3s5c
From Proteopedia
Crystal Structure of a Hexachlorocyclohexane dehydrochlorinase (LinA) Type2
Structural highlights
FunctionPublication Abstract from PubMedHexachlorocyclohexane dehydrochlorinase (LinA) mediates dehydrochlorination of gamma-HCH to 1, 3, 4, 6-tetrachloro-1,4-cyclohexadiene that constitutes first step of the aerobic degradation pathway. We report the 3.5 A crystal structure of a thermostable LinA-type2 protein, obtained from a soil metagenome, in the hexagonal space group P6(3)22 with unit cell parameters a = b = 162.5, c = 186.3 A, respectively. The structure was solved by molecular replacement using the co-ordinates of LinA-type1 that exhibits mesophile-like properties. Structural comparison of LinA-type2 and -type1 proteins suggests that thermostability of LinA-type2 might partly arise due to presence of higher number of ionic interactions, along with 4% increase in the intersubunit buried surface area. Mutational analysis involving the differing residues between the -type1 and -type2 proteins, circular dichroism experiments and functional assays suggest that Q20 and G23 are determinants of stability for LinA-type2. It was earlier reported that LinA-type1 exhibits enantioselectivity for the (-) enantiomer of alpha-HCH. Contrastingly, we identified that -type2 protein prefers the (+) enantiomer of alpha-HCH. Structural analysis and molecular docking experiments suggest that changed residues K20Q, L96C and A131G, vicinal to the active site are probably responsible for the altered enantioselectivity of LinA-type2. Overall the study has identified features responsible for the thermostability and enantioselectivity of LinA-type2 that can be exploited for the design of variants for specific biotechnological applications. Crystal structure of the hexachlorocyclohexane dehydrochlorinase (LinA-type2): mutational analysis, thermostability and enantioselectivity.,Macwan AS, Kukshal V, Srivastava N, Javed S, Kumar A, Ramachandran R PLoS One. 2012;7(11):e50373. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0050373. Epub 2012 Nov 27. PMID:23209726[1] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. References
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