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PDBsum entry 1ort
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Contents |
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* Residue conservation analysis
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References listed in PDB file
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Key reference
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Title
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Crystal structure of pseudomonas aeruginosa catabolic ornithine transcarbamoylase at 3.0-A resolution: a different oligomeric organization in the transcarbamoylase family.
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Authors
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V.Villeret,
C.Tricot,
V.Stalon,
O.Dideberg.
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Ref.
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Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 1995,
92,
10762-10766.
[DOI no: ]
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PubMed id
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Abstract
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The crystal structure of the Glu-105-->Gly mutant of catabolic ornithine
transcarbamoylase (OTCase; carbamoyl phosphate + L-ornithine = orthophosphate +
L-citrulline, EC 2.1.3.3) from Pseudomonas aeruginosa has been determined at
3.0-A resolution. This mutant is blocked in the active R (relaxed) state. The
structure was solved by the molecular replacement method, starting from a crude
molecular model built from a trimer of the catalytic subunit of another
transcarbamoylase, the extensively studied aspartate transcarbamoylase (ATCase)
from Escherichia coli. This model was used to generate initial low-resolution
phases at 8-A resolution, which were extended to 3-A by noncrystallographic
symmetry averaging. Four phase extensions were required to obtain an electron
density map of very high quality from which the final model was built. The
structure, including 4020 residues, has been refined to 3-A, and the current
crystallographic R value is 0.216. No solvent molecules have been added to the
model. The catabolic OTCase is a dodecamer composed of four trimers organized in
a tetrahedral manner. Each monomer is composed of two domains. The carbamoyl
phosphate binding domain shows a strong structural homology with the equivalent
ATCase part. In contrast, the other domain, mainly implicated in the binding of
the second substrate (ornithine for OTCase and aspartate for ATCase) is poorly
conserved. The quaternary structures of these two allosteric transcarbamoylases
are quite divergent: the E. coli ATCase has pseudo-32 point-group symmetry, with
six catalytic and six regulatory chains; the catabolic OTCase has 23 point-group
symmetry and only catalytic chains. However, both enzymes display homotropic and
heterotropic cooperativity.
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