The mechanism of the amidases : mutating the glutamate adjacent to the catalytic triad inactivates the enzyme due to substrate mispositioning

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dc.contributor.author Weber, Brandon W.
dc.contributor.author Kimani, Serah W.
dc.contributor.author Varsani, Arvind
dc.contributor.author Cowan, Don A.
dc.contributor.author Hunter, Roger
dc.contributor.author Venter, Gerhard A.
dc.contributor.author Gumbart, James C.
dc.contributor.author Sewell, B. Trevor
dc.date.accessioned 2013-10-28T08:53:52Z
dc.date.available 2014-09-01T00:20:07Z
dc.date.issued 2013
dc.description.abstract All known nitrilase superfamily amidase and carbamoylase structures have an additional glutamate that is hydrogen bonded to the catalytic lysine in addition to the Glu, Lys, Cys “catalytic triad.” In the amidase from Geobacillus pallidus, mutating this glutamate (Glu-142) to a leucine or aspartate renders the enzyme inactive. X-ray crystal structure determination shows that the structural integrity of the enzyme is maintained despite the mutation with the catalytic cysteine (Cys-166), lysine (Lys-134), and glutamate (Glu-59) in positions similar to those of the wild-type enzyme. In the case of the E142L mutant, a chloride ion is located in the position occupied by Glu-142 Oϵ1 in the wild-type enzyme and interacts with the active site lysine. In the case of the E142D mutant, this site is occupied by Asp-142 Oδ1. In neither case is an atom located at the position of Glu-142 Oϵ2 in the wild-type enzyme. The active site cysteine of the E142L mutant was found to form a Michael adduct with acrylamide, which is a substrate of the wild-type enzyme, due to an interaction that places the double bond of the acrylamide rather than the amide carbonyl carbon adjacent to the active site cysteine. Our results demonstrate that in the wild-type active site a crucial role is played by the hydrogen bond between Glu-142 Oϵ2 and the substrate amino group in positioning the substrate with the correct stereoelectronic alignment to enable the nucleophilic attack on the carbonyl carbon by the catalytic cysteine. en_US
dc.description.librarian hb2013 en_US
dc.description.sponsorship Grant K22-AI100927 from the National Institutes of Health, National Research Foundation and the Carnegie Corporation of New York. en_US
dc.description.uri http://www.jbc.org/ en_US
dc.identifier.citation Weber, BW, Kimani, SW, Varsani, A, Cowan, DA, Hunter, R, Venter, GA, Gumbart, JC & Sewell, BT 2013, 'The mechanism of the amidases : mutating the glutamate adjacent to the catalytic triad inactivates the enzyme due to substrate mispositioning', Journal of Biological Chemistry, vol. 288, no. 40, pp. 28514-28523. en_US
dc.identifier.issn 0021-9258 (print)
dc.identifier.other 10.1074/jbc.M113.503284
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2263/32185
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology en_US
dc.rights © 2013 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc. This research was originally published in Journal of Biological Chemistry. Weber, BW, Kimani SW & Varsani A ..et al. The mechanism of the amidases : mutating the second active site glutamate inactivates theenzyme due to substrate mispositioning. Journal of Biological Chemistry. 2013. Vol. 288, no. 40, pp. 28514-28523. en_US
dc.subject Chemical biology en_US
dc.subject Enzyme mechanisms en_US
dc.subject Enzyme structure en_US
dc.subject Quantum chemistry en_US
dc.subject X-ray crystallography en_US
dc.subject Amidase en_US
dc.title The mechanism of the amidases : mutating the glutamate adjacent to the catalytic triad inactivates the enzyme due to substrate mispositioning en_US
dc.type Postprint Article en_US


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