Literature DB >> 8103944

Probing the mechanism of staphylococcal nuclease with unnatural amino acids: kinetic and structural studies.

J K Judice1, T R Gamble, E C Murphy, A M de Vos, P G Schultz.   

Abstract

Staphylococcal nuclease is an enzyme with enormous catalytic power, accelerating phosphodiester bond hydrolysis by a factor of 10(16) over the spontaneous rate. The mechanistic basis for this rate acceleration was investigated by substitution of the active site residues Glu43, Arg35, and Arg87 with unnatural amino acid analogs. Two Glu43 mutants, one containing the nitro analog of glutamate and the other containing homoglutamate, retained high catalytic activity at pH 9.9, but were less active than the wild-type enzyme at lower pH values. The x-ray crystal structure of the homoglutamate mutant revealed that the carboxylate side chain of this residue occupies a position and orientation similar to that of Glu43 in the wild-type enzyme. The increase in steric bulk is accommodated by a backbone shift and altered torsion angles. The nitro and the homoglutamate mutants display similar pH versus rate profiles, which differ from that of the wild-type enzyme. Taken together, these studies suggest that Glu43 may not act as a general base, as previously thought, but may play a more complex structural role during catalysis.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 8103944     DOI: 10.1126/science.8103944

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Science        ISSN: 0036-8075            Impact factor:   47.728


  12 in total

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8.  Functional evolution of two subtly different (similar) folds.

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9.  Unique Contributions of an Arginine Side Chain to Ligand Recognition in a Glutamate-gated Chloride Channel.

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10.  Regulation of DNA nucleases by molecular crowding.

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Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2007-06-12       Impact factor: 16.971

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