This old version of Proteopedia is provided for student assignments while the new version is undergoing repairs. Content and edits done in this old version of Proteopedia after March 1, 2026 will eventually be lost when it is retired in about June of 2026.


Apply for new accounts at the new Proteopedia. Your logins will work in both the old and new versions.


Sandbox Reserved 1716

From Proteopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 15: Line 15:
===Reaction===
===Reaction===
-
I<scene name='90/904321/I/1'>I</scene> to <scene name='90/904321/Ii/1'>II</scene> to <scene name='90/904321/Iii/1'>III</scene> to
+
I<scene name='90/904321/I/1'>I</scene> to <scene name='90/904321/Ii/1'>II</scene> to <scene name='90/904321/Iii/1'>III</scene> to <scene name='90/904321/Iv/1'>IV</scene>
In the Vitamin K Cycle (Fig 1), there are two primary enzymes, the latter enzyme is Vitamin K Epoxide Reductase. Four conserved cysteines: Cys43, Cys51, Cys132, and Cys135 will aid in a redox reaction that will allow for Vitamin K Epoxide to be reduced back to Vitamin K Quinone. VKOR begins and ends in an open conformation and is fully oxidized. The second step is a partially oxidized state where Catalytic Cysteines 51 and 132 share a disulfide bond. No ligand is within the active site at either of these stages. In the third stage Vitamin K Epoxide binds to the active site and VKOR becomes closed and is still partially oxidized. Cysteine 51 and 132 still share a disulfide bond, and Cysteine 135 binds to Vitamin K Epoxide. When Cysteine43 forms a disulfide bond with Cysteine 51, Cysteine 132 will bind to Cysteine 135. Cysteine 135 will form the disulfide bond with Cysteine132 and kick its extra electrons to Vitamin K Epoxide. The transfer of electrons opens up the epoxide ring, which is reforming Vitamin K Quinone. This is another fully oxidized state of VKOR. Then, the cycle restarts at the beginning in an open conformation to release the Vitamin K Quinone.
In the Vitamin K Cycle (Fig 1), there are two primary enzymes, the latter enzyme is Vitamin K Epoxide Reductase. Four conserved cysteines: Cys43, Cys51, Cys132, and Cys135 will aid in a redox reaction that will allow for Vitamin K Epoxide to be reduced back to Vitamin K Quinone. VKOR begins and ends in an open conformation and is fully oxidized. The second step is a partially oxidized state where Catalytic Cysteines 51 and 132 share a disulfide bond. No ligand is within the active site at either of these stages. In the third stage Vitamin K Epoxide binds to the active site and VKOR becomes closed and is still partially oxidized. Cysteine 51 and 132 still share a disulfide bond, and Cysteine 135 binds to Vitamin K Epoxide. When Cysteine43 forms a disulfide bond with Cysteine 51, Cysteine 132 will bind to Cysteine 135. Cysteine 135 will form the disulfide bond with Cysteine132 and kick its extra electrons to Vitamin K Epoxide. The transfer of electrons opens up the epoxide ring, which is reforming Vitamin K Quinone. This is another fully oxidized state of VKOR. Then, the cycle restarts at the beginning in an open conformation to release the Vitamin K Quinone.

Revision as of 17:30, 11 April 2022

Vitamin K Epoxide Reductase

Structure of Closed Vitamin K Epoxide Reductase (PDB entry 6wv3)

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate
Personal tools