Journal:JBIC:1

From Proteopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 1: Line 1:
<applet load="Image:JBIC 1.1.pdb" size="600" color="white" frame="true" spin="on" Scene ="Journal:JBIC:1/Jbic1_opening/1" align="right" caption="Crystal structure of cobalt bound adenylate kinase from ''Desulfovibrio gigas''"/>
<applet load="Image:JBIC 1.1.pdb" size="600" color="white" frame="true" spin="on" Scene ="Journal:JBIC:1/Jbic1_opening/1" align="right" caption="Crystal structure of cobalt bound adenylate kinase from ''Desulfovibrio gigas''"/>
-
[[Image: Ak overall metal coord tar.png|300px|left|thumb| Crystal structure of cobalt bound adenylate kinase from ''Desulfovibrio gigas'']]
+
[[Image: Ak overall metal coord tar.png|350px|left|thumb| Crystal structure of cobalt bound adenylate kinase from ''Desulfovibrio gigas'']]
==Crystal structure of the zinc, cobalt and iron containing adenylate kinase from ''Desulfovibrio gigas'': a novel metal containing adenylate kinase from Gram-negative bacteria==
==Crystal structure of the zinc, cobalt and iron containing adenylate kinase from ''Desulfovibrio gigas'': a novel metal containing adenylate kinase from Gram-negative bacteria==

Revision as of 12:25, 23 August 2010

Crystal structure of cobalt bound adenylate kinase from Desulfovibrio gigas

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate
Image:Ak overall metal coord tar.png
Crystal structure of cobalt bound adenylate kinase from Desulfovibrio gigas

Crystal structure of the zinc, cobalt and iron containing adenylate kinase from Desulfovibrio gigas: a novel metal containing adenylate kinase from Gram-negative bacteria

By Dr. Mukhopadhyay & Abhik Mukhopadhyay
Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry

        Adenylate kinase (ATP:AMP phosphotransferase, EC 2.7.4.3; AK) is an essential catalyst for cellular growth and multiplication. AK belongs to a family of enzymes essential to life, and is highly abundant inside the cell. It is involved in the reversible transfer of the terminal phosphate group from Mg2+ATP to Mg2+AMP with high energy turnover: Mg2+ATP + AMP↔Mg2+ADP + ADP.

        Adenylate kinases (AK) from Gram-negative bacteria are generally devoid of metal ions in their LID domain. However, , zinc, cobalt and iron, have been found in AK from Gram-negative bacteria. Crystal structures of substrate-free AK from Desulfovibrio gigas with three different metal ions ; (; and ) bound in its LID domain have been determined by X-ray crystallography. to each other with the same LID domain topology, the only change being the presence of the different metal atoms.

        The structures of Zn- , Co- and Fe-AK contain the and , which also include the AMP binding region. The LID domain harbors the , which is responsible for metal binding in a tetrahedral fashion. In the absence of any substrate, the LID domain of all holo forms of AK was present in a fully open conformational state. The Core domain is . This Core domain mainly consists of a that keep the integrity of the tertiary structure of the enzyme. A is present in the N-terminal region The structures presented herein further reinforce the notion that the metal ion is purely structural, contributing to the stability of the LID domain.

This page complements a publication in scientific journals and is one of the Proteopedia's Interactive 3D Complement pages. For aditional details please see I3DC.
Personal tools