta Crystallogr D Struct Biol. 2025 May 1;81(Pt 5):252-264. doi: , 10.1107/S205979832500292X. Epub 2025 Apr 17. PMID:40243630[1] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. References
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