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Sandbox GGC3

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<StructureSection loadfiles='4G36''4G37' size='340' side='right' caption='Luciferin-4-monooxygenase. The wild-type luciferase in the adenylate-forming conformation with DLSA (PDB 4G36) and the cross-linked luciferase in the second catalytic conformation with DLSA (PDB 4G37)' scene=''>
<StructureSection loadfiles='4G36''4G37' size='340' side='right' caption='Luciferin-4-monooxygenase. The wild-type luciferase in the adenylate-forming conformation with DLSA (PDB 4G36) and the cross-linked luciferase in the second catalytic conformation with DLSA (PDB 4G37)' scene=''>
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Firefly luciferase, of the common eastern firefly, is responsible for the ability of the firefly to exhibit bioluminescence. The enzyme luciferin-4-monoxygenase, which catalyzes a multistep oxidative decarboxylation of the luciferyl-AMP intermediate (LH2-AMP) to produce bioluminescence, is a part of the ANL superfamily named so for the '''a'''cyl-CoA syntheses, the adenylation domains of the modular '''n'''on-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPs), and '''l'''uciferase.
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Firefly luciferase, of the common eastern firefly, is responsible for the ability of the firefly to exhibit bioluminescence. The enzyme luciferin-4-monoxygenase, which catalyzes a multistep oxidative decarboxylation of the luciferyl-AMP intermediate (LH<sub>2</sub>-AMP) to produce bioluminescence, is a part of the ANL superfamily named so for the '''a'''cyl-CoA syntheses, the adenylation domains of the modular '''n'''on-ribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPs), and '''l'''uciferase.
More green links just for fun :~) <scene name='75/752266/Adenylate-forming/2'>adenylate-forming</scene> and <scene name='75/752266/Second_catalytic_conformation/2'>second catalytic conformation</scene>
More green links just for fun :~) <scene name='75/752266/Adenylate-forming/2'>adenylate-forming</scene> and <scene name='75/752266/Second_catalytic_conformation/2'>second catalytic conformation</scene>
== Function ==
== Function ==
[[Image:Common_Eastern_Firefly.jpg|thumb|left|The Common Eastern Firefly in a hand emitting a yellow hue, showing bioluminescence.]]
[[Image:Common_Eastern_Firefly.jpg|thumb|left|The Common Eastern Firefly in a hand emitting a yellow hue, showing bioluminescence.]]
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The ANL enzymes catalyze two-step reactions: the first an adenylating step in which an acyl-AMP intermediate is produced; the second step in which the adenylate then serves as a substrate for the multistep oxidative decarboxylation of the luciferyl-AMP (LH<nowiki>2</nowiki>-AMP) intermediate, resulting in bioluminescence.
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The ANL enzymes catalyze two-step reactions: the first an adenylating step in which an acyl-AMP intermediate is produced; the second step in which the adenylate then serves as a substrate for the multistep oxidative decarboxylation of the luciferyl-AMP (LH<sub>2</sub>-AMP) intermediate, resulting in bioluminescence.
ANL enzymes follow a domain alternation strategy for the first adenylation reaction, in which the reaction is catalyzed by one conformation and following the formation of the adenylate intermediate and release of pyrophosphate (PPi), the C-terminal domain undergoes a rotational transformation that is necessary for the second partial reaction. The active site of ANL enzymes resides between a 400-500 residue N-terminal domain and a smaller C-terminal domain of ~110-130 amino acids. Ten conserved regions of these proteins have been termed the A1-A10 motifs which play critical roles in either or both partial reactions. Two lysine residues are required for each partial reaction suggestive that luciferase similarly adopts a rotational transformation for complete catalysis. Lys529, the A10 lysine, impairs only the initial adenylation reaction whereas mutation of Lys443 in the A8 region disrupts the oxidative reaction.
ANL enzymes follow a domain alternation strategy for the first adenylation reaction, in which the reaction is catalyzed by one conformation and following the formation of the adenylate intermediate and release of pyrophosphate (PPi), the C-terminal domain undergoes a rotational transformation that is necessary for the second partial reaction. The active site of ANL enzymes resides between a 400-500 residue N-terminal domain and a smaller C-terminal domain of ~110-130 amino acids. Ten conserved regions of these proteins have been termed the A1-A10 motifs which play critical roles in either or both partial reactions. Two lysine residues are required for each partial reaction suggestive that luciferase similarly adopts a rotational transformation for complete catalysis. Lys529, the A10 lysine, impairs only the initial adenylation reaction whereas mutation of Lys443 in the A8 region disrupts the oxidative reaction.

Revision as of 00:14, 27 April 2021

Firefly Luciferase

Check over subscripts and underlineee and tttaaarrgggetttt to the right plaaccceee please oh and why no titles for the references :(

Luciferin-4-monooxygenase. The wild-type luciferase in the adenylate-forming conformation with DLSA (PDB 4G36) and the cross-linked luciferase in the second catalytic conformation with DLSA (PDB 4G37)

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

References

[1]

  1. Sundlov, J. A., Fontaine, D. M., Southworth, T. L., Branchini, B. R., Gulick, A. M. (2012). Crystal Structure of Firefly Luciferase in a Second Catalytic Conformation Supports a Domain Alternation Mechanism. Biochemistry 51 (33), 6493-6495. https://doi.org/10.1021/bi300934s
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