This old version of Proteopedia is provided for student assignments while the new version is undergoing repairs. Content and edits done in this old version of Proteopedia after March 1, 2026 will eventually be lost when it is retired in about June of 2026.


Apply for new accounts at the new Proteopedia. Your logins will work in both the old and new versions.


6ald

From Proteopedia

Revision as of 15:44, 30 October 2007 by OCA (Talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search

6ald, resolution 2.3Å

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

RABBIT MUSCLE ALDOLASE A/FRUCTOSE-1,6-BISPHOSPHATE COMPLEX

Overview

Class I fructose-1,6-bis(phosphate) aldolase is a glycolytic enzyme that, catalyzes the cleavage of fructose 1,6-bis(phosphate) through a covalent, Schiff base intermediate. Although the atomic structure of this enzyme is, known, assigning catalytic roles to the various enzymic active-site, residues has been hampered by the lack of a structure for the, enzyme-substrate complex. A mutant aldolase, K146A, is unable to cleave, the C3-C4 bond of the hexose while retaining the ability to form the, covalent intermediate, although at a greatly diminished rate. The, structure of rabbit muscle K146A-aldolase A, in complex with its native, substrate, fructose 1,6-bis(phosphate), is determined to 2.3 A resolution, by molecular replacement. The density at the hexose binding site differs, between ... [(full description)]

About this Structure

6ALD is a [Single protein] structure of sequence from [Oryctolagus cuniculus] with 2FP as [ligand]. Active as [Fructose-bisphosphate aldolase], with EC number [4.1.2.13]. Structure known Active Sites: CAT and CTB. Full crystallographic information is available from [OCA].

Reference

Structure of a fructose-1,6-bis(phosphate) aldolase liganded to its natural substrate in a cleavage-defective mutant at 2.3 A(,)., Choi KH, Mazurkie AS, Morris AJ, Utheza D, Tolan DR, Allen KN, Biochemistry. 1999 Sep 28;38(39):12655-64. PMID:10504235

Page seeded by OCA on Tue Oct 30 17:49:34 2007

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

OCA

Personal tools