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PDBsum entry 1zlp
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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 the petal death protein from carnation flower.
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Authors
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A.Teplyakov,
S.Liu,
Z.Lu,
A.Howard,
D.Dunaway-Mariano,
O.Herzberg.
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Ref.
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Biochemistry, 2005,
44,
16377-16384.
[DOI no: ]
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PubMed id
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Abstract
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Expression of the PSR132 protein from Dianthus caryophyllus (carnation, clover
pink) is induced in response to ethylene production associated with petal
senescence, and thus the protein is named petal death protein (PDP). Recent work
has established that despite the annotation of PDP in sequence databases as
carboxyphosphoenolpyruvate mutase, the enzyme is actually a C-C bond cleaving
lyase exhibiting a broad substrate profile. The crystal structure of PDP has
been determined at 2.7 A resolution, revealing a dimer-of-dimers oligomeric
association. Consistent with sequence homology, the overall alpha/beta barrel
fold of PDP is the same as that of other isocitrate lyase/PEP mutase superfamily
members, including a swapped eighth helix within a dimer. Moreover, Mg(2+) binds
in the active site of PDP with a coordination pattern similar to that seen in
other superfamily members. A compound, covalently bound to the catalytic
residue, Cys144, was interpreted as a thiohemiacetal adduct resulting from the
reaction of glutaraldehyde used to cross-link the crystals. The Cys144-carrying
flexible loop that gates access to the active site is in the closed
conformation. Models of bound substrates and comparison with the closed
conformation of isocitrate lyase and 2-methylisocitrate lyase revealed the
structural basis for the broad substrate profile of PDP.
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