Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.2.1.17 (
lysozyme
)
21,489
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A number of unnatural amino acids and amino acid analogs with modified backbone structures were substituted for
alanine
-82 in T4
lysozyme
. Replacements included alpha,alpha-disubstituted amino acids, N-alkyl amino acids, and lactic acid, an isoelectronic analog of
alanine
. The effects of these electronic and structural perturbations on the stability of T4
lysozyme
were determined. The relatively broad substrate specificity of the Escherichia coli protein biosynthetic machinery suggests that a wide range of backbone and side-chain substitutions can be introduced, allowing a more precise definition of the factors affecting protein stability.
...
PMID:Site-specific incorporation of novel backbone structures into proteins. 155 46
Wild type dihydrolipoyltransacetylase(E2p)-components from the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex of A. vinelandii or E. coli, and mutants of A. vinelandii E2p with stepwise deletions of the lipoyl domains or the
alanine
- and proline-rich region between the binding and the catalytic domain have been overexpressed in E. coli TG2. The high expression of A. vinelandii wild type E2p (20% of cellular protein) and of a mutant enzyme with two lipoyl domains changed the properties of the inner bacterial membrane. This resulted in a solubilization of A. vinelandii E2p after degradation of the outer membrane by
lysozyme
without any contamination by E. coli pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDC) or other high-molecular-weight contaminants. The same effect could be detected for A. vinelandii E2o, an E2 which contains only one lipoyl domain, whereas almost no solubilization of A. vinelandii E2p with one lipoyl domain or of E2p consisting only of the binding and catalytic domain was found. Partial or complete deletion of the
alanine
- and proline-rich sequence between the binding and the catalytic domain did also decrease the solubilization of the E2p-mutants after
lysozyme
treatment. Immunocytochemical experiments on E. coli TG2 cells expressing A. vinelandii wild type E2p indicated that the enzyme was present as a soluble protein in the cytoplasm. In contrast, overexpressed A. vinelandii E2p with deletion of all three lipoyl domains and E. coli wild type E2p aggregated intracellularly. The solubilization by
lysozyme
is therefore ascribed to excluded volume effects leading to changes in the properties of the inner bacterial membrane.
...
PMID:Purification and cellular localization of wild type and mutated dihydrolipoyltransacetylases from Azotobacter vinelandii and Escherichia coli expressed in E. coli. 155 45
Threonine 59, a helix-capping residue at the amino terminus of the longest helix in T4 phage
lysozyme
, was substituted with valine,
alanine
, glycine, serine, asparagine, and aspartic acid. The valine,
alanine
, and glycine replacements were observed to be somewhat more destabilizing than serine, asparagine, and aspartic acid. The crystal structures of the different variants showed that changes in conformation occurred at the site of substitution, including Asp 61, which is nearby, as well as displacement of a solvent molecule that is hydrogen-bonded to the gamma-oxygen of Thr 59 in wild-type
lysozyme
. Neither the structures nor the stabilities of the mutant proteins support the hypothesis of Serrano and Fersht (1989) that glycine and
alanine
are better helix-capping residues than valine because a smaller-sized residue allows better hydration at the end of the helix. In the aspartic acid and asparagine replacements the substituted side chains form hydrogen bonds with the end of the helix, as does threonine and serine at this position. In contrast, however, the Asp and Asn side chains also make unusually close contacts with carbon atoms in Asp 61. This suggests a structural basis for the heretofore puzzling observations that asparagine is more frequently observed as a helix-capping residue than threonine [Richardson, J. S., & Richardson, D. C. (1988) Science 240, 1648-1652] yet Thr----Asn replacements at N-cap positions in barnase were found to be destabilizing [Serrano, L., & Fersht, A. R. (1989) Nature 342, 296-299].(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Dissection of helix capping in T4 lysozyme by structural and thermodynamic analysis of six amino acid substitutions at Thr 59. 156 17
Single and multiple Xaa----
Ala
substitutions were constructed in the alpha-helix comprising residues 39-50 in bacteriophage T4
lysozyme
. The variant with alanines at 10 consecutive positions (A40-49) folds normally and has activity essentially the same as wild type, although it is less stable. The crystal structure of this polyalanine mutant displays no significant change in the main-chain atoms of the helix when compared with the wild-type structure. The individual substitutions of the solvent-exposed residues Asn-40, Ser-44, and Glu-45 with
alanine
tend to increase the thermostability of the protein, whereas replacements of the buried or partially buried residues Lys-43 and Leu-46 are destabilizing. The melting temperature of the
lysozyme
in which Lys-43 and Leu-46 are retained and positions 40, 44, 45, 47, and 48 are substituted with
alanine
(i.e., A40-42/44-45/47-49) is increased by 3.1 degrees C relative to wild type at pH 3.0, but reduced by 1.6 degrees C at pH 6.7. In the case of the charged amino acids Glu-45 and Lys-48, the changes in melting temperature indicate that the putative salt bridge between these two residues contributes essentially nothing to the stability of the protein. The results clearly demonstrate that there is considerable redundancy in the sequence information in the polypeptide chain; not every amino acid is essential for folding. Also, further evidence is provided that the replacement of fully solvent-exposed residues within alpha-helices with alanines may be a general way to increase protein stability. The general approach may permit a simplification of the protein folding problem by retaining only amino acids proven to be essential for folding and replacing the remainder with
alanine
.
...
PMID:Folding and function of a T4 lysozyme containing 10 consecutive alanines illustrate the redundancy of information in an amino acid sequence. 157 Feb 93
Unnatural amino acid mutagenesis, in combination with molecular modeling and simulation techniques, was used to probe the effect of side chain structure on protein stability. Specific replacements at position 133 in T4
lysozyme
included (i) leucine (wt), norvaline, ethylglycine, and
alanine
to measure the cost of stepwise removal of methyl groups from the hydrophobic core, (ii) norvaline and O-methyl serine to evaluate the effects of side chain solvation, and (iii) leucine, S,S-2-amino-4-methylhexanoic acid, and S-2-amino-3-cyclopentylpropanoic acid to measure the influence of packing density and side chain conformational entropy on protein stability. All of these factors (hydrophobicity, packing, conformational entropy, and cavity formation) significantly influence protein stability and must be considered when analyzing any structural change to proteins.
...
PMID:Probing protein stability with unnatural amino acids. 161 24
The mutant h-
lysozyme
, W64CC65A, with Trp64 and Cys65 replaced by Cys and
Ala
, respectively, was secreted by yeast and purified. Peptide mapping confirmed that W64CC65A contained a nonnative Cys64-Cys81 bond and three native disulfide bonds. The mutant had 2% of the lytic activity of the wild-type
lysozyme
. The midpoint concentration of the guanidine hydrochloride denaturation curve, the [D]1/2, was 2.7 M for W64CC65A at pH 3.0 and 25 degrees C, whereas the [D]1/2 for the wild-type h-
lysozyme
was 2.9 M. These results show that the W64CC65A protein is a compactly folded molecule. Our previous results, using the mutant C81A, indicate that Cys81 is not required for correct folding and activity, whereas Cys65 is indispensable (Taniyama, Y., Yamamoto, Y., Kuroki, R., and Kikuchi, M. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 65, 7570-7575). Cys64 substituted for Cys65 in W64CC65A, even though the distance between the alpha-carbons at positions 64 and 81 in the wild-type h-
lysozyme
is not favorable for forming a disulfide bond. Unlike C81A, the mutant W64CC65/81A, which has the additional substitution of
Ala
for Cys81, did not fold. These results suggest that the absence of both the Cys64-Cys81 bond and the amino acid residue Trp64 caused the misfolding or destabilization of W64CC65/81A in vivo. It is proposed that the formation of the alternative bond, Cys64-Cys81 is important for the folding of W64CC65A in vivo.
...
PMID:Folding of human lysozyme in vivo by the formation of an alternative disulfide bond. 163 46
Purified murein from Thiobacillus neapolitanus was poorly digested by
lysozyme
. It's sensitivity to the enzyme greatly increased after N-acetylation. The murein was found to contain 30 to 35% glucosamine residues lacking N-acetyl groups. It also contained phosphomuramic acid. Further modifications included amidation of diaminopimelic acid in the peptide side chains and a low
alanine
content. None of these modifications were found in the murein of another sulphur bacterium, Thiobacillus versutus.
...
PMID:N-unsubstituted glucosamine residues and other modifications in murein of the obligatory chemolithotroph Thiobacillus neapolitanus. 164 12
To experimentally examine the functional roles of somatically derived structural variation in the
lysozyme
-binding mAb HyHEL-10, we have introduced three different point mutations and one insertion at two different sites in HyHEL-10 by site-directed mutagenesis and expression of the mutant antibodies. Mutation of Asp----
Ala
at position 101 of the H chain returns a somatically mutated residue to its germline sequence for HyHEL-10, and reduces affinity for chicken
lysozyme
by approximately 9000-fold. Lengthening the third H chain hypervariable region by two amino acids reduces affinity by about 2000-fold. Two mutations, Asp----Thr at position 101 in the H chain and Lys----Thr at position 49 in the L chain, model somatic differences found in another structurally related but functionally distinguishable mAb and minimally decrease affinity for chicken
lysozyme
. The H chain mutation Asp101VVH----Thr has little effect on affinity for other avian lysozymes but does alter relative fine specificity for these lysozymes. The L chain mutation Lys49VK----Thr increases affinity for duck
lysozyme
by approximately fivefold. Neither of the positions mutated, 101 in the H chain nor 49 in the L chain, nor the residues near the insertion contact
lysozyme
in the x-ray structure of the HyHEL-10 F(ab)-HEL complex. The results suggest that these mutations, which model observed somatic mutations, produce functional variation by indirect or long-range effects.
...
PMID:Experimental analysis by site-directed mutagenesis of somatic mutation effects on affinity and fine specificity in antibodies specific for lysozyme. 172 69
The hydrophobic cores of proteins are generally well packed, with few cavities. Mutations in which a bulky buried residue such as leucine or phenylalanine is replaced with a small residue such as
alanine
can create cavities in the core of a protein (our unpublished results). The sizes and shapes of such cavities can vary substantially depending on factors such as local geometry, whether or not a cavity already exists at the site of substitution, and the degree to which the protein structure relaxes to occupy the space vacated by the substituted residue. We show by crystallographic and thermodynamic analysis that the cavity created by the replacement Leu 99----
Ala
in T4
lysozyme
is large enough to bind benzene and that ligand binding increases the melting temperature of the protein by 6.0 degrees C at pH 3.0. Benzene does not, however, bind to the cavity created by the Phe 153----
Ala
replacement. The results show that cavities can be engineered in proteins and suggest that such cavities might be tailored to bind specific ligands. The binding of benzene at an internal site 7 A from the molecular surface also illustrates the dynamic nature of proteins, even in crystals.
...
PMID:A cavity-containing mutant of T4 lysozyme is stabilized by buried benzene. 173 Dec 52
The kinetics of unfolding and refolding of T4
lysozyme
and nine of its mutants have been investigated as a function of guanidinium chloride concentration at 12 degrees C. All show simple two-state, first-order kinetics. Two types of mutants were studied: proline-
alanine
interchanges and substitutions at position 3 with side chains of varying hydrophobicity. Crystal structures are available for seven of the ten proteins. The effect of mutations on the folding kinetics is more pronounced and complex than on equilibrium thermodynamics. The proteins fall into two broad kinetic classes with one class rather close to the wild type. P86A is a mutant with marked changes in kinetics but only a very small change in stability. Since the 86 position is in the middle of an alpha-helix, the indications are that the helix containing an A residue is more stable in the transition state than one containing a P residue. The other mutants are more complicated, with the refolding and unfolding rates unequally affected by the mutations. On the basis of comparisons with other investigations, we conclude that the rate-determining step in the presence of guanidinium chloride is not the same as in aqueous solution and that it most likely precedes it. The indications are that we are studying the formation of a transition intermediate which is destabilized by the denaturant and which resembles the A intermediate of the framework or molten globule models for protein folding.
...
PMID:Folding kinetics of T4 lysozyme and nine mutants at 12 degrees C. 173 5
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