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PDBsum entry 1x10

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Hydrolase PDB id
1x10

 

 

 

 

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Contents
Protein chains
208 a.a. *
Waters ×724
* Residue conservation analysis
PDB id:
1x10
Name: Hydrolase
Title: Structure of mutant pyrrolidone carboxyl peptidase (e192a) from a hyperthermophile, pyrococcus furiosus
Structure: Pyrrolidone-carboxylate peptidase. Chain: a, b, c, d. Synonym: pyrrolidone carboxyl peptidase, 5-oxoprolyl- peptidase, pyroglutamyl-peptidase i, pgp-i, pyrase. Engineered: yes. Mutation: yes
Source: Pyrococcus furiosus. Organism_taxid: 2261. Expressed in: escherichia coli. Expression_system_taxid: 562.
Biol. unit: Tetramer (from PQS)
Resolution:
2.00Å     R-factor:   0.227     R-free:   0.248
Authors: J.K.Kaushik,Y.Yamagata,K.Ogasahara,K.Yutani
Key ref:
J.K.Kaushik et al. (2006). Completely buried, non-ion-paired glutamic acid contributes favorably to the conformational stability of pyrrolidone carboxyl peptidases from hyperthermophiles. Biochemistry, 45, 7100-7112. PubMed id: 16752900 DOI: 10.1021/bi052610n
Date:
31-Mar-05     Release date:   13-Jun-06    
PROCHECK
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 Headers
 References

Protein chains
Pfam   ArchSchema ?
O73944  (PCP_PYRFU) -  Pyrrolidone-carboxylate peptidase from Pyrococcus furiosus (strain ATCC 43587 / DSM 3638 / JCM 8422 / Vc1)
Seq:
Struc:
208 a.a.
208 a.a.*
Key:    PfamA domain  Secondary structure  CATH domain
* PDB and UniProt seqs differ at 3 residue positions (black crosses)

 Enzyme reactions 
   Enzyme class: E.C.3.4.19.3  - pyroglutamyl-peptidase I.
[IntEnz]   [ExPASy]   [KEGG]   [BRENDA]
      Reaction: 5-oxoprolyl-peptide + H2O = 5-oxoproline + peptide

+
=
+
Molecule diagrams generated from .mol files obtained from the KEGG ftp site

 

 
    reference    
 
 
DOI no: 10.1021/bi052610n Biochemistry 45:7100-7112 (2006)
PubMed id: 16752900  
 
 
Completely buried, non-ion-paired glutamic acid contributes favorably to the conformational stability of pyrrolidone carboxyl peptidases from hyperthermophiles.
J.K.Kaushik, S.Iimura, K.Ogasahara, Y.Yamagata, S.Segawa, K.Yutani.
 
  ABSTRACT  
 
Pyrrolidone carboxyl peptidases (PCPs) from hyperthermophiles have a structurally conserved and completely buried Glu192 in the hydrophobic core; in contrast, the corresponding residue in the mesophile protein is a hydrophobic residue, Ile. Does the buried ionizable residue contribute to stabilization or destabilization of hyperthermophile PCPs? To elucidate the role of the buried glutamic acid in stabilizing PCP from hyperthermophiles, we constructed five Glu192 mutants of PCP-0SH (C142S/C188S, Cys-free double mutant of PCP) from Pyrococcus furiosus and examined their thermal and pH-induced unfolding and crystal structures and compared them with those of PCP-0SH. The stabilities of apolar (E192A/I/V) and polar (E192D/Q) mutants were less than PCP-0SH at acidic pH values. In the alkaline region, the mutant proteins, except for E192D, were more stable than PCP-0SH. The thermal stability data and theoretical calculations indicated an apparent pKa value > or = 7.3 for Glu192. Present results confirmed that the protonated Glu192 in PCP-0SH forms strong hydrogen bonds with the carbonyl oxygen and peptide nitrogen of Pro168. New intermolecular hydrogen bonds in the E --> A/D mutants were formed by a water molecule introduced into the cavity created around position 192, whereas the hydrogen bonds disappeared in the E --> I/V mutants. Structure-based empirical stability of mutant proteins was in good agreement with the experimental results. The results indicated that (1) completely buried Glu192 contributes to the stabilization of PCP-0SH because of the formation of strong intramolecular hydrogen bonds and (2) the hydrogen bonds by the nonionized and buried Glu can contribute more than the burial of hydrophobic groups to the conformational stability of proteins.
 

Literature references that cite this PDB file's key reference

  PubMed id Reference
20615256 J.Okada, T.Okamoto, A.Mukaiyama, T.Tadokoro, D.J.You, H.Chon, Y.Koga, K.Takano, and S.Kanaya (2010).
Evolution and thermodynamics of the slow unfolding of hyperstable monomeric proteins.
  BMC Evol Biol, 10, 207.  
19399254 A.Mukaiyama, and K.Takano (2009).
Slow unfolding of monomeric proteins from hyperthermophiles with reversible unfolding.
  Int J Mol Sci, 10, 1369-1385.  
19531602 T.Beliën, I.J.Joye, J.A.Delcour, and C.M.Courtin (2009).
Computational design-based molecular engineering of the glycosyl hydrolase family 11 B. subtilis XynA endoxylanase improves its acid stability.
  Protein Eng Des Sel, 22, 587-596.  
18369193 M.J.Harms, J.L.Schlessman, M.S.Chimenti, G.R.Sue, A.Damjanović, and B.García-Moreno (2008).
A buried lysine that titrates with a normal pKa: role of conformational flexibility at the protein-water interface as a determinant of pKa values.
  Protein Sci, 17, 833-845.
PDB code: 2rks
17656580 R.J.Johnson, S.R.Lin, and R.T.Raines (2007).
Genetic selection reveals the role of a buried, conserved polar residue.
  Protein Sci, 16, 1609-1616.  
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 code is shown on the right.

 

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