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PDBsum entry 6tli
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* Residue conservation analysis
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Enzyme class:
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E.C.3.4.24.27
- thermolysin.
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Reaction:
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Preferential cleavage: Xaa-|-Leu > Xaa-|-Phe.
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Cofactor:
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Ca(2+); Zn(2+)
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DOI no:
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Proteins
37:628-640
(1999)
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PubMed id:
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Locating interaction sites on proteins: the crystal structure of thermolysin soaked in 2% to 100% isopropanol.
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A.C.English,
S.H.Done,
L.S.Caves,
C.R.Groom,
R.E.Hubbard.
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ABSTRACT
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Multiple-solvent crystal structure determination (MSCS) allows the position and
orientation of bound solvent fragments to be identified by determining the
structure of protein crystals soaked in organic solvents. We have extended this
technique by the determination of high-resolution crystal structures of
thermolysin (TLN), generated from crystals soaked in 2% to 100% isopropanol. The
procedure causes only minor changes to the conformation of the protein, and an
increasing number of isopropanol interaction sites could be identified as the
solvent concentration is increased. Isopropanol occupies all four of the main
subsites in the active site, although this was only observed at very high
concentrations of isopropanol for three of the four subsites. Analysis of the
isopropanol positions shows little correlation with interaction energy computed
using a molecular mechanics force field, but the experimentally determined
positions of isopropanol are consistent with the structures of known
protein-ligand complexes of TLN.
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Selected figure(s)
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Figure 2.
Figure 2. Stereo drawings to show isopropanol binding reducing
the disorder in the interior of TLN. A shows the refined TLN-0
structure. B and C show the refined TLN-10 structure. Red cpk
spheres denote bound water molecules in A, B and C. A.
2mF[o(nat)]-DF[c] map (contoured at 1.2 ),
at a resolution of 1.65 Å. The side chains of M120 and
E143 are disordered. B. 2mF[o(ipa,10)]-DF[c] map (contoured at
1.2 ),
at a resolution of 1.95 Å. The side chains of M120 and
E143 are in a single conformer, and L144 has changed
conformation, highlighting a concerted
re-packing .[11]
C. mF[o(ipa,10)]-mF[o(nat)] difference density map (contoured at
±5.0 )
(1.95 Å). Positive and negative difference density are
shown in green and red, respectively. For clarity, the alternate
B conformers of the M120 and E143 side chains, and the original
conformation of L144 in the TLN-0 structure have been
superimposed (colored yellow). The phases were calculated from
the refined TLN-0 model (see Materials and Methods).
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Figure 3.
Figure 3. Stereo drawing showing isopropanol (IPA 6) binding at
a crystal contact in TLN. The figure shows the mF[o(ipa,90)] map
(contoured at 0.3 ),
at a resolution of 1.95 Å superimposed with the refined
TLN-90 model. Red cpk spheres denote bound water molecules, and
yellow bonds indicate the symmetry-related molecule. A nearby
molecule of water (B value 28.5 Å^2) was also omitted from
the model when calculating the map, to highlight the differences
in shape between the electron density of isopropanol and water.
For clarity, the mF[o(ipa,90)] map is displayed only over IPA 6
and a nearby water molecule.
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The above figures are
reprinted
by permission from John Wiley & Sons, Inc.:
Proteins
(1999,
37,
628-640)
copyright 1999.
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Figures were
selected
by an automated process.
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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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A.Ruf,
M.Stihle,
J.Benz,
M.Schmidt,
and
H.Sobek
(2013).
Structure of Gentlyase, the neutral metalloprotease of Paenibacillus polymyxa.
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Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr,
69,
24-31.
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PDB codes:
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M.Mueller,
M.Wang,
and
C.Schulze-Briese
(2012).
Optimal fine φ-slicing for single-photon-counting pixel detectors.
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Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr,
68,
42-56.
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D.H.Bryant,
M.Moll,
B.Y.Chen,
V.Y.Fofanov,
and
L.E.Kavraki
(2010).
Analysis of substructural variation in families of enzymatic proteins with applications to protein function prediction.
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BMC Bioinformatics,
11,
242.
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R.Brenke,
D.Kozakov,
G.Y.Chuang,
D.Beglov,
D.Hall,
M.R.Landon,
C.Mattos,
and
S.Vajda
(2009).
Fragment-based identification of druggable 'hot spots' of proteins using Fourier domain correlation techniques.
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Bioinformatics,
25,
621-627.
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J.Mansfeld,
and
R.Ulbrich-Hofmann
(2007).
The stability of engineered thermostable neutral proteases from Bacillus stearothermophilus in organic solvents and detergents.
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Biotechnol Bioeng,
97,
672-679.
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L.Feng,
H.Yan,
Z.Wu,
N.Yan,
Z.Wang,
P.D.Jeffrey,
and
Y.Shi
(2007).
Structure of a site-2 protease family intramembrane metalloprotease.
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Science,
318,
1608-1612.
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PDB code:
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W.C.Ho,
C.Luo,
K.Zhao,
X.Chai,
M.X.Fitzgerald,
and
R.Marmorstein
(2006).
High-resolution structure of the p53 core domain: implications for binding small-molecule stabilizing compounds.
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Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr,
62,
1484-1493.
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PDB codes:
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D.Kozakov,
K.H.Clodfelter,
S.Vajda,
and
C.J.Camacho
(2005).
Optimal clustering for detecting near-native conformations in protein docking.
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Biophys J,
89,
867-875.
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S.H.Sheu,
D.R.Lancia,
K.H.Clodfelter,
M.R.Landon,
and
S.Vajda
(2005).
PRECISE: a Database of Predicted and Consensus Interaction Sites in Enzymes.
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Nucleic Acids Res,
33,
D206-D211.
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S.C.Lovell,
I.W.Davis,
W.B.Arendall,
P.I.de Bakker,
J.M.Word,
M.G.Prisant,
J.S.Richardson,
and
D.C.Richardson
(2003).
Structure validation by Calpha geometry: phi,psi and Cbeta deviation.
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Proteins,
50,
437-450.
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K.Harata,
W.D.Schubert,
and
M.Muraki
(2001).
Structure of Urtica dioica agglutinin isolectin I: dimer formation mediated by two zinc ions bound at the sugar-binding site.
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Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr,
57,
1513-1517.
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PDB code:
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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
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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}
}
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