User:Hannah Wright/Sandbox 1

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3. The nucleophilic oxygen attacks the carbonyl carbon of one of the fatty acid chains.
3. The nucleophilic oxygen attacks the carbonyl carbon of one of the fatty acid chains.
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4. This pushes electrons up onto the carbonyl oxygen, creating a tetrahedral intermediate. This is the oxyanion hole which is stabilized by main chain nitrogen atoms of W82 and L160.
4. This pushes electrons up onto the carbonyl oxygen, creating a tetrahedral intermediate. This is the oxyanion hole which is stabilized by main chain nitrogen atoms of W82 and L160.
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5. One of the lone pairs of the oxygen (in the oxyanion hole) creates a double bond carbon.
5. One of the lone pairs of the oxygen (in the oxyanion hole) creates a double bond carbon.
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6. The oxygen-carbon bond between the single fatty acid chain and the diglyceride is cleaved.
6. The oxygen-carbon bond between the single fatty acid chain and the diglyceride is cleaved.
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7. H268 hydrogen bonds water, making the oxygen a better nucleophile. Water attacks the carbonyl carbon.
7. H268 hydrogen bonds water, making the oxygen a better nucleophile. Water attacks the carbonyl carbon.
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8. The carboxylic acid is formed and the S159 bond is cleaved and re-protonated via H268.
8. The carboxylic acid is formed and the S159 bond is cleaved and re-protonated via H268.
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9. The active site is now back in its original state.
9. The active site is now back in its original state.
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===Inhibitors===
===Inhibitors===
This <scene name='87/878236/Active_site_w_inhibitor_bound/4'>inhibitor</scene>, M3D shown in a peach color, was a vital piece in unraveling the correct structure of LPL. With the inhibitor bound, LPL’s active site and lid region become visible and crystallizable, thus this inhibitor is what allowed the first complete crystal structure of LPL to come into existence. This inhibitor also revealed the correct orientation of H268, a residue involved in the catalytic triad. Originally, the hydrogen bonding did not align with substrates in the original crystal structure; however, when this inhibitor was bound, the H268 was flipped, thus aligning the hydrogen bonds in the correct orientation.
This <scene name='87/878236/Active_site_w_inhibitor_bound/4'>inhibitor</scene>, M3D shown in a peach color, was a vital piece in unraveling the correct structure of LPL. With the inhibitor bound, LPL’s active site and lid region become visible and crystallizable, thus this inhibitor is what allowed the first complete crystal structure of LPL to come into existence. This inhibitor also revealed the correct orientation of H268, a residue involved in the catalytic triad. Originally, the hydrogen bonding did not align with substrates in the original crystal structure; however, when this inhibitor was bound, the H268 was flipped, thus aligning the hydrogen bonds in the correct orientation.

Revision as of 19:16, 20 April 2021

Lipoprotein Lipase (LPL) complexed with GPIHBP1

Lipoprotein Lipase - 6E7K

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

References

  1. Birrane G, Beigneux AP, Dwyer B, Strack-Logue B, Kristensen KK, Francone OL, Fong LG, Mertens HDT, Pan CQ, Ploug M, Young SG, Meiyappan M. Structure of the lipoprotein lipase-GPIHBP1 complex that mediates plasma triglyceride hydrolysis. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2018 Dec 17. pii: 1817984116. doi:, 10.1073/pnas.1817984116. PMID:30559189 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1817984116


Student/Contributors

  • Ashrey Burely
  • Allison Welz
  • Hannah Wright

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Hannah Wright

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