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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
)
630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hydrogen bonds are the most specific, and therefore predictable of the intermolecular interactions involved in ligand-protein binding. Given the structure of a molecule, it is possible to estimate the positions at which complementary hydrogen-bonding atoms could be found. Crystal-survey data are used in the design of a program, HBMAP, that generates a hydrogen-bond map for any given ligand, which contains all the feasible positions at which a complementary atom could be found. On superposition of ligands, the overlapping regions of their maps represent positions of receptor atoms to which each molecule can bind. The certainty of these positions is increased by the incorporation of a larger number and diversity of molecules. In this work, superposition is achieved using the program HBMATCH, which uses simulated annealing to generate the correspondence between points from the hydrogen-bonding maps of the two molecules. Equivalent matches are distinguished on the basis of their steric similarity. The strategy is tested on a number of ligands for which ligand-protein complexes have been solved crystallographically, which allows validation of the techniques. The receptor atom positions of
thermolysin
are successfully predicted when the correct superposition is obtained.
J Comput Aided
Mol
Des 1997 May
PMID:An automated method for predicting the positions of hydrogen-bonding atoms in binding sites. 926 50
The lethal factor (LF) protein of Bacillus anthracis lethal toxin contains the
thermolysin
-like active-site and zinc-binding consensus motif HEXXH (K. R. Klimpel, N. Arora, and S. H. Leppla,
Mol
. Microbiol. 13:1093-1100, 1994). LF is hypothesized to act as a Zn2+ metalloprotease in the cytoplasm of macrophages, but no proteolytic activities have been previously shown on any target substrate. Here, synthetic peptides are hydrolyzed by LF in vitro. Mass spectroscopy and peptide sequencing of isolated cleavage products separated by reverse-phase high-pressure liquid chromatography indicate that LF seems to prefer proline-containing substrates. Substitution mutations within the consensus active-site residues completely abolish all in vitro catalytic functions, as does addition of 1,10-phenanthroline, EDTA, and certain amino acid hydroxamates, including the novel zinc metalloprotease inhibitor ZINCOV. In contrast, the protease inhibitors bestatin and lysine CMK, previously shown to block LF activity on macrophages, did not block LF activity in vitro. These data provide the first direct evidence that LF may act as an endopeptidase.
...
PMID:Lethal factor active-site mutations affect catalytic activity in vitro. 957 35
In the accompanying paper, we report that zinc is unlikely to be the co-factor supporting peptide deformylase activity in vivo. In contrast, nickel binding promotes full enzyme activity. The three-dimensional structure of the resulting nickel-containing peptide deformylase (catalytic domain, residues 1 to 147) was solved by NMR using a 13C-15N-doubly labelled protein sample. A set of 2261 restraints could be collected, with an average of 15.4 per amino acid. The resolution, which shows a good definition for the position of most side-chains, is greatly improved compared to that previously reported for the zinc-containing, inactive form. A comparison of the two stuctures indicates however that both share the same 3D organization. This shows that the nature of the bound metal is the primary determinant of the hydrolytic activity of this enzyme. Site-directed mutagenesis enabled us to determine the conserved residues of PDF involved in the structure of the active site. In particular, a buried arginine appears to be critical for the positioning of Cys90, one of the metal ligands. Furthermore, the 3D structure of peptide deformylase was compared to
thermolysin
and metzincins. Although the structural folds are very different, they all display a common structural motif involving an alpha-helix and a three-stranded beta-sheet. These conserved structural elements build a common scaffold which includes the active site, suggesting a common hydrolytic mechanism for these proteases. Finally, an invariant glycine shared by both PDF and metzincins enables us to extend the conserved motif from HEXXH to HEXXHXXG.
J
Mol
Biol 1998 Jul 17
PMID:Solution structure of nickel-peptide deformylase. 966 52
The Streptomyces metalloproteinase inhibitor, SMPI, isolated from Streptomyces nigrescens TK-23, is a proteinaceous metalloproteinase inhibitor, and consists of 102 amino acid residues with two disulfide bridges. SMPI specifically inhibits metalloproteinases such as
thermolysin
. In the present work, the solution structure of SMPI was determined on the basis of 1536 nuclear Overhauser enhancement derived distance restraints and 52 dihedral angle restraints obtained from three-bond spin coupling constants. The final ensemble of 20 NMR structures overlaid onto their mean coordinate with backbone (N, Calpha, C') r.m.s.d. values of 0. 45(+/-0.11) A and 0.57(+/-0.18) A for residues 6 to 99 and the entire 102 residues, respectively. SMPI is essentially composed of two beta-sheets, each consisting of four antiparallel beta-strands. The structure can be considered as two Greek key motifs with 2-fold internal symmetry, a Greek key beta-barrel. One unique structural feature found in SMPI is in its extension between the first and second strands of the second Greek key motif. Interestingly, this extended segment is known to be involved in the inhibitory activity of SMPI. In the absence of sequence similarity, the SMPI structure shows clear similarity to both domains of the eye lens crystallins, both domains of the calcium sensor protein-S, as well as the single-domain yeast killer toxin. The yeast killer toxin structure was thought to be a precursor of the two-domain beta gamma-crystallin proteins, because of its structural similarity to each domain of the beta gamma-crystallins. SMPI thus provides another example of a single-domain protein structure that corresponds to the ancestral fold from which the two-domain proteins in the beta gamma-crystallin superfamily are believed to have evolved.
J
Mol
Biol 1998 Sep 18
PMID:NMR structure of the Streptomyces metalloproteinase inhibitor, SMPI, isolated from Streptomyces nigrescens TK-23: another example of an ancestral beta gamma-crystallin precursor structure. 973 97
SMPI is a proteinaceous microbial metalloproteinase inhibitor that was isolated from Streptomyces nigrescens TK-23 in 1979. SMPI is known to selectively inhibit the metalloproteinases in the gluzincin family, according to the Rawling and Barrett classification. There has been no report on the interaction of a metalloproteinase in the family of gluzincins with its specific proteinaceous inhibitor. We have solved the solution structure of SMPI by NMR. Here, we report the binding mode of SMPI to
thermolysin
, based on the model complex structure generated using our high-resolution NMR structure of SMPI and the crystal structure of
thermolysin
. The obtained complex model shows that the extruded loop of SMPI, with the scissile bond Cys64-Val65, is complementary in shape to the active cleft of
thermolysin
. In the complex, the Cys64 (P1) carbonyl oxygen atom can form a tetrahedral coordination to the active zinc in
thermolysin
, and simultaneously, the methyl groups of Val65 (P1') are closely located in the hydrophobic S1' pocket in
thermolysin
. From the electrostatic potential surface calculation, the active loop of SMPI and the active cleft in
thermolysin
have been shown to be complementary in the surface charge distribution, resulting in the stabilization of the complex. The apparently large active loop is less flexible, but maintains a conformation in the nano- to picosecond time-scale, as elucidated from the 15N spin relaxation analysis. This is a quite different structural feature of SMPI from the flexible binding loop generally found in the serine proteinase inhibitors, such as SSI and eglin c, and can be related to the narrow specificity of SMPI. The present study provides the first insight into the interaction between a proteinaceous inhibitor and a gluzincin metalloproteinase.
J
Mol
Biol 1998 Sep 18
PMID:Elucidation of the mode of interaction of thermolysin with a proteinaceous metalloproteinase inhibitor, SMPI, based on a model complex structure and a structural dynamics analysis. 973 98
Limited proteolysis of the NAD+-dependent DNA ligase from Bacillus stearothermophilus with
thermolysin
results in two fragments which were resistant to further proteolysis. These fragments were characterised by N-terminal protein sequencing and electrospray mass spectrometry. The larger, N-terminal fragment consists of the first 318 residues and the smaller, C-terminal fragment begins at residue 397 and runs to the C terminus. Both fragments were over-expressed in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity from this source. The large fragment retains the full self-adenylation activity of the intact enzyme, has minimal DNA binding activity and vastly reduced ligation activity. The small fragment lacks adenylation activity but binds to nicked DNA with a similar affinity to that of the intact enzyme. It is unable to stimulate the ligation activity of the large fragment. Atomic absorption spectroscopy showed that the intact protein and the small fragment bind a zinc ion but the large fragment does not. No evidence of any interaction between the two fragments could be obtained. Thus, we conclude that NAD+-dependent DNA ligases consist of at least two discrete functional domains: an N-terminal domain which is responsible for cofactor binding and self adenylation, and a C-terminal DNA-binding domain which contains a zinc binding site.
J
Mol
Biol 1999 Jan 08
PMID:Functional domains of an NAD+-dependent DNA ligase. 987 89
The zinc metalloendopeptidase,
thermolysin
(
EC 3.4.24.27
) produced by Bacillus thermoproteolyticus serves as a model of important physiological enzymes such as neprilysin, angiotensin converting enzyme and endothelin converting enzyme. Thermolysin is synthesised as a pre-proenzyme, with an N-terminal prosequence of 204 residues and a mature sequence of 316 residues. The prosequence facilitates the folding of the denatured mature sequence in vitro and the cleavage of the peptide bond linking the pro and mature sequences occurs by an autocatalytic, intramolecular process. With the aim to study the role of the prosequence in vivo and to produce active mutants for structural studies, the mature sequence of
thermolysin
has now been expressed in Escherichia coli, either alone or with the prosequence as an independent polypeptide, i.e. in trans form. In addition, the mature sequence of an inactive mutant in which Glu143 involved in the catalytic process was replaced by Ala has also been expressed in trans with the prosequence. The results show that the pro-sequence is required to obtain active
thermolysin
and that a covalent link with the mature sequence is not necessary for the correct folding of the protease in vivo. Moreover, when expressed in E. coli (in trans with the prosequence), the yield of correctly folded E143A mutant was similar to that of the wild-type protease, whereas no mature enzyme was detected when it was expressed as a pre-proenzyme in Bacillus subtilis. These results demonstrate that the
thermolysin
prosequence acts as an intramolecular chaperone in vivo and open the way to structural studies of catalytic site mutants produced in large quantities in E. coli.
J
Mol
Biol 1999 Feb 05
PMID:The prosequence of thermolysin acts as an intramolecular chaperone when expressed in trans with the mature sequence in Escherichia coli. 992 74
NADPH:protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase (POR) catalyzes the light-dependent reduction of protochlorophyllide (pchlide) to chlorophyllide (chlide) in the biosynthesis of chlorophyll. POR is a peripheral membrane protein that accumulates to high levels in the prolamellar bodies of vascular plant etioplasts and is present at low levels in the thylakoid membranes of developing and mature plastids. Clustered charged-to-alanine scanning mutagenesis of the pea (Pisum sativum L.) POR was carried out and the resulting mutant enzymes analyzed for their ability to catalyze pchlide photoconversion in vivo and to associate properly with thylakoid membrane preparations in vitro. Of 37 mutant enzymes examined, 5 retained wild-type levels of activity, 14 were catalytically inactive, and the remaining 18 exhibited altered levels of function. Several of the mutant enzymes showed temperature-dependent enzymatic activity, being inactive at 32 degrees C, but partially active at 24 degrees C. Mutations in predicted alpha-helical regions of the protein showed the least effect on enzyme activity, whereas mutations in predicted beta-sheet regions of the protein showed a consistent adverse affect on enzyme function. In the absence of added NADPH, neither wild-type POR nor any of the mutant PORs resisted proteolysis by
thermolysin
following assembly onto the thylakoid membranes. In contrast, when NADPH was present in the assay mixture, 13 of the 37 mutant PORs examined were found to be resistant to
thermolysin
upon treatment, suggesting that the mutations did not affect their ability to be properly attached to the thylakoid membrane. In general, the replacement of charged amino acids by alanine in the most N- and C-terminal regions of the mature protein did not significantly affect POR assembly, whereas mutations within the central core of the protein (between residues 86 and 342) were incapable of proper attachment to the thylakoid. Failure to properly associate with the thylakoid membrane in a protease resistant manner was only weakly correlated to loss of catalytic function. These studies are a first step towards defining structural determinants crucial to POR function and intraorganellar localization.
Plant
Mol
Biol 1999 Jan
PMID:The role of protein surface charge in catalytic activity and chloroplast membrane association of the pea NADPH: protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase (POR) as revealed by alanine scanning mutagenesis. 1008 Jun 97
Comparative molecular field analysis has been applied to a data set of
thermolysin
inhibitors. Fields expressed in terms of molecular similarity indices (CoMSIA) have been used instead of the usually applied Lennard-Jones- and Coulomb-type potentials (CoMFA). Five different properties, assumed to cover the major contributions responsible for ligand binding, have been considered: steric, electrostatic, hydrophobic, and hydrogen-bond donor or acceptor properties. The statistical evaluation of the field properties by PLS analysis reveals a similar predictive potential to CoMFA. However, significantly improved and easily interpretable contour maps are obtained. The features in these maps intuitively suggest where to modify a molecular structure in terms of physicochemical properties and functional groups in order to improve its binding affinity. They can also be interpreted with respect to the known structural protein environment of
thermolysin
. Most of the highlighted regions in the maps are mirrored by features in the surrounding environment required for binding. Using the derived correlation model, different members of a combinatorial library designed for
thermolysin
inhibition have been scored for affinity. The results obtained demonstrate the prediction power of the CoMSIA method.
J Comput Aided
Mol
Des 1999 Jan
PMID:Comparative molecular similarity index analysis (CoMSIA) to study hydrogen-bonding properties and to score combinatorial libraries. 1008 95
The effects that the inhibitors inositol hexakisphosphate and benzene tri-, tetra- and hexacarboxylates have on the phosphoglycerate mutases from Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Schizosaccharomyces pombe have been determined. Their Kivalues have been calculated, and the ability of the inhibitors to protect the enzymes against limited proteolysis investigated. These biochemical data have been placed in a structural context by the solution of the crystal structures of S. cerevisiae phosphoglycerate mutase soaked with inositol hexakisphosphate or benzene hexacarboxylate. These large polyanionic compounds bind to the enzyme so as to block the entrance to the active-site cleft. They form multiple interactions with the enzyme, consistent with their low Kivalues, and afford good protection against limited proteolysis of the C-terminal region by
thermolysin
. The inositol compound is more efficacious because of its greater number of negative charges. The S. pombe phosphoglycerate mutase that is inherently lacking a comparable C-terminal region has higher Kivalues for the compounds tested. Moreover, the S. pombe enzyme is less sensititive to proteolysis, and the presence or absence of the inhibitor molecules has little effect on susceptibility to proteolysis.
J
Mol
Biol 1999 Jun 18
PMID:Polyanionic inhibitors of phosphoglycerate mutase: combined structural and biochemical analysis. 1036 55
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