| Literature DB >> 26457516 |
J Guo1, P Erskine1, A R Coker1, J Gor2, S J Perkins2, S P Wood1, J B Cooper1.
Abstract
The enzyme 2,4'-dihydroxyacetophenone dioxygenase (DAD) catalyses the conversion of 2,4'-dihydroxyacetophenone to 4-hydroxybenzoic acid and formic acid. This enzyme is a very unusual dioxygenase in that it cleaves a C-C bond in a substituent of the aromatic ring rather than within the ring itself. Whilst it has been shown that DAD is a tetramer in solution, the recently solved crystal structure of the Alcaligenes sp. 4HAP enzyme was in fact dimeric rather than tetrameric. Since the use of limited chymotrypsinolysis, which apparently results in removal of the first 20 or so N-terminal residues of DAD, was necessary for crystallization of the protein, it was investigated whether this was responsible for the change in its oligomerization state. Gel-filtration and analytical ultracentrifugation studies were conducted, which confirmed that chymotrypsinolysed DAD has an apparent molecular weight of around 40 kDa, corresponding to a dimer. In contrast, the native enzyme has a molecular weight in the 70-80 kDa region, as expected for the tetramer. The structural basis for tetramerization has been investigated by the use of several docking servers, and the results are remarkably consistent with the tetrameric structure of a homologous cupin protein from Ralstonia eutropha (PDB entry 3ebr).Entities:
Keywords: 2,4′-dihydroxyacetophenone dioxygenase; analytical ultracentrifugation; dioxygenase; docking; gel filtration; oligomerization; protein X-ray structure
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26457516 PMCID: PMC4601589 DOI: 10.1107/S2053230X15015873
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Crystallogr F Struct Biol Commun ISSN: 2053-230X Impact factor: 1.056