Structural highlights
6yrs is a 2 chain structure with sequence from Synthetic construct. Full crystallographic information is available from OCA. For a guided tour on the structure components use FirstGlance.
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Method: | X-ray diffraction, Resolution 1.7Å |
Ligands: | , , , , |
Resources: | FirstGlance, OCA, PDBe, RCSB, PDBsum, ProSAT |
Publication Abstract from PubMed
TEM-1 beta-lactamase degrades beta-lactam antibiotics with a strong preference for penicillins. Sequence reconstruction studies indicate that it evolved from ancestral enzymes that degraded a variety of beta-lactam antibiotics with moderate efficiency. This generalist to specialist conversion involved more than 100 mutational changes, but conserved fold and catalytic residues, suggesting a role for dynamics in enzyme evolution. Here, we develop a conformational dynamics computational approach to rationally mold a protein flexibility profile on the basis of a hinge-shift mechanism. By deliberately weighting and altering the conformational dynamics of a putative Precambrian beta-lactamase, we engineer enzyme specificity that mimics the modern TEM-1 beta-lactamase with only 21 amino acid replacements. Our conformational dynamics design thus re-enacts the evolutionary process and provides a rational allosteric approach for manipulating function while conserving the enzyme active site.
Hinge-shift mechanism as a protein design principle for the evolution of beta-lactamases from substrate promiscuity to specificity.,Modi T, Risso VA, Martinez-Rodriguez S, Gavira JA, Mebrat MD, Van Horn WD, Sanchez-Ruiz JM, Banu Ozkan S Nat Commun. 2021 Mar 25;12(1):1852. doi: 10.1038/s41467-021-22089-0. PMID:33767175[1]
From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.
See Also
References
- ↑ Modi T, Risso VA, Martinez-Rodriguez S, Gavira JA, Mebrat MD, Van Horn WD, Sanchez-Ruiz JM, Banu Ozkan S. Hinge-shift mechanism as a protein design principle for the evolution of beta-lactamases from substrate promiscuity to specificity. Nat Commun. 2021 Mar 25;12(1):1852. doi: 10.1038/s41467-021-22089-0. PMID:33767175 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-22089-0