| Literature DB >> 16012173 |
Pakorn Winayanuwattikun1, Albert J Ketterman.
Abstract
In Anopheles dirus glutathione transferase D3-3, there are electrostatic interactions between the negatively charged glutamyl alpha-carboxylate group of glutathione, the positively charged Arg-66, and the negatively charged Asp-100. This ionic interaction is stabilized by a network of hydrogen bonds from Ser-65, Thr-158, Thr-162, and a conserved water-mediated contact. This alternating ionic bridge interaction between negatively and positively charged residues stabilized by a network of hydrogen bonding we have named an electron-sharing network. We show that the electron-sharing network assists the glutamyl alpha-carboxylate of glutathione to function as a catalytic base accepting the proton from the thiol group forming an anionic glutathione, which is a crucial step in the glutathione transferase (GST) catalysis. Kinetic studies demonstrate that the mutation of electron-sharing network residues results in a decreased ability to lower the pKa of the thiol group of glutathione. Although the residues that contribute to the electron-sharing network are not conserved in the primary sequence, structural characterizations indicate that the presence of the network can be mapped to the same region in all GST classes. A structural diversification but functional conservation suggests a significant role for the electron-sharing network in catalysis as the purpose was maintained during the divergent evolution of GSTs. This network appears to be a functionally conserved motif that contributes to the "base-assisted deprotonation" model suggested to be essential for the glutathione ionization step of the catalytic mechanism.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 16012173 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M502612200
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157