Journal:JBIC:13
From Proteopedia

N-Butylisocyanide Oxidation at the [NiFe4S4OHx]-cluster of CO DehydrogenaseJae-Hun Jeoung and Holger Dobbek[1] Molecular Tour The high resolution crystal structure of CODH-II from Carboxydothermus hydrogenoformans (dmin = 1.28 Å) revealed (the product of n-BIC oxidation), in which the rather than the (3b52) and states (3i39). , while apolar amino acid side chains, Ile567 and Ala564, accommodate the long chain alkyl group of n-butylisocyanate. A superposition of the CODH-II structures with different ligands bound to the C-cluster reveals a flexible coordination and geometry for the Ni-Fe1 dyad, while the [Fe3S4] moiety of C-cluster remains unchanged in position. The n-BIC molecule is located in a distance of approximately 8 Å from the n-butylisocyanate bound in the active site, measured between nearest atoms and is placed within a hydrophobic channel, which was shown to be a binding place for Xe atoms in CODH/ACS (2z8y). Analysis of the CODH-II structure identified the presence of two different channels, in which one is analogous to the channel identified by Xe-soaking in bifunctional CODH/ACS (conserved channel), while the other seems to be specific for monofunctional CODH (unique channel). The conserved channel in CODH-II is similar in position to that in bifunctional CODH, where the channel is extended to reach the A-cluster of ACS. Monofunctional CODHs have smaller side chains like Thr and Val, while Tyr617 and Phe634 block a passage of the unique channel to the protein surface in bifunctional CODH/ACS. Furthermore, the unique channel is completely blocked by residue His9 – Pro13 to prevent diffusion of gaseous substrate/product from the protein in bifunctional CODH/ACS. However, the channel of monofunctional CODH-II is directed towards the solvent, which is in line with its role to allow fast progress and egress of substrates and products from the active site to the outside of the enzyme, which has not been described previously.
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