spacer
spacer

PDBsum entry 2idt

Go to PDB code: 
protein metals links
Electron transport PDB id
2idt

 

 

 

 

Loading ...

 
JSmol PyMol  
Contents
Protein chain
105 a.a. *
Metals
_CU
Waters ×175
* Residue conservation analysis
PDB id:
2idt
Name: Electron transport
Title: Structure of m98q mutant of amicyanin, cu(ii)
Structure: Amicyanin. Chain: a. Engineered: yes. Mutation: yes
Source: Paracoccus denitrificans. Organism_taxid: 266. Gene: mauc, ami. Expressed in: escherichia coli. Expression_system_taxid: 562.
Resolution:
1.00Å     R-factor:   0.126     R-free:   0.158
Authors: C.J.Carrell,J.K.Ma,W.Antholine,J.P.Hosler,F.S.Mathews,V.L.Davidson
Key ref:
C.J.Carrell et al. (2007). Generation of novel copper sites by mutation of the axial ligand of amicyanin. Atomic resolution structures and spectroscopic properties. Biochemistry, 46, 1900-1912. PubMed id: 17295442 DOI: 10.1021/bi0619674
Date:
15-Sep-06     Release date:   13-Mar-07    
PROCHECK
Go to PROCHECK summary
 Headers
 References

Protein chain
Pfam   ArchSchema ?
P22364  (AMCY_PARDE) -  Amicyanin from Paracoccus denitrificans
Seq:
Struc:
131 a.a.
105 a.a.*
Key:    PfamA domain  Secondary structure  CATH domain
* PDB and UniProt seqs differ at 2 residue positions (black crosses)

 

 
DOI no: 10.1021/bi0619674 Biochemistry 46:1900-1912 (2007)
PubMed id: 17295442  
 
 
Generation of novel copper sites by mutation of the axial ligand of amicyanin. Atomic resolution structures and spectroscopic properties.
C.J.Carrell, J.K.Ma, W.E.Antholine, J.P.Hosler, F.S.Mathews, V.L.Davidson.
 
  ABSTRACT  
 
Amicyanin from Paracoccus denitrificans is a type 1 copper protein with three strong equatorial copper ligands provided by nitrogens of His53 and His95 and the sulfur of Cys92, with an additional weak axial ligand provided by the sulfur of Met98. Met98 was replaced with either Gln or Ala. As isolated, the M98A and M98Q mutant proteins contain zinc in the active site. The zinc is then removed and replaced with copper so that the copper-containing proteins may be studied. Each of the mutant amicyanins exhibits a marked decrease in thermal stability relative to that of native amicyanin, consistent with the weaker affinity for copper. Crystal structures were obtained for the oxidized and reduced forms of M98A and M98Q amicyanins at atomic resolution (<or=1.0 A). The crystal structure of oxidized M98A amicyanin exhibits a type 1 ligation geometry but with the axial ligand provided by a water, which fills the void left by the mutation of Met to Ala. The protein undergoes a reversible switch in ligation geometry when going from the aqueous to the frozen state. The visible absorption spectrum in solution is characteristic of type 1 copper, consistent with the crystal structure. On freezing, the blue color is lost, and EPR spectroscopy reveals that the copper is primarily type 2. The crystal structure of reduced M98A amicyanin exhibits an unprecedented ligation geometry in which the His95-Cu coordination is broken, and copper is left with only two ligands from His53 and Cys92 in an almost linear coordination. The replacement of Met98 with Gln yielded a type 1 copper site with increased rhombicity evident from its EPR and visible absorption spectra, and an increase in distance from Cu to the trigonal equatorial plane seen in the crystal structure. Gln98 coordinates more strongly with copper than Met, and the oxidized and reduced forms each exhibit two alternate conformers. EPR and metal analysis of oxidized M98Q amicyanin indicate that a small population of the protein contains weakly bound type 2 copper, which may be removed by washing with EDTA. These results demonstrate that the identity as well as position and rigidity of the axial ligand of the type 1 copper site has a profound influence in the uptake specificity of metal ions, protein stability, and determination of the active site geometry and its spectroscopic properties.
 

Literature references that cite this PDB file's key reference

  PubMed id Reference
21258692 M.Choi, and V.L.Davidson (2011).
Cupredoxins--a study of how proteins may evolve to use metals for bioenergetic processes.
  Metallomics, 3, 140-151.  
20169379 M.G.Savelieff, and Y.Lu (2010).
Cu(A) centers and their biosynthetic models in azurin.
  J Biol Inorg Chem, 15, 461-483.  
19715303 M.Choi, N.Sukumar, A.Liu, and V.L.Davidson (2009).
Defining the role of the axial ligand of the type 1 copper site in amicyanin by replacement of methionine with leucine.
  Biochemistry, 48, 9174-9184.
PDB codes: 3ie9 3iea
17986390 J.K.Ma, S.Lee, M.Choi, G.R.Bishop, J.P.Hosler, and V.L.Davidson (2008).
The axial ligand and extent of protein folding determine whether Zn or Cu binds to amicyanin.
  J Inorg Biochem, 102, 342-346.  
17602663 J.K.Ma, F.S.Mathews, and V.L.Davidson (2007).
Correlation of rhombic distortion of the type 1 copper site of M98Q amicyanin with increased electron transfer reorganization energy.
  Biochemistry, 46, 8561-8568.  
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.

 

spacer

spacer