| Literature DB >> 28333455 |
Vasiliki E Fadouloglou1, Stavroula Balomenou1,2, Michalis Aivaliotis1, Dina Kotsifaki1, Sofia Arnaouteli2, Anastasia Tomatsidou2, Giorgos Efstathiou1, Nikos Kountourakis1, Sofia Miliara1, Marianna Griniezaki2, Aleka Tsalafouta2, Spiros A Pergantis3, Ivo G Boneca4,5, Nicholas M Glykos6, Vassilis Bouriotis1,2, Michael Kokkinidis1,2.
Abstract
The full extent of proline (Pro) hydroxylation has yet to be established, as it is largely unexplored in bacteria. We describe here a so far unknown Pro hydroxylation activity which occurs in active sites of polysaccharide deacetylases (PDAs) from bacterial pathogens, modifying the protein backbone at the Cα atom of a Pro residue to produce 2-hydroxyproline (2-Hyp). This process modifies with high specificity a conserved Pro, shares with the deacetylation reaction the same active site and one catalytic residue, and utilizes molecular oxygen as source for the hydroxyl group oxygen of 2-Hyp. By providing additional hydrogen-bonding capacity, the Pro→2-Hyp conversion alters the active site and enhances significantly deacetylase activity, probably by creating a more favorable environment for transition-state stabilization. Our results classify this process as an active-site "maturation", which is highly atypical in being a protein backbone-modifying activity, rather than a side-chain-modifying one.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28333455 DOI: 10.1021/jacs.6b12209
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Chem Soc ISSN: 0002-7863 Impact factor: 15.419