Sandbox Wabash 23 Fumarase
From Proteopedia
(Difference between revisions)
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
== Structural highlights == | == Structural highlights == | ||
- | The general mechanistic idea about the fumarase reaction is that at the active site, L-malate is converted to fumarate via several steps. First, the a proton is removed at the C3 by a basic residue near the active site forming an aci-carboxylate intermediate. In the second step, the -OH group on the C2 carbon leaves as an OH- ion. This is step is thought to be aided by another protonated basic group on the enzyme. However, upon X-ray crystallography analysis of the E-S complex, it was found that there were traces of L-malate at <Active | + | The general mechanistic idea about the fumarase reaction is that at the active site, L-malate is converted to fumarate via several steps. First, the a proton is removed at the C3 by a basic residue near the active site forming an aci-carboxylate intermediate. In the second step, the -OH group on the C2 carbon leaves as an OH- ion. This is step is thought to be aided by another protonated basic group on the enzyme. However, upon X-ray crystallography analysis of the E-S complex, it was found that there were traces of L-malate at <Active Site='72/726401/Active_sites_-unbound/1'>two sites</scene>, where His is the proton transfer mediator. This raises the issue as to which is the the true site. |
</StructureSection> | </StructureSection> |
Revision as of 23:25, 29 February 2016
Determination of the active site Fumarase
|
References
Mutations of Fumarase that Distinguish Between the Active Site and a Nearby Dicarboxylic Acid Binding Site [1] JSmol in Proteopedia [2] Jmol [3] to the rescue