| Literature DB >> 11735428 |
Abstract
Bacterial luciferase catalyzes the conversion of FMNH(2), a long-chain aliphatic aldehyde, and molecular oxygen to FMN, the corresponding carboxylic acid, and H(2)O with the emission of light. The light-emitting species is an enzyme-bound excited state flavin. The enzyme is a heterodimer (alphabeta) of homologous subunits each with an (beta/alpha)(8) barrel structure. A portion of the loop in the alpha subunit that connects beta strand 7 to alpha helix 7 is disordered in the crystal structure. To test the hypothesis that this loop closes over the active site during catalysis and protects the active site from bulk solvent, a mutant was constructed in which the 29 residues that are disordered in the 2.4 A crystal structure were deleted. Deletion of this loop results in a heterodimer with a subunit equilibrium dissociation constant of 1.32 +/- 1.25 microM, whereas the wild-type heterodimer shows no measurable subunit dissociation. This mutant retains its ability to bind substrate flavin and aldehyde with wild-type affinity and can carry out the chemistry of the bioluminescence reaction with nearly wild-type efficiency. However, the bioluminescent quantum yield of the reaction is reduced nearly 2 orders of magnitude from that of the wild-type enzyme.Entities:
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Year: 2001 PMID: 11735428 DOI: 10.1021/bi0111855
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochemistry ISSN: 0006-2960 Impact factor: 3.162