Structural highlights
Evolutionary Conservation
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Publication Abstract from PubMed
The 2.1-A resolution crystal structure of native uncomplexed iron superoxide dismutase (EC 1.15.1.1) from Pseudomonas ovalis was solved and refined to a final R factor of 24%. The dimeric structure contains one catalytic iron center per monomer with an asymmetric trigonal-bipyramidal coordination of protein ligands to the metal. Each monomer contains two domains, with the trigonal ligands (histidines 74 and 160; aspartate 156) contributed by the large domain and stabilized by an extended hydrogen-bonded network, including residues from opposing monomers. The axial ligand (histidine 26) is found on the small domain and does not participate extensively in the stabilizing H-bond network. The open axial coordination position of the iron is devoid of bound water molecules or anions. The metal is located 0.5 A out of the plane of the trigonal ligands toward histidine 26, providing a slightly skewed coordination away from the iron binding site. The molecule contains a glutamine residue in the active site which is conserved between all iron enzymes sequenced to data but which is conserved among all manganese SODs at a separate position in the sequence. This residue shows the same structural interactions in both cases, implying that iron and manganese SODs are second-site revertants of one another.
The 2.1-A resolution structure of iron superoxide dismutase from Pseudomonas ovalis.,Stoddard BL, Howell PL, Ringe D, Petsko GA Biochemistry. 1990 Sep 25;29(38):8885-93. PMID:2271564[1]
From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.
See Also
References
- ↑ Stoddard BL, Howell PL, Ringe D, Petsko GA. The 2.1-A resolution structure of iron superoxide dismutase from Pseudomonas ovalis. Biochemistry. 1990 Sep 25;29(38):8885-93. PMID:2271564