Journal:Acta Cryst D:S2059798323004175

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Analysis of solvent tunnels highlighted the amino acids that are crucial for proton transfer into the trinuclear copper site. <scene name='96/965740/Ttlmco1_tunnels/10'>Graphical representation of TtLMCO1 tunnels</scene>. T2 and T3 tunnels are shown as red and blue spheres, respectively. Copper ions are shown as brown spheres and side chains of residues forming the tunnels as shown as wheat sticks. Docking simulations with substrates that are oxidized by ''Tt''LMCO1 provide evidence that substrate specificity of these metallo-proteins is not exclusively related to their redox potential but also on the architecture of the binding site and the side chain flexibility of specific amino acids. Graphical representation of docking simulation results for TtLMCO1:
Analysis of solvent tunnels highlighted the amino acids that are crucial for proton transfer into the trinuclear copper site. <scene name='96/965740/Ttlmco1_tunnels/10'>Graphical representation of TtLMCO1 tunnels</scene>. T2 and T3 tunnels are shown as red and blue spheres, respectively. Copper ions are shown as brown spheres and side chains of residues forming the tunnels as shown as wheat sticks. Docking simulations with substrates that are oxidized by ''Tt''LMCO1 provide evidence that substrate specificity of these metallo-proteins is not exclusively related to their redox potential but also on the architecture of the binding site and the side chain flexibility of specific amino acids. Graphical representation of docking simulation results for TtLMCO1:
-
*<scene name='96/965740/Binding_pocket/3'>Ball-and-stick representation of the substrate
+
*<scene name='96/965740/Binding_pocket/4'>Ball-and-stick representation of the substrate
binding pocket of TtLMCO1 with L-ascorbic acid</scene>.
binding pocket of TtLMCO1 with L-ascorbic acid</scene>.

Revision as of 14:43, 24 May 2023

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This page complements a publication in scientific journals and is one of the Proteopedia's Interactive 3D Complement pages. For aditional details please see I3DC.
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