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Structure-function study of maize ribosome-inactivating protein: implications for the internal inactivation region and the sole glutamate in the active site
Authors
Amanda Nga-Sze Mak
Bang
+39 more
Bass
Bass
Cavallaro
Chan
Chan
Chan
Chan
Cheung
Di
Dowd
Girbes
Hartley
Hess
Hey
Hudak
Kam-Bo Wong
Kim
Kong-Hung Sze
Krawetz
Laskowski
Motto
Pang-Chui Shaw
Parikh
Ragulina
Rajamohan
Robertus
Savino
Schnell
Shannon Wing-Ngor Au
Shaw
Spedding
Stirpe
Sun-Shin Cha
Vater
Walsh
Wong
Young-Jun An
Yuen-Ting Wong
Zheng
Publication date
1 January 2007
Publisher
'Oxford University Press (OUP)'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
Maize ribosome-inactivating protein is classified as a class III or an atypical RNA N-glycosidase. It is synthesized as an inactive precursor with a 25-amino acid internal inactivation region, which is removed in the active form. As the first structural example of this class of proteins, crystals of the precursor and the active form were diffracted to 2.4 and 2.5 Å, respectively. The two proteins are similar, with main chain root mean square deviation (RMSD) of 0.519. In the precursor, the inactivation region is found on the protein surface and consists of a flexible loop followed by a long α-helix. This region diminished both the interaction with ribosome and cytotoxicity, but not cellular uptake. Like bacterial ribosome-inactivating proteins, maize ribosome-inactivating protein does not have a back-up glutamate in the active site, which helps the protein to retain some activity if the catalytic glutamate is mutated. The structure reveals that the active site is too small to accommodate two glutamate residues. Our structure suggests that maize ribosome-inactivating protein may represent an intermediate product in the evolution of ribosome-inactivating proteins. © 2007 The Author(s).published_or_final_versio
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oai:hub.hku.hk:10722/97292
Last time updated on 01/06/2016
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HKU Scholars Hub
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oai:hub.hku.hk:10722/157493
Last time updated on 01/06/2016