Sandbox Reserved 431
From Proteopedia
(Difference between revisions)
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==Additional Features== | ==Additional Features== | ||
| - | Cytochrome P45 has a central iron-bound heme, which, combined with its structural conformation, allows for hydroxylation with the attached substrate. Cytochrome P450 has specific vitamin D 25-hydroxylase activity, which does not function properly when a person has rickets. Rickets is caused when a person lacks sufficient vitamin D in their system, which is often caused by a vitamin D-25 hydroxylation defect. Leu99Pro is an evolutionarily conserved mutation in the beta helix which contributes to the hydroxylation defect. Leu99 does not inhibit substrate binding; however, Leu99Pro disturbs hydrogen binding around the heme and interferes with the helix steric properties, causing protein instability. When Leu99 does not have the proline mutation, its carboxyl group forms hydrogen bonds with Arg445 which are both located around the central heme. | + | Cytochrome P45 has a central iron-bound heme, which, combined with its structural conformation, allows for hydroxylation with the attached substrate. Cytochrome P450 has specific vitamin D 25-hydroxylase activity, which does not function properly when a person has rickets. Rickets is caused when a person lacks sufficient vitamin D in their system, which is often caused by a vitamin D-25 hydroxylation defect. Leu99Pro is an evolutionarily conserved mutation in the beta helix which contributes to the hydroxylation defect. Leu99 does not inhibit substrate binding; however, Leu99Pro disturbs hydrogen binding around the heme and interferes with the helix steric properties, causing protein instability. When Leu99 does not have the proline mutation, its carboxyl group forms hydrogen bonds with Arg445, which are both located around the central heme and allows for hydroxylation of vitamin D. |
| - | <scene name='48/483888/ | + | <scene name='48/483888/Hemegroup/1'>Leu99 and Arg445</scene> |
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| - | + | From <scene name='48/483888/This_orientation/1'>this orientation</scene> can you identify the green, red, and blue parts of the molecule? | |
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
Revision as of 19:31, 10 April 2016
| This Sandbox is Reserved from January 19, 2016, through August 31, 2016 for use for Proteopedia Team Projects by the class Chemistry 423 Biochemistry for Chemists taught by Lynmarie K Thompson at University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA. This reservation includes Sandbox Reserved 425 through Sandbox Reserved 439. |
Vitamin D activation by cytochrome P450, Rickets (3c6g)[1]
by Isabel Hand, Elizabeth Humble, Kati Johnson, Samantha Kriksceonaitis, and Matthew Tiller
Student Projects for UMass Chemistry 423 Spring 2016
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