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PDBsum entry 1xr2
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References listed in PDB file
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Key reference
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Title
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Cobalamin-Independent methionine synthase (mete): a face-To-Face double barrel that evolved by gene duplication.
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Authors
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R.Pejchal,
M.L.Ludwig.
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Ref.
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Plos Biol, 2005,
3,
e31-264.
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PubMed id
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Abstract
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Cobalamin-independent methionine synthase (MetE) catalyzes the transfer of a
methyl group from methyltetrahydrofolate to L-homocysteine (Hcy) without using
an intermediate methyl carrier. Although MetE displays no detectable sequence
homology with cobalamin-dependent methionine synthase (MetH), both enzymes
require zinc for activation and binding of Hcy. Crystallographic analyses of
MetE from T. maritima reveal an unusual dual-barrel structure in which the
active site lies between the tops of the two (betaalpha)(8) barrels. The fold of
the N-terminal barrel confirms that it has evolved from the C-terminal
polypeptide by gene duplication; comparisons of the barrels provide an
intriguing example of homologous domain evolution in which binding sites are
obliterated. The C-terminal barrel incorporates the zinc ion that binds and
activates Hcy. The zinc-binding site in MetE is distinguished from the
(Cys)(3)Zn site in the related enzymes, MetH and betaine-homocysteine
methyltransferase, by its position in the barrel and by the metal ligands, which
are histidine, cysteine, glutamate, and cysteine in the resting form of MetE.
Hcy associates at the face of the metal opposite glutamate, which moves away
from the zinc in the binary E.Hcy complex. The folate substrate is not
intimately associated with the N-terminal barrel; instead, elements from both
barrels contribute binding determinants in a binary complex in which the folate
substrate is incorrectly oriented for methyl transfer. Atypical locations of the
Hcy and folate sites in the C-terminal barrel presumably permit direct
interaction of the substrates in a ternary complex. Structures of the binary
substrate complexes imply that rearrangement of folate, perhaps accompanied by
domain rearrangement, must occur before formation of a ternary complex that is
competent for methyl transfer.
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