Journal:Acta Cryst F:S2053230X18016217

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<scene name='80/801748/Cv/25'>A comparison of the active site conformation in different HtrA enzymes with bovine trypsin</scene> (<span style="color:yellow;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">''M. tuberculosis'' HtrA active site residues are in yellow</span>). The active site residues from bovine trypsin and proteases belonging to the HtrA family from different species were superposed with ''M. tuberculosis'' ΔTM HtrA. Two well characterized HtrA proteases (''M. tuberculosis'' PepD (PDB ID: [[2z9i]]; <span style="color:salmon;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">colored in salmon</span>), E. coli DegS (PDB ID: [[1soz]]; <span style="color:cyan;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">colored in cyan</span>)) provided a basis for this comparison alongside bovine trypsin structures. Among these, one is a complex with phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF) (PDB ID: [[1pqa]]; <span style="color:dodgerblue;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">colored in dodgerblue</span>) providing a reference for a covalently linked ligand to active site Ser-OH. The other representative model for a substrate bound form is the trypsin-peptide complex (AAPK) (PDB ID: [[2agg]]; <span style="color:violet;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">colored in violet</span>). This structure provides a representation of the oxyanion hole wherein the peptide is bound to the active site Ser-OH providing a structural snapshot of the acyl enzyme intermediate. In both examples, the active site Histidine is flipped with χ<sup>1</sup> of 80.7° and -166.8° in the case of peptide bound ([[1pqa]]) or 89.4° and -174.8° in the case of the PMSF complex ([[2agg]]).<ref name="Ash">PMID:10984533</ref><ref name="Radisky">PMID:16636277</ref> For comparison, the Histidine rotamers with χ<sup>1</sup> of 80.7° and 89.4° represent the canonical catalytic triad alongside the active site Asp and Ser. Of note, that the χ<sup>1</sup> of His270 of ''M. tuberculosis'' HtrA is -80.9 leading a distorted catalytic triad. This conformation of the catalytic triad in ''M. tuberculosis'' HtrA thus represents either an inactive state or a distorted conformation mimicking Histidine flipping in the acylation step of catalysis.
<scene name='80/801748/Cv/25'>A comparison of the active site conformation in different HtrA enzymes with bovine trypsin</scene> (<span style="color:yellow;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">''M. tuberculosis'' HtrA active site residues are in yellow</span>). The active site residues from bovine trypsin and proteases belonging to the HtrA family from different species were superposed with ''M. tuberculosis'' ΔTM HtrA. Two well characterized HtrA proteases (''M. tuberculosis'' PepD (PDB ID: [[2z9i]]; <span style="color:salmon;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">colored in salmon</span>), E. coli DegS (PDB ID: [[1soz]]; <span style="color:cyan;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">colored in cyan</span>)) provided a basis for this comparison alongside bovine trypsin structures. Among these, one is a complex with phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF) (PDB ID: [[1pqa]]; <span style="color:dodgerblue;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">colored in dodgerblue</span>) providing a reference for a covalently linked ligand to active site Ser-OH. The other representative model for a substrate bound form is the trypsin-peptide complex (AAPK) (PDB ID: [[2agg]]; <span style="color:violet;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">colored in violet</span>). This structure provides a representation of the oxyanion hole wherein the peptide is bound to the active site Ser-OH providing a structural snapshot of the acyl enzyme intermediate. In both examples, the active site Histidine is flipped with χ<sup>1</sup> of 80.7° and -166.8° in the case of peptide bound ([[1pqa]]) or 89.4° and -174.8° in the case of the PMSF complex ([[2agg]]).<ref name="Ash">PMID:10984533</ref><ref name="Radisky">PMID:16636277</ref> For comparison, the Histidine rotamers with χ<sup>1</sup> of 80.7° and 89.4° represent the canonical catalytic triad alongside the active site Asp and Ser. Of note, that the χ<sup>1</sup> of His270 of ''M. tuberculosis'' HtrA is -80.9 leading a distorted catalytic triad. This conformation of the catalytic triad in ''M. tuberculosis'' HtrA thus represents either an inactive state or a distorted conformation mimicking Histidine flipping in the acylation step of catalysis.
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PDB reference: ''M. tuberculosis'' HtrA, [[6ieo]].
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'''PDB reference:''' ''M. tuberculosis'' HtrA, [[6ieo]].
<b>References</b><br>
<b>References</b><br>

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