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1E1Z

Crystal structure of an Arylsulfatase A mutant C69S

Summary for 1E1Z
Entry DOI10.2210/pdb1e1z/pdb
Related1AUK
DescriptorArylsulfatase A, 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-beta-D-glucopyranose-(1-4)-2-acetamido-2-deoxy-beta-D-glucopyranose, MAGNESIUM ION, ... (4 entities in total)
Functional Keywordshydrolase, cerebroside-3-sulfate hydrolysis, lysosomal enzyme, formylglycine
Biological sourceHomo sapiens (Human)
Total number of polymer chains1
Total formula weight52391.46
Authors
von Buelow, R.,Schmidt, B.,Dierks, T.,von Figura, K.,Uson, I. (deposition date: 2000-05-12, release date: 2001-05-10, Last modification date: 2023-12-06)
Primary citationvon Bulow, R.,Schmidt, B.,Dierks, T.,von Figura, K.,Uson, I.
Crystal structure of an enzyme-substrate complex provides insight into the interaction between human arylsulfatase A and its substrates during catalysis.
J. Mol. Biol., 305:269-277, 2001
Cited by
PubMed Abstract: Arylsulfatase A (ASA) belongs to the sulfatase family whose members carry a C(alpha)-formylglycine that is post-translationally generated by oxidation of a conserved cysteine or serine residue. The crystal structures of two arylsulfatases, ASA and ASB, and kinetic studies on ASA mutants led to different proposals for the catalytic mechanism in the hydrolysis of sulfate esters. The structures of two ASA mutants that lack the functional C(alpha)-formylglycine residue 69, in complex with a synthetic substrate, have been determined in order to unravel the reaction mechanism. The crystal structure of the inactive mutant C69A-ASA in complex with p-nitrocatechol sulfate (pNCS) mimics a reaction intermediate during sulfate ester hydrolysis by the active enzyme, without the covalent bond to the key side-chain FGly69. The structure shows that the side-chains of lysine 123, lysine 302, serine 150, histidine 229, the main-chain of the key residue 69 and the divalent cation in the active center are involved in sulfate binding. It is proposed that histidine 229 protonates the leaving alcoholate after hydrolysis.C69S-ASA is able to bind covalently to the substrate and hydrolyze it, but is unable to release the resulting sulfate. Nevertheless, the resulting sulfation is low. The structure of C69S-ASA shows the serine side-chain in a single conformation, turned away from the position a substrate occupies in the complex. This suggests that the double conformation observed in the structure of wild-type ASA is more likely to correspond to a formylglycine hydrate than to a twofold disordered aldehyde oxo group, and accounts for the relative inertness of the C69S-ASA mutant. In the C69S-ASA-pNCS complex, the substrate occupies the same position as in the C69A-ASA-pNCS complex, which corresponds to the non-covalently bonded substrate. Based on the structural data, a detailed mechanism for sulfate ester cleavage is proposed, involving an aldehyde hydrate as the functional group.
PubMed: 11124905
DOI: 10.1006/jmbi.2000.4297
PDB entries with the same primary citation
Experimental method
X-RAY DIFFRACTION (2.4 Å)
Structure validation

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