Sandbox Wabash 11 Fumarase

From Proteopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
(The Active Site of Fumarase C)
Current revision (00:55, 29 February 2016) (edit) (undo)
(The Active Site of Fumarase C)
 
(11 intermediate revisions not shown.)
Line 1: Line 1:
==The Active Site of Fumarase C==
==The Active Site of Fumarase C==
-
<StructureSection load='1stp' size='340' side='right' caption='Caption for this structure' scene='<scene name='72/726380/Fumarase_c/1'>Fumarase C</scene>'
+
<StructureSection load='1YFE_mm1.pdb' size='340' side='right' caption='Fumarase C' scene=''>
 +
 
 +
Kyle Stucker
'''Fumarase C'''
'''Fumarase C'''
-
Found in E. Coli, Fumarase C is an enzyme that catalyzes L-malate and fumarate. It belongs to a family of enzymes that includes aspartase, arginosuccinate lyase, adenlosuccinate lyase, and gamma-crysatallin. It is tetrameric and has approximately 460 amino acids in each monomer. (Weaver et. al. 834).
+
Found in E. Coli, Fumarase C is an enzyme that catalyzes L-malate and fumarate. It belongs to a family of enzymes that includes aspartase, arginosuccinate lyase, adenlosuccinate lyase, and gamma-crysatallin. It is tetrameric and has approximately 460 amino acids in each monomer.<ref>PMID:9098893</ref>
'''The Debate About Two Possible Locations of the Active Site'''
'''The Debate About Two Possible Locations of the Active Site'''
-
Many studies of Fumarase have shown that there are two different binding sites for carboxylic acid. One of the two sites (Site A), is formed by the residues from three subunits and is located at the tungstate sight. The active site is very deep and contains His-188, Ser-98, Thr-100, Asn-141. Site A also utilizes hydrogen bonding between a water molecule and His-188 to increase stability of substrate. The second site (Site B), is formed from atoms in a single subunit and contains L-malate. Site B is close to the surface of the enzymes and is composed of Asn-131, Asp-132, His-129, and Arg-126. A study conducted by Todd Weaver, Mason Lees, and Leonard Banaszak confirmed that Site A was the actual active site by mutating the Histidine residues at each site into Arginine and observing which mutation most effected substrate binding.
+
Many studies of Fumarase have shown that there are two different binding sites for carboxylic acid. One of the two sites <scene name='72/726380/Site_a/1'>(Site A)</scene> is formed by the residues from three subunits and is located at the tungstate site. The active site is very deep and contains His-188, Ser-98, Thr-100, Asn-141. Site A also utilizes hydrogen bonding between a water molecule and His-188 to increase stability of substrate.<ref>PMID:9098893</ref> The second site <scene name='72/726380/Site_b/1'>(Site B)</scene> is formed from atoms in a single subunit and contains L-malate. Site B is close to the surface of the enzymes and is composed of Asn-131, Asp-132, His-129, and Arg-126.<ref>PMID:9098893</ref> A study conducted by Todd Weaver, Mason Lees, and Leonard Banaszak confirmed that Site A was the actual active site by mutating the <scene name='72/726380/His-188/1'>His-188</scene> at Site A and the <scene name='72/726380/His-129/2'>His-129</scene> at Site B into <scene name='72/726380/Asn-188/1'>Asparagine</scene> and observing which mutation most effected substrate binding. The mutated <scene name='72/726380/Acitve_site_a_mutated/1'>Histidine residue at Site A</scene> was the mutation that affected activity the most. The un-mutated form of Fumarase had an activity of 4920.0 microunits/mL. When His-188 was mutated the activity of the enzyme was only at 9.62 microunits/mL, but the His-129 mutation still allowed for 2080.0 microunits/mL.<ref>PMID:9098893</ref> These results showed that Site A was the active site.
-
 
+
-
You may include any references to papers as in: the use of JSmol in Proteopedia <ref>DOI 10.1002/ijch.201300024</ref> or to the article describing Jmol <ref>PMID:21638687</ref> to the rescue.
+
<references/>
== Function ==
== Function ==

Current revision

The Active Site of Fumarase C

Fumarase C

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

References

Personal tools