Sandbox Reserved 1640
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== Biological relevance and broader implications == | == Biological relevance and broader implications == | ||
- | In the article that was assigned to me, they are studying the double nature of the enzymatic mechanism. Specifically at the active site and looking at the flexibility required for rotation. This is relevant because it helps us understand how the industrial applications of how enzymes work. Enzymes are used in the food industry quite often, They are used to manufacture dairy, meat, and bakery items. Understanding this protein can help us understand how its hydrophilic tendencies can impact the products it creates. This protein contains a few sugar rings in its metabolic pathway. The process creates sugar products. Studying Enzyme kinetics is important because enzymes are important to life. Understanding This information provides data about many diverse reactions, which helps us predict the metabolism of all living things. Even though changing Glucose into Galactose is a reaction near equilibrium and can be reserved because there isn't a big energy change, Studying this enzyme can help with biocatalysis. Biocatalysis is defined as the use of natural substances that include enzymes from biological sources or whole cells to speed up chemical reactions. In doing research on this enzyme-substrate complex it can help with improving the knowledge base of how catalysis impact reactions that include the production of alcohols from fermentation and cheese by the breakdown of proteins. The same types of enzymes that can be used in the food process, can be used in drug uptake. Enzymes often bind and act on their targets with great affinity and specificity. By looking at how a simple swing and flip of a pro-chiral 4-keto-hexose can change the molecule altogether and can change the whole structure and function of the protein. Second, enzymes are catalytic and convert multiple target molecules to the desired products, by adding different substrates and changing the formation of the structure, which can create many different products as we see in table 6 of our paper. | + | In the article that was assigned to me, they are studying the double nature of the enzymatic mechanism. Specifically at the active site and looking at the flexibility required for rotation. This is relevant because it helps us understand how the industrial applications of how enzymes work. Enzymes are used in the food industry quite often, They are used to manufacture dairy, meat, and bakery items. Understanding this protein can help us understand how its hydrophilic tendencies can impact the products it creates. This protein contains a few sugar rings in its metabolic pathway. The process creates sugar products. Studying Enzyme kinetics is important because enzymes are important to life. Understanding This information provides data about many diverse reactions, which helps us predict the metabolism of all living things. Even though changing Glucose into Galactose is a reaction near equilibrium and can be reserved because there isn't a big energy change, Studying this enzyme can help with biocatalysis. Biocatalysis is defined as the use of natural substances that include enzymes from biological sources or whole cells to speed up chemical reactions. In doing research on this enzyme-substrate complex it can help with improving the knowledge base of how catalysis impact reactions that include the production of alcohols from fermentation and cheese by the breakdown of proteins. The same types of enzymes that can be used in the food process, can be used in drug uptake. Enzymes often bind and act on their targets with great affinity and specificity. By looking at how a simple swing and flip of a pro-chiral 4-keto-hexose can change the molecule altogether and can change the whole structure and function of the protein. Second, enzymes are catalytic and convert multiple target molecules to the desired products, by adding different substrates and changing the formation of the structure, which can create many different products as we see in table 6 of our paper. WHY? Another example of biological relevance and the human body is that when glucose changes into galactose via hexokinase, it triggers mammary glands to secrete lactose. |
== Important amino acids == | == Important amino acids == | ||
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Our protein comes from the Bacillus cereus HuA2-4 organism. It includes the Epimerase domain. Our protein has a fair amount of secondary structures. These structures are important because of hydrogen bonding between carbonyl and amino groups in the peptide backbone. Our protein also consists of many Rossmann folds. This is a super secondary structure. It is composed of alternating alpha and beta sheets. The first Rossmann fold in a series is the one in contact with the nucleotide. In our protein, our nucleotide is the NAD. It contains a <scene name='86/861622/Rossmann_folds/1'>Rossmann folds</scene> that had 7 𝛃- strands and 6 𝜶-helices. The '''Rossman folds''' help stabilize the binding in the protein, which helps the '''catalytic triad''' have more efficient binding. This <scene name='86/861622/Quaternary_structure/1'>quaternary</scene> structure contains many hydrophobic interactions. This is true because of the association of several protein chains or subunits into a closely packed arrangement. Each of the subunits has its own primary, secondary, and tertiary structure. The subunits are held together by hydrogen bonds and van der Waals forces between nonpolar side chains. Our protein is made up of two or more polypeptide chains. Our protein is a strong homodimer with a hydrophobic interaction face. This means that the amino acids at the <scene name='86/861622/Active_site/1'>binding sites</scene> have nonpolar R groups cluster together, on the inside of the protein. This leaves the hydrophilic amino acids on the outside of the structure. | Our protein comes from the Bacillus cereus HuA2-4 organism. It includes the Epimerase domain. Our protein has a fair amount of secondary structures. These structures are important because of hydrogen bonding between carbonyl and amino groups in the peptide backbone. Our protein also consists of many Rossmann folds. This is a super secondary structure. It is composed of alternating alpha and beta sheets. The first Rossmann fold in a series is the one in contact with the nucleotide. In our protein, our nucleotide is the NAD. It contains a <scene name='86/861622/Rossmann_folds/1'>Rossmann folds</scene> that had 7 𝛃- strands and 6 𝜶-helices. The '''Rossman folds''' help stabilize the binding in the protein, which helps the '''catalytic triad''' have more efficient binding. This <scene name='86/861622/Quaternary_structure/1'>quaternary</scene> structure contains many hydrophobic interactions. This is true because of the association of several protein chains or subunits into a closely packed arrangement. Each of the subunits has its own primary, secondary, and tertiary structure. The subunits are held together by hydrogen bonds and van der Waals forces between nonpolar side chains. Our protein is made up of two or more polypeptide chains. Our protein is a strong homodimer with a hydrophobic interaction face. This means that the amino acids at the <scene name='86/861622/Active_site/1'>binding sites</scene> have nonpolar R groups cluster together, on the inside of the protein. This leaves the hydrophilic amino acids on the outside of the structure. | ||
- | The hydrophobic amino acids include THR, ILE, ALA, and PHE. This protein contains a few sugar rings in its metabolic pathway. The process creates sugar products. This enzyme creates a cavity where the sugar group binds and modifies itself | + | The hydrophobic amino acids include THR, ILE, ALA, and PHE. This protein contains a few sugar rings in its metabolic pathway. The process creates sugar products. This enzyme creates a cavity where the sugar group binds and modifies itself.The paper also mentions the le loir pathway. This pathway is used in the catabolism of Galactose. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Leloir_pathway.png] |
== Other important features == | == Other important features == | ||
- | The enzyme prevents decarboxylation by keeping the CO2 on the structure. the structure of the apoenzyme together with the kinetic isotope, further outline the flexible loops. You can see this in scheme 1 where it breaks the double O bond on Carbon 4 and makes it alcohol and keeps the CO2 on the sugar structure. Another structural mechanism characteristic is that this protein has a lot of | + | The enzyme prevents decarboxylation by keeping the CO2 on the structure. the structure of the apoenzyme together with the kinetic isotope, further outline the flexible loops. You can see this in scheme 1 where it breaks the double O bond on Carbon 4 and makes it alcohol and keeps the CO2 on the sugar structure. Another structural mechanism characteristic is that this protein has a lot of <scene name='86/861622/H_bond_and_pi_stacking/1'>stacking</scene>. This protein by making it more structurally sound by helping the protein regulate electronegativity. You can see this on our protein in figure 2.A the block dotted lines are representing the hydrogen bonds in the structure. Figure 1 also shows that the crevice between the 2 domains encloses the active site. The crevice also denotes the hydrophobic interactions within the protein's 2 <scene name='86/861622/Hydrophobic_interface/2'>polypeptide faces</scene>. Hydrophobic interactions mean that the amino acids that have nonpolar r groups cluster together, on the inside of the protein. This leaves the hydrophilic amino acids on the outside of the structure. I saw a perfect example of this in figure 2. A, and 2.D. the protein we are studying contains F,Y, and L. Our protein also contains an '''enzyme-substrate''' complex. This is when an enzyme binds to the substrate and forms a complex. The result of the complex-forming causes the decrease in activation energy of the reaction and causes other ions and chemical groups to form covalent bonds creating additional steps in the process. This is shown in our protein in figure 7. In the presence of UDP-Glc, the enzyme closes over the substrate changing the position compared to the UDP- bound enzyme. There also is a C-terminal domain. whereas the smaller <scene name='86/861622/C-terminal_domain/1'>C-terminal</scene> domain provides the |
the binding site for the UDP-GlcA substrate. | the binding site for the UDP-GlcA substrate. | ||
Current revision
[[1]
This Sandbox is Reserved from 09/18/2020 through 03/20/2021 for use in CHEM 351 Biochemistry taught by Bonnie Hall at Grand View University, Des Moines, IA. This reservation includes Sandbox Reserved 1628 through Sandbox Reserved 1642. |
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References
[3] https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32661196/ https://journals.plos.org/ploscompbiol/article?id=10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007569 https://aip.scitation.org/doi/10.1063/1.4929905 https://cbm.msoe.edu/teachingResources/proteinStructure/quaternary.html
- ↑ 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
- ↑ 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
- ↑ Iacovino LG, Savino S, Borg AJE, Binda C, Nidetzky B, Mattevi A. Crystallographic snapshots of UDP-glucuronic acid 4-epimeraseligand binding, rotation and reduction. J Biol Chem. 2020 Jul 13. pii: RA120.014692. doi: 10.1074/jbc.RA120.014692. PMID:32661196 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.RA120.014692