1fsa

From Proteopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 1: Line 1:
-
[[Image:1fsa.gif|left|200px]]
+
{{Seed}}
 +
[[Image:1fsa.png|left|200px]]
<!--
<!--
Line 9: Line 10:
{{STRUCTURE_1fsa| PDB=1fsa | SCENE= }}
{{STRUCTURE_1fsa| PDB=1fsa | SCENE= }}
-
'''THE T-STATE STRUCTURE OF LYS 42 TO ALA MUTANT OF THE PIG KIDNEY FRUCTOSE 1,6-BISPHOSPHATASE EXPRESSED IN E. COLI'''
+
===THE T-STATE STRUCTURE OF LYS 42 TO ALA MUTANT OF THE PIG KIDNEY FRUCTOSE 1,6-BISPHOSPHATASE EXPRESSED IN E. COLI===
-
==Overview==
+
<!--
-
During the R--&gt;T transition in the tetrameric pig kidney fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (Fru-1,6-P2ase, EC 3.1.3.11) a major change in the quaternary structure of the enzyme occurs that is induced by the binding of the allosteric inhibitor AMP (Ke HM, Liang JY, Zhang Y, Lipscomb WN, 1991, Biochemistry 30:4412-4420). The change in quaternary structure involving the rotation of the upper dimer by 17 degrees relative to the lower dimer is coupled to a series of structural changes on the secondary and tertiary levels. The structural data indicate that Lys-42 is involved in a complex set of intersubunit interactions across the dimer-dimer interface with residues of the 190's loop, a loop located at the pivot of the allosteric rotation. In order to test the function of Lys-42, we have replaced it with alanine using site-specific mutagenesis. The kcat and K(m) values for Lys-42--&gt;Ala Fru-1,6-P2ase were 11 s-1 and 3.3 microM, respectively, resulting in a mutant enzyme that was slightly less efficient catalytically than the normal pig kidney enzyme. Although the Lys-42--&gt;Ala Fru-1,6-P2ase was similar kinetically in terms of K(m) and kcat, the response to inhibition by AMP was significantly different than that of the normal pig kidney enzyme. Not only was AMP inhibition no longer cooperative, but also it occurred in two stages, corresponding to high- and low-affinity binding sites. Saturation of the high-affinity sites only reduced the activity by 30%, compared to 100% for the wild-type enzyme. In order to determine in what structural state the enzyme was after saturation of the high-affinity sites, the Lys-42--&gt;Ala enzyme was crystallized in the presence of Mn2+, fructose-6-phosphate (Fru-6-P), and 100 microM AMP and the data collected to 2.3 A resolution. The X-ray structure showed the T state with AMP binding with full occupancy to the four regulatory sites and the inhibitor Fru-6-P bound at the active sites. The results reported here suggest that, in the normal pig kidney enzyme, the interactions between Lys-42 and residues of the 190's loop, are important for propagation of AMP cooperativity to the adjacent subunit across the dimer-dimer interface as opposed to the monomer-monomer interface, and suggest that AMP cooperativity is necessary for full allosteric inhibition by AMP.
+
The line below this paragraph, {{ABSTRACT_PUBMED_8931152}}, adds the Publication Abstract to the page
 +
(as it appears on PubMed at http://www.pubmed.gov), where 8931152 is the PubMed ID number.
 +
-->
 +
{{ABSTRACT_PUBMED_8931152}}
==About this Structure==
==About this Structure==
Line 33: Line 37:
[[Category: Hydrolase]]
[[Category: Hydrolase]]
[[Category: Lyase]]
[[Category: Lyase]]
-
''Page seeded by [http://oca.weizmann.ac.il/oca OCA ] on Fri May 2 16:42:19 2008''
+
 
 +
''Page seeded by [http://oca.weizmann.ac.il/oca OCA ] on Tue Jul 1 03:52:13 2008''

Revision as of 00:52, 1 July 2008

Template:STRUCTURE 1fsa

THE T-STATE STRUCTURE OF LYS 42 TO ALA MUTANT OF THE PIG KIDNEY FRUCTOSE 1,6-BISPHOSPHATASE EXPRESSED IN E. COLI

Template:ABSTRACT PUBMED 8931152

About this Structure

1FSA is a Single protein structure of sequence from Sus scrofa. Full crystallographic information is available from OCA.

Reference

Evidence for an active T-state pig kidney fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase: interface residue Lys-42 is important for allosteric inhibition and AMP cooperativity., Lu G, Stec B, Giroux EL, Kantrowitz ER, Protein Sci. 1996 Nov;5(11):2333-42. PMID:8931152

Page seeded by OCA on Tue Jul 1 03:52:13 2008

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

OCA

Personal tools