Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.21.4 (trypsin)
42,187 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The structure of the complex between sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and a deuterated bifunctional enzyme, N-5'-phosphoribosylanthranilate isomerase/indole-3-glycerol-phosphate synthase (Mr 49,484), has been studied in dilute solution by small-angle neutron scattering. The complex nearly acquired its final size, as shown by molecular-sieve chromatography, at the chosen SDS concentration of 1.6 mM, which is slightly below the critical micelle concentration of 1.8 mM (at the ionic strength of 0.1 M). The 452 amino-acid residues of the bifunctional enzyme were combined with 216 detergent molecules. The complex was found to be composed of three protein-decorated SDS micelles of unequal size, connected by short flexible polypeptide segments. The largest of the three micelles was the middle one. The SDS-protein complex contained the dodecyl hydrocarbon moieties in three globular cores. Each core was surrounded by a hydrophilic shell, formed by the hydrophilic and amphiphilic stretches of the polypeptide chain, and by the sulfate head groups of the detergent. The average thickness of these shells was 0.7-0.8 nm. The three-micelle complex was cleaved with trypsin at a single site, possibly in a micelle-connecting segment, into a single-micelle fragment at the carboxyl-terminal which comprised 73 SDS molecules and 163 amino-acid residues, and a dual-micelle fragment. One of the micelles within this larger fragment contained 42 SDS molecules and about 90 amino-acid residues; the other micelle contained 101 SDS molecules and about 190 amino-acid residues. The individual micelle sizes seemed to be determined by the amino-acid sequence.
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PMID:Protein-decorated micelle structure of sodium-dodecyl-sulfate--protein complexes as determined by neutron scattering. 219

Enzymes from thermophilic organisms often are barely active at low temperatures. To obtain a better understanding of this sluggishness, we used DNA shuffling to mutagenize the trpC gene, which encodes indoleglycerol phosphate synthase, from the hyperthermophile Sulfolobus solfataricus. Mutants producing more active protein variants were selected by genetic complementation of an Escherichia coli mutant bearing a trpC deletion. Single amino acid changes and combinations of these changes improved growth appreciably. Five singly and doubly altered protein variants with changes at the N- and C-termini, or at the phosphate binding site, were purified and characterized with regard to their kinetics of enzymatic catalysis, product binding, cleavage by trypsin, and inactivation by heat. Turnover numbers of the purified variant proteins correlated with the corresponding growth rates, showing that the turnover number was the selected trait. Although the affinities for both the substrate and the product decreased appreciably in most protein variants, these defects were offset by the accumulation of high levels of the enzyme's substrate. Rapid mixing of the product indoleglycerol phosphate with the parental enzyme revealed that the enzyme's turnover number at low temperatures is limited by the dissociation of the enzyme-product complex. In contrast, representative protein variants bind and release the product far more rapidly, shifting the bottleneck to the preceding chemical step. The turnover number of the parental enzyme increases with temperature, suggesting that its structural rigidity is responsible for its poor catalytic activity at low temperatures. In support of this interpretation, the rate of trypsinolysis or of thermal denaturation is accelerated significantly in the activated protein variants.
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PMID:Improving the catalytic activity of a thermophilic enzyme at low temperatures. 1065 31