Sandbox Wabash 02 Fumarase

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The H129N mutation was made to characterize the functional significance of a dicarboxylic acid binding site we have labeled the B-site. The B-site is formed from a single subunit of the tetramer and includes atoms from residues R126, H129, N131, and D132 (Weaver & Banaszak, 1996). H129 is the only potential side
The H129N mutation was made to characterize the functional significance of a dicarboxylic acid binding site we have labeled the B-site. The B-site is formed from a single subunit of the tetramer and includes atoms from residues R126, H129, N131, and D132 (Weaver & Banaszak, 1996). H129 is the only potential side
chain that could serve as one of the catalytic bases in the B-site (Brant et al., 1963). The H129N mutation had little effect on catalytic activity, confirming the active site to be site A. The crystal structure of H129N showed that the mutated protein had essentially the same conformation as the wild type but appeared to dramatically reduce binding of ligands at the B-site.
chain that could serve as one of the catalytic bases in the B-site (Brant et al., 1963). The H129N mutation had little effect on catalytic activity, confirming the active site to be site A. The crystal structure of H129N showed that the mutated protein had essentially the same conformation as the wild type but appeared to dramatically reduce binding of ligands at the B-site.
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Removal of the carboxylate binding site is due to a rotation of N129 about x, compared to the imidazole side chain position in the native structure. N129 is stabilized in this new position by forming bifurcated hydrogen bonds between its OD1 atom and the backbone nitrogen atoms of N131 and D132. These two backbone atoms form important hydrogen bonds to the O1 and O2 atoms of the dicarboxylic acid at the B-site in the native enzyme, but are blocked by internal H-bonds in the H 129N mutant. The carboxyamide side chain of N129 in the mutant behaves like the carboxylate of ligand bound at site B.
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To further confirm that dicarboxylic acids will no longer bind to the B-site due to the steric hindrance imposed by N129, a H129N crystal was soaked in a solution containing P-trimethysilyl maleate (TMSM) under the exact conditions used to generate the complex reported by Weaver and Banaszak (1996). No binding of TMSM was visible in the resulting maps. This result not only proved unambiguously that the A-site was the active site, but also that the H129N mutation dramatically reduced binding at the B-site. The A-site or active site in the crystal structure of H129N was unchanged by the mutation at H129.
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The mutation at the A-site, H188N, had a dramatic effect on the fumarase activity and suggested that this histidine side chain may have a direct role in the catalytic mechanism. In H188N. the absence of the histidine side chain effectively reduces binding of citrate so that it is missing in the electron density maps. Another observation with respect to the H188N mutation is that the active site water molecule (W-26) is still present although shifted by approximately 0.70 A compared to the crystal structure of the wild-type enzyme. In the crystal structure of H188N, W-26 makes four hydrogen bonds to protein
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atoms. the replacement asparagine side chain, N188, forms two hydrogen bonds to W-26, one of which is rather short- 2.59 A. The N188 side chain seems able to mimic that of H188, leading to the previously observed short hydrogen bond between the side chain at 188 and W-26. S98b and N141b form the other two hydrogen bonds to the active site water. T100-OGI, which is one of the reported atoms interacting with the water in the crystal structure of native fumarase is no longer within hydrogen bonding distance. In the wild type, the active site water W-26 is hydrogen bonded to five different atoms. There are
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four protein ligands from two subunits including residues T1OOb,S98b, N141b. and H188c. The other interaction is only formed when a competitive inhibitor is present. With bound citrate ion, the water interaction involves the carboxylate at the C1 position (Weaver & Banaszak, 1996). In the case of the H129N structure, W-26 maintains all five of the interactions.

Revision as of 02:46, 28 February 2016

Wabash Sandbox 02 Fumarase

Caption for this structure

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References

  1. Hanson, R. M., Prilusky, J., Renjian, Z., Nakane, T. and Sussman, J. L. (2013), JSmol and the Next-Generation Web-Based Representation of 3D Molecular Structure as Applied to Proteopedia. Isr. J. Chem., 53:207-216. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ijch.201300024
  2. Herraez A. Biomolecules in the computer: Jmol to the rescue. Biochem Mol Biol Educ. 2006 Jul;34(4):255-61. doi: 10.1002/bmb.2006.494034042644. PMID:21638687 doi:10.1002/bmb.2006.494034042644
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