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PDBsum entry 3fft

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protein ligands metals Protein-protein interface(s) links
Signaling protein PDB id
3fft

 

 

 

 

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Contents
Protein chains
128 a.a. *
Ligands
BEF ×2
GOL ×4
SO4 ×2
Metals
_MN ×2
Waters ×344
* Residue conservation analysis
PDB id:
3fft
Name: Signaling protein
Title: Crystal structure of chey double mutant f14e, e89r complexed with bef3- and mn2+
Structure: Chemotaxis protein chey. Chain: a, b. Engineered: yes. Mutation: yes
Source: Escherichia coli. Organism_taxid: 83333. Strain: k-12. Gene: b1882, chey, jw1871. Expressed in: escherichia coli. Expression_system_taxid: 562.
Resolution:
2.21Å     R-factor:   0.163     R-free:   0.203
Authors: Y.Pazy,E.J.Collins,R.B.Bourret
Key ref: Y.Pazy et al. (2009). Matching biochemical reaction kinetics to the timescales of life: structural determinants that influence the autodephosphorylation rate of response regulator proteins. J Mol Biol, 392, 1205-1220. PubMed id: 19646451
Date:
04-Dec-08     Release date:   22-Sep-09    
PROCHECK
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 Headers
 References

Protein chains
Pfam   ArchSchema ?
P0AE67  (CHEY_ECOLI) -  Chemotaxis protein CheY from Escherichia coli (strain K12)
Seq:
Struc:
129 a.a.
128 a.a.*
Key:    PfamA domain  Secondary structure  CATH domain
* PDB and UniProt seqs differ at 2 residue positions (black crosses)

 Enzyme reactions 
   Enzyme class: E.C.?
[IntEnz]   [ExPASy]   [KEGG]   [BRENDA]

 

 
J Mol Biol 392:1205-1220 (2009)
PubMed id: 19646451  
 
 
Matching biochemical reaction kinetics to the timescales of life: structural determinants that influence the autodephosphorylation rate of response regulator proteins.
Y.Pazy, A.C.Wollish, S.A.Thomas, P.J.Miller, E.J.Collins, R.B.Bourret, R.E.Silversmith.
 
  ABSTRACT  
 
In two-component regulatory systems, covalent phosphorylation typically activates the response regulator signaling protein, and hydrolysis of the phosphoryl group reestablishes the inactive state. Despite highly conserved three-dimensional structures and active-site features, the rates of catalytic autodephosphorylation for different response regulators vary by a factor of almost 10(6). Previous studies identified two variable active-site residues, corresponding to Escherichia coli CheY residues 59 and 89, that modulate response regulator autodephosphorylation rates about 100-fold. Here, a set of five CheY mutants, which match other "model" response regulators (ArcA, CusR, DctD, FixJ, PhoB, or Spo0F) at variable active-site positions corresponding to CheY residues 14, 59, and 89, were characterized functionally and structurally in an attempt to identify mechanisms that modulate autodephosphorylation rate. As expected, the autodephosphorylation rates of the CheY mutants were reduced 6- to 40-fold relative to wild-type CheY, but all still autodephosphorylated 12- to 80-fold faster than their respective model response regulators. Comparison of X-ray crystal structures of the five CheY mutants (complexed with the phosphoryl group analogue BeF(3)(-)) to wild-type CheY or corresponding model response regulator structures gave strong evidence for steric obstruction of the phosphoryl group from the attacking water molecule as one mechanism to enhance phosphoryl group stability. Structural data also suggested that impeding the change of a response regulator from the active to the inactive conformation might retard the autodephosphorylation reaction if the two processes are coupled, and that the residue at position '58' may contribute to rate modulation. A given combination of amino acids at positions '14', '59', and '89' adopted similar conformations regardless of protein context (CheY or model response regulator), suggesting that knowledge of residue identity may be sufficient to predict autodephosphorylation rate, and hence the kinetics of the signaling response, in the response regulator family of proteins.
 

Literature references that cite this PDB file's key reference

  PubMed id Reference
20207758 K.H.Lam, T.K.Ling, and S.W.Au (2010).
Crystal structure of activated CheY1 from Helicobacter pylori.
  J Bacteriol, 192, 2324-2334.
PDB codes: 3gwg 3h1e 3h1f 3h1g
20211578 R.B.Bourret (2010).
Receiver domain structure and function in response regulator proteins.
  Curr Opin Microbiol, 13, 142-149.  
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 either method. However, we are continually building up the citation data 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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