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Sandbox Wabash 10 Fumarase
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=='''The Debated Fumarase C Active Site'''== | =='''The Debated Fumarase C Active Site'''== | ||
| - | The overall catalytic mechanism of Fumarase drives fumarate formation from L-malate. A water molecule is removed from L-malate to generate fumarate. The first step of this is through a proton removal, and followed by OH- ion removal. The debate for the active site of fumarase involves two active sites that both contain carboxylic acid binding sites; the A and B site. Biochemical data suggests that the Histidine side chain is one of the bases participating in the catalytic reaction <ref name= "Weaver">PMID:9098893</ref> In order to determine which is the actual active site of fumarase, Weaver <ref name= "Weaver">PMID:9098893</ref> mutated the Histidine side chain, and created two fumarase mutants H129N and H188N. The <scene name='72/726383/His188/1'>HIS188 </scene> represents the location of the targeted mutation within site A, and <scene name='72/726383/His_129/1'>HIS129</scene> represents the location of the mutated residue in site B. The B-site is formed from a single subunit of the tetramer and includes atoms from residue R126, H129, N131, and D132 <ref name= "Weaver">PMID:9098893</ref>. H129 was mutated because it is the only potential side chain that could serve as a catalytic base in the B-site. | + | The overall catalytic mechanism of Fumarase drives fumarate formation from L-malate. A water molecule is removed from L-malate to generate fumarate. The first step of this is through a proton removal, and followed by OH- ion removal. The debate for the active site of fumarase involves two active sites that both contain carboxylic acid binding sites; the A and B site. Biochemical data suggests that the Histidine side chain is one of the bases participating in the catalytic reaction <ref name= "Weaver">PMID:9098893</ref> In order to determine which is the actual active site of fumarase, Weaver <ref name= "Weaver">PMID:9098893</ref> mutated the Histidine side chain, and created two fumarase mutants H129N and H188N. The <scene name='72/726383/His188/1'>HIS188 </scene> represents the location of the targeted mutation within site A, and <scene name='72/726383/His_129/1'>HIS129</scene> represents the location of the mutated residue in site B.The A-site appears to be in a relatively deep pit, and the B-site appears to be neared to the surface edge of the active site pit. The B-site is formed from a single subunit of the tetramer and includes atoms from residue R126, H129, N131, and D132 <ref name= "Weaver">PMID:9098893</ref>. H129 was mutated because it is the only potential side chain that could serve as a catalytic base in the B-site. Each of these residues (H188 & H129) were replaced by asparagine to determine the A and B sites role in the enzymatic catalysis of L-malate by hindering the catalytic activity of fumarase. Data was gathered from crystal structure analyses, and activity measurements to confirm the active site <ref name= "Weaver">PMID:9098893</ref>. Through a nickel agarose column and subsequent SDS-PAGE, they purified the histidine tagged protein <ref name= "Weaver">PMID:9098893</ref>. Subsequently, they calculated the specific activities of the wild-type fumarase and the histidine mutants H129N and H188N. Weaver observed that the H188N mutant drastically affected the catalytic reaction, showing an avg activity of 9.62 μ/mL as opposed to the wild type with 4920.0 μ/mL and the H129N mutant with 2080 μ/mL <ref name= "Weaver">PMID:9098893</ref>.Supporting his hypothesis that site A was the active site, by changing H188 residue they dramatically affected the catalytic activity of the enzyme <ref name= "Weaver">PMID:9098893</ref>. Additionally, this was further supported by eliminating the HIS188 from fumarase, in the absence of HIS188 effectively reduced binding of citrate and they also note that the A-site (active site) in the structure of H129N was unchanged by a mutation at H129 residue <ref name= "Weaver">PMID:9098893</ref>. |
== '''Actual Active Site of Fumarase''' == | == '''Actual Active Site of Fumarase''' == | ||
| - | The actual site of Fumarase, shown through studying the wild type conformation of Fumarase, has four protein ligands from two subunits including residues T100b, S98B, N141b, | + | The actual site of Fumarase, shown through studying the wild type conformation of Fumarase, has four protein ligands from two subunits including residues T100b, S98B, N141b, H188c, E331c, <ref name= "Weaver">PMID:9098893</ref>. In this conformation the active site water W-26 is bonded to five different atoms. This is also supported by the fact that in the H129N structure, W-26 acts as a donor and the acceptor atoms: H188-NE2, N141-OD1, S98-OG, T100-OG, these are the same four protein atoms reported in the wild type crystal structure from the bound citrate <ref name= "Weaver">PMID:9098893</ref>. |
the interactions | the interactions | ||
Revision as of 05:28, 29 February 2016
Fumarase
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References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 1.9 Weaver T, Lees M, Banaszak L. Mutations of fumarase that distinguish between the active site and a nearby dicarboxylic acid binding site. Protein Sci. 1997 Apr;6(4):834-42. PMID:9098893
Weaver T, Lees M, Banaszak L. Mutations of fumarase that distinguish between the active site and a nearby dicarboxylic acid binding site. Protein Sci. 1997 Apr;6(4):834-42. PMID:9098893[1]
