| Literature DB >> 20944226 |
Anna E Speers1, Benjamin F Cravatt.
Abstract
Liganded structures can be instrumental in assigning function to uncharacterized proteins by revealing active sites, conserved residues, binding motifs, and substrate specificity. This introduction provides an overview and commentary on the value of liganded structures emerging from the JCSG structural genomics initiative.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20944226 PMCID: PMC2954220 DOI: 10.1107/S1744309110035748
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Crystallogr Sect F Struct Biol Cryst Commun ISSN: 1744-3091
Figure 1Metal ligands were instrumental in locating the active sites of three uncharacterized proteins. Comparison of the metal-bound crystal structures of YP_164873.1 (blue), YP_555544.1 (green) and YP_556190.1 (magenta) with that of the known 3-keto-5-aminohexanoate cleavage protein (grey) reveals a similar metal-binding motif, allowing unambiguous identification of the enzyme active sites and functional classification. Hydrogen bonds are shown as dashes, water molecules as red spheres, Zn atoms as grey spheres and Ni as a blue sphere. The protein is rendered with cartoon-representation side chains and the active-site His and Asp residues are shown in ball-and-stick representation.
Figure 2Crystal structure of the uncharacterized protein NP_823353.1 with a bound UNL resembling phenylalanine. UNL (unidentified ligand) atoms are represented as red spheres enveloped by the electron-density mesh (2F o − F c density contoured at 1σ level above the mean) and surrounded by the protein rendered in cartoon representation. Although the ligand looks like phenylalanine, it was annotated as a UNL since no definitive proof of its identity by other methods was available.