Sandbox2O14

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2O14 Structure and Proposed Functionality

(NOTE TO ALL EDITORS: This page is part of a final project for a biochemistry lab at Elizabethtown College. Please do not edit this.)

2O14 is a monomeric protein complex that originates from the bacterial species Bacillus subtilis and has a mass of 41.79 kDa. Using InterPro this protein was assumed to be like Rhamnogalacturan acetylesterase, which falls under the SGNH Hydrolase Superfamily with structural and sequential similarities to lipases, esterases, along with similar functional domains to galactose-binding. With the research performed with current protein databases available, the evidence suggests that this protein removes acetyl groups from the backbone proteins by hydrolyzing the acetyl esters. It accomplishes this most likely through the catalytic triad of serine-histidine-aspartic acid.

3D Representation of 2O14’s structure.

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

Contents

Figure 1

Image:Firstswissdock.png

Lowest Calculated affinity image from SwissDock of -6.133 kcal/mol, with the ligand 4-nitrophenyl alpha-glucoside.

Figure 2

Image:OutsideActiveSite.png

The second lowest calculated binding affinity value, -5.629 kcal/mol, predicted bonding site. Believed that the protein’s binding site is in the center between the beta sheet group on top and the alpha helices on the bottom with the ligand 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-beta-D-glucopyranose.

Figure 3

Image:Smallotherprotein.png

Image shows a similar protein, 1PP4, having a different bonding site on the outside of the protein with a binding affinity of -4.429 kcal/mole with the ligand 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-beta-D-glucopyranose. This is interesting due to the similarities of 2O14 and 1PP4, but emphasizes the differences in their active sites

References

A) Mølgaard, A.; Kauppinen, S.; Larsen, S. Rhamnogalacturonan Acetylesterase Elucidates the Structure and Function of a New Family of Hydrolases. Structure 2000, 8 (4), 373–383. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0969-2126(00)00118-0. B) Schoch, C. L.; Ciufo, S.; Domrachev, M.; Hotton, C. L.; Kannan, S.; Khovanskaya, R.; Leipe, D.; Mcveigh, R.; O’Neill, K.; Robbertse, B.; Sharma, S.; Soussov, V.; Sullivan, J. P.; Sun, L.; Turner, S.; Karsch-Mizrachi, I. NCBI Taxonomy: A Comprehensive Update on Curation, Resources and Tools. Database 2020, 2020, baaa062. https://doi.org/10.1093/database/baaa062. C) Miesfeld, R. L.; McEvoy, M. M. Biochemistry, 2nd ed.; W. W. Norton & Company, 2021. D) SGNH hydrolase superfamily. InterPro, 2017. https://www.ebi.ac.uk/interpro/entry/InterPro/IPR036514/ E) Bugnon M, Röhrig UF, GOullieux M, Perez MAS, Daina A, Michielin O, Zoete V. SwissDock 2024: major enhancements for small-molecule docking with Attracting Cavities and AutoDock Vina. Nucleic Acids Res. 2024 F) Eberhardt J, Santos-Martins D, Tillack AF, Forli S.. AutoDock Vina 1.2.0: New Docking Methods, Expanded Force Field, and Python Bindings. J. Chem. Inf. Model., 2021


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