Loading
PDBj
MenuPDBj@FacebookPDBj@TwitterPDBj@YouTubewwPDB FoundationwwPDB
RCSB PDBPDBeBMRBAdv. SearchSearch help

1MRO

METHYL-COENZYME M REDUCTASE

Summary for 1MRO
Entry DOI10.2210/pdb1mro/pdb
DescriptorMETHYL-COENZYME M REDUCTASE, ZINC ION, FACTOR 430, ... (10 entities in total)
Functional Keywordsbiological methanogenesis, ni-enzyme, oxidoreductase, methanogenesis
Biological sourceMethanothermobacter marburgensis str. Marburg
More
Total number of polymer chains6
Total formula weight275393.37
Authors
Ermler, U.,Grabarse, W. (deposition date: 1997-10-01, release date: 1998-11-11, Last modification date: 2017-03-29)
Primary citationErmler, U.,Grabarse, W.,Shima, S.,Goubeaud, M.,Thauer, R.K.
Crystal structure of methyl-coenzyme M reductase: the key enzyme of biological methane formation.
Science, 278:1457-1462, 1997
Cited by
PubMed Abstract: Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR), the enzyme responsible for the microbial formation of methane, is a 300-kilodalton protein organized as a hexamer in an alpha2beta2gamma2 arrangement. The crystal structure of the enzyme from Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum, determined at 1.45 angstrom resolution for the inactive enzyme state MCRox1-silent, reveals that two molecules of the nickel porphinoid coenzyme F430 are embedded between the subunits alpha, alpha', beta, and gamma and alpha', alpha, beta', and gamma', forming two identical active sites. Each site is accessible for the substrate methyl-coenzyme M through a narrow channel locked after binding of the second substrate coenzyme B. Together with a second structurally characterized enzyme state (MCRsilent) containing the heterodisulfide of coenzymes M and B, a reaction mechanism is proposed that uses a radical intermediate and a nickel organic compound.
PubMed: 9367957
DOI: 10.1126/science.278.5342.1457
PDB entries with the same primary citation
Experimental method
X-RAY DIFFRACTION (1.16 Å)
Structure validation

226707

PDB entries from 2024-10-30

PDB statisticsPDBj update infoContact PDBjnumon