Sandbox bcce8
From Proteopedia
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- | == | + | ==β-Glucuronidase== |
- | <StructureSection load=' | + | <StructureSection load='3hn3' size='340' side='right' caption='Ribbon diagram of human β-glucuronidase' scene=''> |
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- | + | This tutorial illustrates the quaternary structures of the human and ''E. coli'' β-glucuronidase enzyme. | |
- | == | + | |
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+ | == Function == | ||
+ | β-glucuronidase is a ubiquitous enzyme that catalyzes the hydrolysis of a glucuronide moiety from a variety of substrates. This enzyme is present throughout biological systems, including bacteria up through humans. | ||
== Relevance == | == Relevance == | ||
+ | Deficiencies in the human form of β-glucuronidase (<scene name='59/596447/Human_bglucuronidase/1'>overall structure</scene>) is associated with a disease known as Sly Syndrome (AKA Mucopolysaccharidosis VII -- MPS VII). This disease is characterized by mental retardation, short stature, macrocephaly, and enlarged joints. As is commonly seen with genetic disorders, patients with this disease present a spectrum of symptom severity, but the disease is always ultimately fatal. | ||
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+ | The ''E. coli'' form of β-glucuronidase (<scene name='59/596447/E_coli_b-glucuronidase/1'>overall structure</scene>) is associated with the side effects seen with administration of the cancer chemotherapy drug CPT-11. This drug gets converted to SN38, a topoisomerase inhibitor, by the liver. The body adds a glucuronide group to this molecule (now SN38-G) to mark it for elimination, which partially occurs through the intestine. Once in the intestine, bacterial β-glucuronidase cleaves the glucuronide from the SN38-G, releasing the SN38 into the intestinal lumen. The released SN38 prevents cell division, compromising the epithelial lining of the intestines, a painful and dangerous side-effect of CPT-11 administration. | ||
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+ | Selective inhibition of bacterial β-glucuronidase is desired to alleviate this side-effect of CPT-11 treatment, hopefully without inhibiting the human form of the enzyme. | ||
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== Structural highlights == | == Structural highlights == | ||
+ | The structure of ''E. coli'' β-glucuronidase contains 4 identical subunits (<scene name='59/596447/E_coli_b-glucuronidase/1'>homotetramer</scene>). | ||
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+ | The structure of the enzyme contains both α-helix (blue) and β-sheet (yellow) forms of <scene name='59/596447/E_coli_b-glucuronidase3/1'>secondary structure</scene>, with the β-sheets arranged in β-barrels in an immunoglobulin-like fold. | ||
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- | This is a sample scene created with SAT to <scene name="/12/3456/Sample/1">color</scene> by Group, and another to make <scene name="/12/3456/Sample/2">a transparent representation</scene> of the protein. You can make your own scenes on SAT starting from scratch or loading and editing one of these sample scenes. | ||
</StructureSection> | </StructureSection> | ||
== References == | == References == | ||
<references/> | <references/> |
Current revision
β-Glucuronidase
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