| Literature DB >> 18645234 |
Annette Langkilde1, Søren M Kristensen, Leila Lo Leggio, Anne Mølgaard, Jan H Jensen, Andrew R Houk, Jens Christian Navarro Poulsen, Sakari Kauppinen, Sine Larsen.
Abstract
An extremely low-field signal (at approximately 18 p.p.m.) in the (1)H NMR spectrum of rhamnogalacturonan acetylesterase (RGAE) shows the presence of a short strong hydrogen bond in the structure. This signal was also present in the mutant RGAE D192N, in which Asp192, which is part of the catalytic triad, has been replaced with Asn. A careful analysis of wild-type RGAE and RGAE D192N was conducted with the purpose of identifying possible candidates for the short hydrogen bond with the 18 p.p.m. deshielded proton. Theoretical calculations of chemical shift values were used in the interpretation of the experimental (1)H NMR spectra. The crystal structure of RGAE D192N was determined to 1.33 A resolution and refined to an R value of 11.6% for all data. The structure is virtually identical to the high-resolution (1.12 A) structure of the wild-type enzyme except for the interactions involving the mutation and a disordered loop. Searches of the Cambridge Structural Database were conducted to obtain information on the donor-acceptor distances of different types of hydrogen bonds. The short hydrogen-bond interactions found in RGAE have equivalents in small-molecule structures. An examination of the short hydrogen bonds in RGAE, the calculated pK(a) values and solvent-accessibilities identified a buried carboxylic acid carboxylate hydrogen bond between Asp75 and Asp87 as the likely origin of the 18 p.p.m. signal. Similar hydrogen-bond interactions between two Asp or Glu carboxy groups were found in 16% of a homology-reduced set of high-quality structures extracted from the PDB. The shortest hydrogen bonds in RGAE are all located close to the active site and short interactions between Ser and Thr side-chain OH groups and backbone carbonyl O atoms seem to play an important role in the stability of the protein structure. These results illustrate the significance of short strong hydrogen bonds in proteins.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18645234 PMCID: PMC2483496 DOI: 10.1107/S0907444908017083
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr ISSN: 0907-4449
Data-collection and refinement statistics for RGAE D192N
Values in parentheses are for the outer resolution shell.
| Total No. of reflections | 497682 |
| Unique reflections | 55818 |
| Resolution range (Å) | 19.73–1.33 (1.35–1.33) |
| Completeness (%) | 99.5 (98.3) |
| 91.3 (72.8) | |
| 3.2 (19.8) | |
| Average redundancy | 8.9 (2.3) |
| 11.57 | |
| 10.98 | |
| 15.34 | |
| 14.56 | |
| No. of non-H atoms in model | |
| Protein | 1768 |
| GlcNAc + acetate | 32 |
| Water molecules | 355 |
| 〈 | |
| Protein main chain | 13.3 |
| Protein side chain | 15.6 |
| GlcNAc + acetate | 35.6 |
| Water molecules | 37.3 |
| Ramachandran statistics | |
| Core (%) | 99.0 |
| Outliers (%) | 1.0 |
Using all reflections (work and free set).
Based on 5% randomly chosen reflections.
Including disordered atoms.
Kleywegt & Jones (1996 ▶). The STructure ANalysis (STAN) server (http://xray.bmc.uu.se/cgi-bin/gerard/rama_server.pl) was used.
Short hydrogen bonds with O—H donors from the Cambridge Structural Database
Mean distances and angles are given along with the sample standard deviation†. D, donor; A, acceptor.
| Donor group | Acceptor group | No. of fragments | ∠( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carboxylic acid | Carboxylate | 337 | 2.54 (6) | 169 (8) |
| Carboxylic acid | Amide O | 101 | 2.60 (5) | 165 (9) |
| Phenol | Carboxylate | 44 | 2.64 (8) | 169 (8) |
| Carboxylic acid | Aliphatic OH | 199 | 2.65 (5) | 164 (9) |
| Carboxylic acid | Carboxylic acid | 1358 | 2.65 (4) | 171 (7) |
| Carboxylic acid | Phenol | 18 | 2.67 (7) | 166 (10) |
| Phenol | Amide O | 19 | 2.70 (7) | 168 (9) |
| Phenol | Aliphatic OH | 137 | 2.73 (8) | 162 (11) |
| Phenol | Carboxylic acid | 35 | 2.74 (10) | 160 (15) |
| Aliphatic OH | Carboxylate | 221 | 2.74 (10) | 162 (12) |
| Aliphatic OH | Amide O | 65 | 2.77 (8) | 164 (10) |
| Aliphatic OH | Aliphatic OH | 4931 | 2.78 (8) | 163 (11) |
| Phenol | Phenol | 514 | 2.80 (9) | 159 (14) |
| Aliphatic OH | Imidazole | 7 | 2.80 (14) | 162 (12) |
| Aliphatic OH | Carboxylic acid | 232 | 2.81 (9) | 157 (14) |
| Aliphatic OH | Phenol | 93 | 2.82 (9) | 162 (13) |
Sample standard deviation = .
Short hydrogen bonds with N—H donors from the Cambridge Structural Database
Mean distances and angles are given along with the sample standard deviation†. D, donor; A, acceptor.
| Donor group | Acceptor group | No. of fragments | ∠( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Imidazole | Carboxylate | 53 | 2.75 (12) | 164 (12) |
| Imidazole | Aliphatic OH | 10 | 2.81 (5) | 166 (10) |
| Aliphatic NH+ | Carboxylate | 306 | 2.82 (8) | 161 (12) |
| Imidazole | Carboxylic acid | 9 | 2.83 (9) | 155 (23) |
| Indole | Carboxylate | 8 | 2.84 (7) | 161 (10) |
| Imidazole | Amide O | 5 | 2.85 (13) | 162 (4) |
| Aliphatic NH+ | Amide O | 16 | 2.85 (7) | 151 (18) |
| Aliphatic NH+ | Aliphatic OH | 24 | 2.85 (9) | 157 (14) |
| Indole | Aliphatic OH | 15 | 2.87 (5) | 159 (13) |
| Imidazole | Imidazole | 63 | 2.88 (7) | 167 (8) |
| Backbone NH | Carboxylate | 43 | 2.89 (6) | 160 (11) |
| Indole | Amide O | 11 | 2.89 (6) | 162 (11) |
| Aliphatic NH+ | Carboxylic acid | 52 | 2.89 (8) | 149 (15) |
| Aliphatic NH+ | Phenol | 15 | 2.89 (7) | 153 (13) |
| Guanidinium | Carboxylate | 59 | 2.90 (7) | 163 (12) |
| Backbone NH | Amide O | 415 | 2.91 (7) | 162 (11) |
| Backbone NH | Aliphatic OH | 22 | 2.93 (5) | 164 (13) |
| Guanidinium | Aliphatic OH | 5 | 2.93 (5) | 161 (7) |
| Amide NH side chain | Amide O | 65 | 2.93 (6) | 165 (10) |
| Indole | Carboxylic acid | 22 | 2.93 (8) | 159 (11) |
| Guanidinium | Carboxylic acid | 12 | 2.93 (7) | 161 (13) |
| Backbone NH | Carboxylic acid | 61 | 2.95 (6) | 161 (10) |
| Amide NH side chain | Carboxylate | 15 | 2.95 (5) | 159 (15) |
| Guanidinium | Phenol | 5 | 2.96 (6) | 150 (10) |
| Backbone NH | Phenol | 7 | 2.97 (7) | 160 (13) |
| Amide NH side chain | Aliphatic OH | 23 | 2.97 (7) | 160 (13) |
| Amide NH side chain | Carboxylic acid | 5 | 2.98 (4) | 165 (6) |
Sample standard deviation = .
Figure 1Overall structure of RGAE D192N excluding Thr79 and Ser80, which could not be located in the density maps. The terminal residues Thr1 and Leu233 are labelled. The three residues corresponding to the catalytic triad (Ser9-His195-Asn192) are coloured green and the GlcNAc moieties and acetate ion are illustrated by spheres. The short hydrogen bonds in Table 4 ▶ are shown as dashed lines.
Figure 2Stereo figure showing the active-site His195–Asp192/His195–Asn192 and His193–Glu140 interactions in wild-type RGAE and RGAE D192N in lighter and darker shades, respectively.
Figure 3Stereo figure showing the Asp75–Asp87 area and oxyanion hole in wild-type RGAE and RGAE D192N in lighter and darker shades, respectively.
Figure 41H NMR spectra of wild-type RGAE (a) and RGAE D192N (b) at various pH values.
Figure 5Histograms showing the distribution of distances in the Cambridge Structural Database for some of the short hydrogen-bond types present in RGAE.
Short hydrogen bonds in wild-type RGAE and RGAE D192N
The estimated standard deviations on the distances were obtained from matrix inversion in SHELXL least-squares refinements. All ∠C—N⋯O, ∠C—O⋯N and ∠C—O⋯O are larger than 90°. The distances in square parentheses are included for comparison, but are not considered to be potential hydrogen bonds. The interactions highlighted in bold are illustrated in Figs. 2 ▶, 3 ▶ and 6 ▶.
| Donor–acceptor (or | Distance in wild type (Å) | Distance in D192N (Å) | Relative accessibility | p |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2.47 (1) | 2.48 (2) | 1/6 | 4.1/10.2 | |
| Glu202 O∊2—Glu206 O∊2 | 2.50 (2) | [5.48 (4)] | 27/25 | 2.6/8.7 |
| Tyr30 OH—Glu202 O∊2 | 2.63 (1) | [6.50 (2)] | 21/27 | 12.3/2.6 |
| Thr86 Oγ1—Gly76 O | 2.72 (1) | 2.62 (3) | 5/27 | —/— |
| Ser187 Oγ—Thr184 O | 2.69 (2) | 2.65 (2) | 64/38 | —/— |
| Ser44 Oγ—Arg85 O | 2.67 (1) | 2.69 (2) | 0/37 | —/— |
| 2.69 (2) | 2.71 (3) | 5/39 | —/— | |
| Thr49 Oγ1—Ala45 O | 2.77 (1) | 2.73 (2) | 39/0 | —/— |
| Thr194 Oγ1—Asn136 Oδ1 | 2.87 (2) | 2.75 (2) | 18/38 | —/— |
| Ser218 Oγ—Glu165 O∊1 | 2.56 (2) | 2.56 (3) | 30/33 | —/3.3 |
| 2.67 (1) | 2.62 (2) | 8/2 | —/4.6 | |
| 2.64 (2) | 2.63 (3) | 15/20 | —/0.3 | |
| Ser171 Oγ—Asp168 Oδ2 | 2.66 (1) | 2.69 (3) | 29/26 | —/2.4 |
| Ser131 Oγ—Glu70 O∊1 | 2.75 (1) | 2.74 (2) | 1/4 | —/3.6 |
| 2.63 (2) | — | 20/40 | 5.1/1.7 | |
| — | [4.38 (2)] | 10 | 2.9 | |
| 2.61 (1) | 2.62 (2) | 0/3 | 4.6/3.6 | |
| His193 Nδ1—Glu140 O∊1 | 2.66 (4) | 2.88 (4) | 41/60 | 7.2/4.0 |
| Arg53 N∊—Glu51 O∊1 | 2.78 (2) | 2.75 (2) | 30/41 | 11.8/3.5 |
| 2.76 (2) | 2.80 (3) | 0/20 | 11.6/0.3 | |
| Arg43 N∊—Glu51 O∊1 | 2.80 (2) | 2.78 (2) | 26/41 | 11.6/3.5 |
| 2.77 (1) | 2.75 (2) | 0/61 | —/— | |
| Glu115 N—Pro111 O | 2.79 (1) | 2.78 (2) | 14/0 | —/— |
| Arg85 N—Asn83 Oδ1 | 2.80 (2) | 2.80 (3) | 37/55 | —/— |
| Ser197 N—Tyr188 O | 2.83 (2) | 2.79 (2) | 15/9 | —/— |
| Ala201 N—Ser197 O | 2.84 (1) | 2.79 (2) | 0/15 | —/— |
| His195 Nδ1—Ser9 Oγ | — | 2.73 (2) | 10 | 2.9 |
| His195 N∊2—Ser9 Oγ | [2.95 (2)] | — | 20/7 | 5.1/— |
| Lys124 Nζ—Ala58 O | 2.66 (2) | [4.64 (6)] | 43/12 | 9.8/— |
| His169 N∊2—Val204 O | 2.79 (1) | 2.73 (2) | 41/3 | 7.2/— |
Relative residue accessibility in wild-type RGAE compared with Ala-X-Ala, using a default probe size of 1.4 Å.
Listed pK a values are based on the wild-type structure.
Distance with side-chain configuration as in Fig. 2 ▶. The shortest distance between any two atoms in the two side chains is 3.36 Å.
Accessibility/pK a calculated for the RGAE D192N structure.
Figure 6Examples of different types of short hydrogen bonds from the RGAE D192N structure. (a) Asp75–Asp87, (b) Thr10–Asp8, (c) Thr20–Gly17, (d) Val3–Thr34, (e) His169–Glu70 and Ser131–Glu70, (f) Arg46–Asp82 and Ser98–Asp82.