Sandbox Wabash 28 Fumarase

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As stated earlier and suggested by the theorized mechanism, the use of His residues which are readily protonated and deprotonated at physiological pHs and the binding of inhibitors to two different sites created two targets: His 188 for site A and His 129 for site B. To determine which was the true active site, single-site directed mutagenesis of His to Asn was conducted. The activity of the resultant fumarase mutants (H188N and H129N) were compared against the wild type to determine changes in catalytic ability. Crystolography was performed as well to observe changes in the protein structure (bond angles, distances between atoms, orientation of substrate, etc.). The choice of Asn limited changes in steric bulk as well as folding from different H-bonding interactions (both His and Asn residues act as H-bond acceptors and donors).
As stated earlier and suggested by the theorized mechanism, the use of His residues which are readily protonated and deprotonated at physiological pHs and the binding of inhibitors to two different sites created two targets: His 188 for site A and His 129 for site B. To determine which was the true active site, single-site directed mutagenesis of His to Asn was conducted. The activity of the resultant fumarase mutants (H188N and H129N) were compared against the wild type to determine changes in catalytic ability. Crystolography was performed as well to observe changes in the protein structure (bond angles, distances between atoms, orientation of substrate, etc.). The choice of Asn limited changes in steric bulk as well as folding from different H-bonding interactions (both His and Asn residues act as H-bond acceptors and donors).
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Modifying site A (H188N) produced an enzyme with approximately 200-fold less specific activity than the wild type. Crystalographic data showed little to no changes in site B whereas the presence of N188 encouraged increased H-bonding with a water molecule instead of the ligand (represented by the inhibitor citrate in the crystal).
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<scene name='72/726358/H188n_site_a/1'>Modifying site A</scene> (H188N) produced an enzyme with approximately 200-fold less specific activity than the wild type. Crystalographic data showed little to no changes in site B whereas the presence of N188 encouraged increased H-bonding with a water molecule instead of the ligand (represented by the inhibitor citrate in the crystal).
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Although modifications at site B (H129N) also changed H-bonding patterns in the site. The net result was little to no conformation change at either site A or B. The catalytic studies demonstrated a small, but significantly larger specific activity in the mutant. Citrate (the inhibitor representative of the substrate) remained bound to site A.
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Although modifications at <scene name='72/726358/H129n_site_b/1'>site B</scene> (H129N) also changed H-bonding patterns in the site. The net result was little to no conformation change at either site A or B. The catalytic studies demonstrated a small, but significantly larger specific activity in the mutant. Citrate (the inhibitor representative of the substrate) remained bound to site A.
Cohesively, these results are indicative that site A (especially H188) is the catalytic active site.
Cohesively, these results are indicative that site A (especially H188) is the catalytic active site.

Revision as of 01:37, 28 February 2016

Fumarase

PDB ID 1yfe

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