User:Alexandra Pentala/Sandbox 1
From Proteopedia
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===The C-Terminal Domain=== | ===The C-Terminal Domain=== | ||
- | The <scene name='81/811091/C_terminal_domain/ | + | The <scene name='81/811091/C_terminal_domain/1'>C-terminal segment</scene> of lysine methyltransferase is essential for the catalytic activity of the enzyme. Hydrophobic packing of the C-terminal segment (residues 345-366) forms the lysine access channel. Residues 337-349 create a <scene name='81/811086/Beta_hairpin/2'>beta hairpin structure</scene> that stabilizes the orientation of two tyrosine residues Tyr 335 and Tyr337 that form the lysine access channel. The hydrophobic packing of the C-terminal <scene name='81/811091/C_terminal_domain/7'>alpha helix</scene> against beta sheet 19 (specifically residue 299) orient the SAM cofactor so the methyl donating group is oriented toward the lysine access channel. donating group is oriented toward the lysine access channel. |
- | <scene name='81/811091/C_terminal_domain/1'> | + | <scene name='81/811091/C_terminal_domain/1'>Lysine Methyltransferase PDB: 109S</scene> |
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===The Active Site=== | ===The Active Site=== | ||
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+ | The active site and binding pocket of KMT have several essential characteristics for the overall efficiency. First, the lysine of the histone enters the active site “with difficulty” which is facilitated by the faces of flanking <scene name='81/811092/Tyrosine_channel_2/1'>Tyrosines (Y35, Y37)</scene>. Once in the active site, the alkyl part of the histone chain is stabilized by the <scene name='81/811092/Hydrophobic_binding_pocket/1'>Hydrophobic Binding Pocket</scene>, and polar residues are stabilized by hydrogen bonding interactions on the surface. The Y335 and Y337 are also essential for stabilization of histone chain via hydrogen bonding. | ||
+ | The <scene name='81/811092/Active_site_w_water/2'>Active site</scene> itself contains the cofactor S-adenosyl methionine (SAM) which donates the methyl group in the reaction. The reaction is catalyzed by Y305, Y245, carbonyl oxygens of the main chain in residues 295 and 290. Y305 and the carbonyl oxygens stabilize and pull electron density off a water to pull on one of the hydrogens off the nitrogen of the lysine, while oxygen of Y245 pulls on the other hydrogen of the nitrogen. Both of these actions allow nitrogen to become more nucleophilic and attack the carbon of the methyl group on the SAM, which is attached to a positively charged sulfur. The methyl group is then transferred and the sulfur is neutral; SAM has been converted to S-adenosyl homocysteine (SAH). | ||
==Inhibitors== | ==Inhibitors== | ||
Sinefungin is a potent methyltransferase inhibitor. It is a structural analog of S-adenosylmethionine that is more stable due to the ability to create two additional hydrogen bonds to its amine group in the active site. It has been used experimentally to inhibit the SET 7/9 protein on peritoneal fibrosis in mice and in human peritoneal mesothelial cells. Tamura et al. (2018) found that sinefungin suppressed the cell accumulation and thickening in methylglyoxal peritoneal fibrosis. | Sinefungin is a potent methyltransferase inhibitor. It is a structural analog of S-adenosylmethionine that is more stable due to the ability to create two additional hydrogen bonds to its amine group in the active site. It has been used experimentally to inhibit the SET 7/9 protein on peritoneal fibrosis in mice and in human peritoneal mesothelial cells. Tamura et al. (2018) found that sinefungin suppressed the cell accumulation and thickening in methylglyoxal peritoneal fibrosis. |
Revision as of 23:12, 9 April 2019
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References
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