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Hydrolase inhibitor
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PDB id
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1m8b
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Contents |
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* Residue conservation analysis
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Gene Ontology (GO) functional annotation
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Biochemical function
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serine-type endopeptidase inhibitor activity
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1 term
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DOI no:
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Biochemistry
42:6380-6391
(2003)
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PubMed id:
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Two conformational states of Turkey ovomucoid third domain at low pH: three-dimensional structures, internal dynamics, and interconversion kinetics and thermodynamics.
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J.Song,
M.Laskowski,
M.A.Qasim,
J.L.Markley.
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ABSTRACT
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Turkey ovomucoid third domain (OMTKY3) is shown to exist at low pH as two
distinctly folded, interconverting conformations. Activation parameters were
determined for the transition, and these were of the type reported previously
for cis/trans isomerizations of prolyl peptide bonds. Multidimensional,
multinuclear NMR spectroscopy was used to determine the three-dimensional
structure of each of the two states of P(5)-Pro(14)Asp OMTKY3 at pH 2.5 and 25
degrees C, under conditions where the two states have equal populations with
interchange rates of 0.25 s(-1). The results showed that the two states differ
by cis/trans isomerization of the P(8)-Tyr(11)-P(7)-Pro(12) peptide bond, which
is cis in the conformer dominant at neutral pH and trans in the conformer
appearing at low pH. The major structural differences were found to be in the
region of the reactive site loop. The core of the protein, including the
antiparallel beta-sheet and a alpha-helix, is preserved in both structures. The
state with the cis peptide bond is similar to previously reported structures of
OMTKY3 determined by NMR spectroscopy and X-ray crystallography. The
cis-to-trans transition results in the relocation of the aromatic ring of
P(8)-Tyr(11), disrupts many interactions between the alpha-helix and the
reactive-site loop, and leads to more open spacing between this loop and the
alpha-helix. In addition, the configurations of two of the three disulfide
bonds, P(11)-Cys(8)- P(20)'-Cys(38), and P(3)-Cys(16)- P(17)'-Cys(35), are
altered such that the C(alpha)-C(alpha) distances for each disulfide bridge are
longer by approximately 1 A in the trans state than in the cis. Mutations at
P(1)-Leu(18), P(6)-Lys(13), and P(5)-Pro(14) influence the position of the cis
<= => trans equilibrium. In P(1)-Leu(18)Xxx OMTKY3 mutants, the trans state
is more favored by P(1)-Gly(18) than by Ala(18) or Leu(18); in P(6)-Lys(13)Xxx
OMTKY3 mutants, the trans state is more favored by P(6)-Glu(13) and P(6)-Asp(13)
than Lys(13) or His(13). Stabilization of the trans state in P(5)-Pro(14)Xxx
OMTKY3 mutants follows the series Xxx = Gly > Asp > Glu > Ala approximately
equal His > Pro. In comparing the state with the trans peptide bond to that with
the cis, the pK(a) values of P(12)-Asp(7) and P(1)'-Glu(19) are higher and those
of P(9)-Glu(10) and P(25)'-Glu(43) are lower. The pK(a) values of other
titrating groups in the molecule are similar in both conformational states.
These pK(a) changes underlie the pH dependence of the conformational equilibrium
and can be explained in part by observed structural differences. (15)N
transverse relaxation results indicate that residues P(6)-Lys(13)-P(3)-Cys(16)
in the trans state undergo a dynamic process on the microsecond-millisecond time
scale not present in the cis state.
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Literature references that cite this PDB file's key reference
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PubMed id
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Reference
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R.B.Huang,
Q.S.Du,
C.H.Wang,
S.M.Liao,
and
K.C.Chou
(2010).
A fast and accurate method for predicting pKa of residues in proteins.
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Protein Eng Des Sel, 23,
35-42.
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R.Schmucki,
S.Yokoyama,
and
P.Güntert
(2009).
Automated assignment of NMR chemical shifts using peak-particle dynamics simulation with the DYNASSIGN algorithm.
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J Biomol NMR, 43,
97.
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Y.He,
J.Xu,
and
X.M.Pan
(2007).
A statistical approach to the prediction of pK(a) values in proteins.
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Proteins, 69,
75-82.
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C.M.Santiveri,
J.M.Pérez-Cañadillas,
M.K.Vadivelu,
M.D.Allen,
T.J.Rutherford,
N.A.Watkins,
and
M.Bycroft
(2004).
NMR structure of the alpha-hemoglobin stabilizing protein: insights into conformational heterogeneity and binding.
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J Biol Chem, 279,
34963-34970.
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PDB codes:
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The most recent references are shown first.
Citation data come partly from CiteXplore and partly
from an automated harvesting procedure. Note that this is likely to be
only a partial list as not all journals are covered by
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so more and more references will be included with time.
Where a reference describes a PDB structure, the PDB
codes are
shown on the right.
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