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Title
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Second-site revertants of an inactive T4 lysozyme mutant restore activity by restructuring the active site cleft.
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Authors
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A.R.Poteete,
D.P.Sun,
H.Nicholson,
B.W.Matthews.
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Ref.
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Biochemistry, 1991,
30,
1425-1432.
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PubMed id
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Abstract
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Substitution of Thr26 by Gln in the lysozyme of bacteriophage T4 produces an
enzyme with greatly reduced activity but essentially unaltered stability
relative to wild type. Spontaneous second-site revertants of the mutant were
selected genetically; two of them were chosen for structural and biochemical
characterization. One revertant bears (in addition to the primary mutation) the
substitution Tyr18----His, the other, Tyr18----Asp. The primary mutant and both
revertant lysozyme genes were reconstructed in a plasmid-based expression
system, and the proteins were produced and purified. The two revertant lysozymes
exhibit enzymatic activities intermediate between wild type and the primary
mutant; both also exhibit melting temperatures approximately 3 degrees C lower
than either the wild type or the primary mutant. Crystals suitable for X-ray
diffraction analysis were obtained from both revertant lysozymes, but not the
primary mutant. Structures of the double mutant lysozymes were refined at 1.8-A
resolution to crystallographic residuals of 15.1% (Tyr18----His) and 15.2%
(Tyr18----Asp). Model building suggests that the side chain of Gln26 in the
primary mutant is forced to protrude into the active site cleft, resulting in
low catalytic activity. In contrast, the crystal structures of the revertants
reveal that the double substitutions (Gln26 and His18, or Gln26 and Asp18) fit
into the same space that is occupied by Thr26 and Tyr18 in the wild-type enzyme;
the effect is a restructuring of the surface of the active site cleft, with
essentially no perturbation of the polypeptide backbone. This restructuring is
effected by a novel series of hydrogen bonds and electrostatic interactions that
apparently stabilize the revertant structures.
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