| Literature DB >> 25132082 |
Paul Langan1, Amandeep K Sangha2, Troy Wymore2, Jerry M Parks2, Zamin Koo Yang3, B Leif Hanson4, Zoe Fisher5, Sax A Mason6, Matthew P Blakeley6, V Trevor Forsyth7, Jenny P Glusker8, Horace L Carrell8, Jeremy C Smith9, David A Keen10, David E Graham3, Andrey Kovalevsky11.
Abstract
D-xylose isomerase (XI) is capable of sugar isomerization and slow conversion of some monosaccharides into their C2-epimers. We present X-ray and neutron crystallographic studies to locate H and D atoms during the respective isomerization and epimerization of L-arabinose to L-ribulose and L-ribose, respectively. Neutron structures in complex with cyclic and linear L-arabinose have demonstrated that the mechanism of ring-opening is the same as for the reaction with D-xylose. Structural evidence and QM/MM calculations show that in the reactive Michaelis complex L-arabinose is distorted to the high-energy (5)S1 conformation; this may explain the apparent high KM for this sugar. MD-FEP simulations indicate that amino acid substitutions in a hydrophobic pocket near C5 of L-arabinose can enhance sugar binding. L-ribulose and L-ribose were found in furanose forms when bound to XI. We propose that these complexes containing Ni(2+) cofactors are Michaelis-like and the isomerization between these two sugars proceeds via a cis-ene-diol mechanism.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25132082 DOI: 10.1016/j.str.2014.07.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Structure ISSN: 0969-2126 Impact factor: 5.006