Sandbox Reserved 1709

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=== Brief Overview ===
=== Brief Overview ===
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The <scene name='90/906893/Open_conformation/1'>open conformation</scene> will be prepped and waiting for a substrate or ligand to bind. Once the substrate binds, this will induce the closed conformation of VKOR, where the catalytic mechanism will activate Vitamin K via reactive cysteine residues. Vitamin K will then be released from the binding pocket once it is fully activated for use in the body, and VKOR will resume the open conformation once again. The enzyme will then reset into its reactive state to prep for another molecule of Vitamin K to bind.
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The <scene name='90/906893/Open_conformation/1'>open conformation</scene> will be prepped and waiting for a substrate or ligand to bind. Once the substrate binds, this will induce the <scene name='90/904314/Closed_conformation/1'>Closed conformation</scene> of VKOR, where the catalytic mechanism will activate Vitamin K via reactive cysteine residues. Vitamin K will then be released from the binding pocket once it is fully activated for use in the body, and VKOR will resume the open conformation once again. The enzyme will then reset into its reactive state to prep for another molecule of Vitamin K to bind.

Revision as of 13:37, 29 March 2022

VKOR with KO bound.

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

References

1. Elshaikh, A. O., Shah, L., Joy Mathew, C., Lee, R., Jose, M. T., & Cancarevic, I. "Influence of Vitamin K on Bone Mineral Density and Osteoporosis" (2020) Cureus, 12(10), e10816. [1]

2. Guomin Shen, Weidong Cui, Qing Cao, Meng Gao, Hongli Liu, Gaigai Su, Michael L. Gross, Weikai Li. The catalytic mechanism of vitamin K epoxide reduction in a cellular environment. (2021) Journal of Biological Chemistry, Volume 296,100145. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.RA120.015401.

3. Li, Weikai et al. “Structure of a bacterial homologue of vitamin K epoxide reductase.” Nature vol. 463,7280 (2010): 507-12. doi:10.1038/nature08720.

4. Liu S, Li S, Shen G, Sukumar N, Krezel AM, Li W. Structural basis of antagonizing the vitamin K catalytic cycle for anticoagulation. Science. 2021 Jan 1;371(6524):eabc5667. doi: 10.1126/science.abc5667. Epub 2020 Nov 5. PMID: 33154105; PMCID: PMC7946407.

5. “Warfarin.” Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation, 10 Feb. 2022, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warfarin.

6. Yang W., et. al. “VKORC1 Haplotypes Are Associated With Arterial Vascular Diseases (Stroke, Coronary Heart Disease, and Aortic Dissection)” (2006) Circulation. ;113:1615–1621 [2]


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