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User:Nicholas Bantz/Sandbox 1
From Proteopedia
(Difference between revisions)
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====Active Site and FAD Cofactor==== | ====Active Site and FAD Cofactor==== | ||
| - | Within the active site cavity, there are four invaginations, or <scene name='81/811090/Active_site_pockets/1'>active site pockets</scene>, each with differing chemical properties. The first pocket or invagination within the active site (residues Val317, Gly330, Ala331, Met332, Val333, Phe538, Leu659, Asn660, Lys661, Trp695, Ser749, Ser760 and Tyr761) catalyzes the interaction between the FAD cofactor and the substrate lysine <ref name="Stavropolous"/>. This first pocket binds and positions the substrate lysine so that it is exposed to the <scene name='81/811089/Fadcofactor/4'>FAD | + | Within the active site cavity, there are four invaginations, or <scene name='81/811090/Active_site_pockets/1'>active site pockets</scene>, each with differing chemical properties. The first pocket or invagination within the active site (residues Val317, Gly330, Ala331, Met332, Val333, Phe538, Leu659, Asn660, Lys661, Trp695, Ser749, Ser760 and Tyr761) catalyzes the interaction between the FAD cofactor and the substrate lysine <ref name="Stavropolous"/>. This first pocket binds and positions the substrate lysine so that it is exposed to the <scene name='81/811089/Fadcofactor/4'>FAD cofactor</scene>. During catalysis, the FAD cofactor is reduced and becomes an anion. Therefore, a positively charged residue is present in most FAD-dependent oxidases to assist in stabilizing the anionic form of FAD. <scene name='81/811088/Lys661/2'>Lys661</scene> is present in the catalytic pocket of the active site to stabilize the negatively charged FAD <ref name="Stavropolous"/>. The other three <scene name='81/811090/Active_site_pockets/1'>pockets</scene> are not as well understood but predictions can be made about their functions within the active site of LSD-1. Because the active site is able to accept additional residues on the substrate histone other than the lysine, the remaining three pockets are most plausibly responsible for the recognition of chemical modifications on the histone itself <ref name="Stavropolous"/>. The first pocket (Pocket 1) that assists in recognizing chemical modifications on the substrate histone is composed of residues Val334, Thr335, Asn340, Met342, Tyr571, Thr810, Val811 and His812 <ref name="Stavropolous"/>. The second pocket in the active site for side-chain recognition (Pocket 2) is composed of Phe558, Glu559, Phe560, Asn806, Tyr807 and Pro808 <ref name="Stavropolous"/>. Pocket 3 within the active site is composed of Asn540, Leu547, Trp552, Asp553, Gln554, Asp555, Asp556, Ser762, Tyr763, Val764 and Tyr773 <ref name="Stavropolous"/>. Each of the three pockets, in addition to the catalytic pocket, are able to recognize distinct modifications on the substrate and contribute to the specificity of LSD-1. |
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[[Image:FADMechanism.png|200 px|right|thumb|Figure 4: Hydride transfer mechanism of LSD-1 active site via FAD cofactor.]] | [[Image:FADMechanism.png|200 px|right|thumb|Figure 4: Hydride transfer mechanism of LSD-1 active site via FAD cofactor.]] | ||
| - | The mechanism of lysine demethylation is highly dependent on the presence of the <scene name='81/811089/Fadcofactor/4'>FAD | + | The mechanism of lysine demethylation is highly dependent on the presence of the <scene name='81/811089/Fadcofactor/4'>FAD cofactor</scene>. The FAD cofactor, positioned closely to the substrate lysine in the active site, acts as an oxidizing agent and initiates catalysis (Figure 4). A two-electron transfer occurs between the substrate lysine and FAD in the form of a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydride hydride]; the lysine is oxidized and the FAD is reduced <ref name="Stavropolous"/>. The FAD cofactor forms an anion and is stabilized by the positively charged <scene name='81/811088/Lys661/2'>Lys661</scene> positioned in the catalytic pocket of the active site <ref name="Stavropolous"/>. Although Lys661 is 8 ร
away from the nitrogen in FAD that is thought to sustain the negative charge in its reduced form, through resonance it is possible that the negative charge may be dispersed to an atom closer to the stabilizing Lys661. The oxidized lysine forms an aminium cation that is hydrolyzed into the carbinolamine intermediate <ref name="Stavropolous"/>. The carbinolamine intermediate readily decomposes into formaldehyde and the demethylated lysine substrate <ref name="Stavropolous"/>. |
===Inhibition by Tri-Methylated Lysine=== | ===Inhibition by Tri-Methylated Lysine=== | ||
Revision as of 20:39, 8 April 2019
LSD-1: Human lysine-specific demethylase 1
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Student Contributors
- Nicholas Bantz
- Cody Carley
- Michael Thomas
