9 research outputs found

    Crystal structure at 2.3 A resolution and revised nucleotide sequence of the thermostable cyclodextrin glycosyltransferase from Thermoanaerobacterium thermo-sulfurigenes EM1

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    The crystal structure of the cyclodextrin glycosyltransferase (CGTase) from the thermophilic microorganism Thermoanaerobacterium thermosulfurigenes EM1 has been elucidated at 2.3 Angstrom resolution. The final model consists of all 683 amino acid residues, two calcium ions and 343 water molecules, and has a crystallographic X-factor of 17.9% (R(free) 24.9%) with excellent stereochemistry. The overall fold of the enzyme is highly similar to that reported for mesophilic CGTases and differences are observed only at surface loop regions. Closer inspection of these loop regions and comparison with other CGTase structures reveals that especially loops 88-95, 335-339 and 534-539 possibly contribute with novel hydrogen bonds and apolar contacts to the stabilization of the enzyme. Other structural features that might confer thermostability to the T. thermosulfurigenes EM1 CGTase are the introduction of five new salt-bridges and three Gly to Ala/Pro substitutions. The abundance of Ser, Thr and Tyr residues near the active site and oligosaccharide binding sites might explain the increased thermostability of CGTase in the presence of starch, by allowing amylose chains to bind non-specifically to the protein. Additional stabilization of the A/E domain interface through apolar contacts involves residues Phe273 and Tyr187. No additional or improved calcium binding is observed in the structure, suggesting that the observed stabilization in the presence of calcium ions is caused by the reduced exchange of calcium from the protein to the solvent, rendering it less susceptible to unfolding. The 50% decrease in cyclization activity of the T. thermosulfurigenes EM1 CGTase compared with that of B. circulans strain 251 appears to be caused by the changes in the conformation and amino acid composition of the 88-95 loop. In the T. thermosulfurigenes EM1 CGTase there is no residue homologous to Tyr89, which was observed to take part in stacking interactions with bound substrate in the case of the B. circulans strain 251 CGTase. The lack of this interaction in the enzyme-substrate complex is expected to destabilize bound substrates prior to cyclization. Apparently, some catalytic functionality of CGTase has been sacrificed for the sake of structural stability by modifying loop regions near the active site. (C) 1996 Academic Press Limite

    MORPH-PRO: a novel algorithm and web server for protein morphing

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    Abstract Background Proteins are known to be dynamic in nature, changing from one conformation to another while performing vital cellular tasks. It is important to understand these movements in order to better understand protein function. At the same time, experimental techniques provide us with only single snapshots of the whole ensemble of available conformations. Computational protein morphing provides a visualization of a protein structure transitioning from one conformation to another by producing a series of intermediate conformations. Results We present a novel, efficient morphing algorithm, Morph-Pro based on linear interpolation. We also show that apart from visualization, morphing can be used to provide plausible intermediate structures. We test this by using the intermediate structures of a c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK1) conformational change in a virtual docking experiment. The structures are shown to dock with higher score to known JNK1-binding ligands than structures solved using X-Ray crystallography. This experiment demonstrates the potential applications of the intermediate structures in modeling or virtual screening efforts. Conclusions Visualization of protein conformational changes is important for characterization of protein function. Furthermore, the intermediate structures produced by our algorithm are good approximations to true structures. We believe there is great potential for these computationally predicted structures in protein-ligand docking experiments and virtual screening. The Morph-Pro web server can be accessed at http://morph-pro.bioinf.spbau.ru

    Molecular Docking: Challenges, Advances and its Use in Drug Discovery Perspective

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