Sandbox Reserved 1632
From Proteopedia
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== Biological relevance and broader implications == | == Biological relevance and broader implications == | ||
- | Candida glabrata is a fungus of high concern as it infects the host through the bloodstream. Unfortunately, this is a life-threatening infection for humans and upwards of 29% of all cases are | + | Candida glabrata is a fungus of high concern as it infects the host through the bloodstream. Unfortunately, this is a life-threatening infection for humans and upwards of 29% of all cases are life-threatening. As this does affect the human race is it of high relevance to study in health sciences. Understanding how this fungus can infect the bloodstream is needed to slow and possibly stop Candida glabrata from infecting other people. The approach in this paper is on the epithelial adhesions and altering their composition around the binding site. By altering conserved and un-conserved areas in its binding site we can better understand what hot spots are needed for good binding to the carbohydrates on the human epithelial cells. Understanding this protein's function is beneficial to understanding how other possible fungi infect hosts in a parasitic relationship. In this page we will highlight Epa9 specifically and how it can bind compared to other mutants created from the paper. |
== Important amino acids == | == Important amino acids == | ||
- | The type of protein that we are looking at is an adhesion protein, so it does not function as an enzyme. It does not have a catalytic triad within the binding pocket. Though there are some important amino acid residues to highlight as they interact with the ligand (lactose). The ligand itself, lactose, is a small carbohydrate consisting of two sugars. In the diagram of the protein, we can observe the all-red ball stick structures around the ligand are the amino acid residues interacting with the ligand. <scene name='86/861614/Protein_view_2/5'>These residues are Arg258, Asp257, Asp196, and Asp197.</scene>. They are all interacting via hydrogen bonds as depicted with this image off to the right. In the image, the hydrogen bonds involved are circled and we can see that there are only six hydrogen bonds that are binding the lactose to Epa9, which could account for a low binding affinity towards smaller carbohydrates. As it is noted that Epa9 is better at binding larger carbohydrates because of its elongated loop 1.[[Image: Inked4CP0 view of hydrogen bond interactions on ligand LI.jpg | thumb]] | + | The type of protein that we are looking at is an adhesion protein, so it does not function as an enzyme. It does not have a catalytic triad within the binding pocket. Though there are some important amino acid residues to highlight as they interact with the ligand (lactose). The ligand itself, lactose, is a small carbohydrate consisting of two sugars. In the diagram of the protein, we can observe the all-red ball stick structures around the ligand are the amino acid residues interacting with the ligand. <scene name='86/861614/Protein_view_2/5'>These residues are Arg258, Asp257, Asp196, and Asp197.</scene>. They are all interacting via hydrogen bonds as depicted with this image off to the right. In the image, the hydrogen bonds involved are circled and we can see that there are only six hydrogen bonds that are binding the lactose to Epa9, which could account for a low binding affinity towards smaller carbohydrates. As it is noted that Epa9 is better at binding larger carbohydrates because of its elongated loop 1.[[Image: Inked4CP0 view of hydrogen bond interactions on ligand LI.jpg | thumb]] |
+ | Now looking at this <scene name='86/861614/Space_fill_view/1'>space fill</scene> structure we can look at how the shape of the binding pocket | ||
== Structural highlights == | == Structural highlights == |
Revision as of 18:30, 6 December 2020
This Sandbox is Reserved from 09/18/2020 through 03/20/2021 for use in CHEM 351 Biochemistry taught by Bonnie Hall at Grand View University, Des Moines, IA. This reservation includes Sandbox Reserved 1628 through Sandbox Reserved 1642. |
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References
https://www.rcsb.org/structure/4cp0 https://learn-us-east-1-prod-fleet02-xythos.content.blackboardcdn.com/5b158bd279e57/1664396?X-Blackboard-Expiration=1607137200000&X-Blackboard-Signature=GuEivyKsG4G%2BKvfW2%2BOy0ZwjcFfkfg%2FKduITfEBsJvQ%3D&X-Blackboard-Client-Id=305095&response-cache-control=private%2C%20max-age%3D21600&response-content-disposition=inline%3B%20filename%2A%3DUTF-8%27%27J.%2520Biol.%2520Chem.-2020-Hoffmann-12512-24%2520Team%2520Lysine.pdf&response-content-type=application%2Fpdf&X-Amz-Algorithm=AWS4-HMAC-SHA256&X-Amz-Date=20201204T210000Z&X-Amz-SignedHeaders=host&X-Amz-Expires=21600&X-Amz-Credential=AKIAZH6WM4PL5SJBSTP6%2F20201204%2Fus-east-1%2Fs3%2Faws4_request&X-Amz-Signature=8214f4813df26fab8c7a19e9a14f4fbe7aaeca9d67156ef20e8d12bcd48a589f