5 research outputs found
Structure and activity of the Streptococcus pyogenes family GH1 6-phospho β-glycosidase, Spy1599
The group A streptococcus Streptococcus pyogenes is the causative agent of a wide spectrum of invasive infections, including necrotizing fasciitis, scarlet fever and toxic shock syndrome. In the context of its carbohydrate chemistry, it is interesting that S. pyogenes (in this work strain M1 GAS SF370) displays a spectrum of oligosaccharide-processing enzymes that are located in close proximity on the genome but that the in vivo function of these proteins remains unknown. These proteins include different sugar transporters (SPy1593 and SPy1595), both GH125 -1,6- and GH38 -1,3-mannosidases (SPy1603 and SPy1604), a GH84 -hexosaminidase (SPy1600) and a putative GH2 -galactosidase (SPy1586), as well as SPy1599, a family GH1 `putative -glucosidase'. Here, the solution of the three-dimensional structure of SPy1599 in a number of crystal forms complicated by unusual crystallographic twinning is reported. The structure is a classical (/)8-barrel, consistent with CAZy family GH1 and other members of the GH-A clan. SPy1599 has been annotated in sequence depositions as a -glucosidase (EC 3.2.1.21), but no such activity could be found; instead, three-dimensional structural overlaps with other enzymes of known function suggested that SPy1599 contains a phosphate-binding pocket in the active site and has possible 6-phospho--glycosidase activity. Subsequent kinetic analysis indeed showed that SPy1599 has 6-phospho--glucosidase (EC 3.2.1.86) activity. These data suggest that SPy1599 is involved in the intracellular degradation of 6-phosphoglycosides, which are likely to originate from import through one of the organism's many phosphoenolpyruvate phosphotransfer systems (PEP-PTSs)
New insights from metallic tracers on the ffeding ecology of common dolphins in European waters
19th Annual Conference of the European Cetacean Society and associated workshop, April 2-7, 2005, La Rochelle, FranceThe common dolphin, Delphinus delphis, is the most abundant small cetacean inhabiting the temperate waters of the northeastern Atlantic. Although its distribution can be correlated to oceanographic features, it is likely that prey abundance is the major factor in determining its occurrence and movementN
X-ray Diffraction and Density Functional Theory Provide Insight into Vanadate Binding to Homohexameric Bromoperoxidase II and the Mechanism of Bromide Oxidation
International audienceX-ray diffraction of native bromoperoxidase II (EC 1.11.1.18) from the brown alga Ascophyllum nodosum reveals at a resolution of 2.26 Å details of orthovanadate binding and homohexameric protein organization. Three dimers interwoven in contact regions and tightened by hydrogen-bond-clamped guanidinium stacks along with regularly aligned water molecules form the basic structure of the enyzme. Intra- and intermolecular disulfide bridges further stabilize the enzyme preventing altogether the protein from denaturing up to a temperature of 90 °C, as evident from dynamic light scattering and the on-gel ortho-dianisidine assay. Every monomer binds one equivalent of orthovanadate in a cavity formed from side chains of three histidines, two arginines, one lysine, serine, and tryptophan. Protein binding occurs primarily through hydrogen bridges and superimposed by Coulomb attraction according to thermochemical model on density functional level of theory (B3LYP/6-311++G**). The strongest attractor is the arginine side chain mimic N-methylguanidinium, enhancing in positive cooperative manner hydrogen bridges toward weaker acceptors, such as residues from lysine and serine. Activating hydrogen peroxide occurs in the thermochemical model by side-on binding in orthovanadium peroxoic acid, oxidizing bromide with virtually no activation energy to hydrogen bonded hypobromous acid
X‑ray Diffraction and Density Functional Theory Provide Insight into Vanadate Binding to Homohexameric Bromoperoxidase II and the Mechanism of Bromide Oxidation
X-ray
diffraction of native bromoperoxidase II (EC 1.11.1.18) from
the brown alga <i>Ascophyllum nodosum</i> reveals at a resolution
of 2.26 Å details of orthovanadate binding and homohexameric
protein organization. Three dimers interwoven in contact regions and
tightened by hydrogen-bond-clamped guanidinium stacks along with regularly
aligned water molecules form the basic structure of the enyzme. Intra-
and intermolecular disulfide bridges further stabilize the enzyme
preventing altogether the protein from denaturing up to a temperature
of 90 °C, as evident from dynamic light scattering and the on-gel <i>ortho</i>-dianisidine assay. Every monomer binds one equivalent
of orthovanadate in a cavity formed from side chains of three histidines,
two arginines, one lysine, serine, and tryptophan. Protein binding
occurs primarily through hydrogen bridges and superimposed by Coulomb
attraction according to thermochemical model on density functional
level of theory (B3LYP/6-311++G**). The strongest attractor is the
arginine side chain mimic <i>N</i>-methylguanidinium, enhancing
in positive cooperative manner hydrogen bridges toward weaker acceptors,
such as residues from lysine and serine. Activating hydrogen peroxide
occurs in the thermochemical model by side-on binding in orthovanadium
peroxoic acid, oxidizing bromide with virtually no activation energy
to hydrogen bonded hypobromous acid