1E43
Native structure of chimaeric amylase from B. amyloliquefaciens and B. licheniformis at 1.7A
Summary for 1E43
Entry DOI | 10.2210/pdb1e43/pdb |
Related | 1BLI 1BPL 1E3X 1E3Z 1E40 1VJS |
Descriptor | ALPHA-AMYLASE, CALCIUM ION, SODIUM ION, ... (4 entities in total) |
Functional Keywords | hydrolase, amylase, family 13 |
Biological source | BACILLUS AMYLOLIQUEFACIENS |
Total number of polymer chains | 1 |
Total formula weight | 55221.71 |
Authors | Brzozowski, A.M.,Lawson, D.M.,Turkenburg, J.P.,Bisgaard-Frantzen, H.,Svendsen, A.,Borchert, T.V.,Dauter, Z.,Wilson, K.S.,Davies, G.J. (deposition date: 2000-06-27, release date: 2001-06-21, Last modification date: 2023-12-13) |
Primary citation | Brzozowski, A.M.,Lawson, D.M.,Turkenburg, J.P.,Bisgaard-Frantzen, H.,Svendsen, A.,Borchert, T.V.,Dauter, Z.,Wilson, K.S.,Davies, G.J. Structural Analysis of a Chimeric Bacterial Alpha-Amylase. High Resolution Analysis of Native and Ligand Complexes Biochemistry, 39:9099-, 2000 Cited by PubMed Abstract: Several chimeric alpha-amylases genes were constructed by an in vivo recombination technique from the Bacillus amyloliquefaciens and Bacillus licheniformis genes. One of the fusion amylases (hereafter BA2), consisting of residues 1-300 from B. amyloliquefaciens and 301-483 from B. licheniformis, has been extensively studied by X-ray crystallography at resolutions between 2.2 and 1.7 A. The 3-dimensional structure of the native enzyme was solved by multiple isomorphous replacement, and refined at a resolution of 1.7 A. It consists of 483 amino acids, organized similarly to the known B. lichiniformis alpha-amylase structure [Machius et al. (1995) J. Mol. Biol. 246, 545-559], but features 4 bound calcium ions. Two of these form part of a linear cluster of three ions, the central ion being attributed to sodium. This cluster lies at the junction of the A and B domains with one calcium of the cluster structurally equivalent to the major Ca(2+) binding site of fungal alpha-amylases. The third calcium ion is found at the interface of the A and C domains. BA2 contains a fourth calcium site, not observed in the B. licheniformis alpha-amylase structure. It is found on the C domain where it bridges the two beta-sheets. Three acid residues (Glu261, Asp328, and Asp231) form an active site similar to that seen in other amylases. In the presence of TRIS buffer, a single molecule of TRIS occupies the -1 subsite of the enzyme where it is coordinated by the three active-center carboxylates. Kinetic data reveal that BA2 displays properties intermediate to those of its parents. Data for crystals soaked in maltooligosaccharides reveal the presence of a maltotriose binding site on the N-terminal face of the (beta/alpha)(8) barrel of the molecule, not previously described for any alpha-amylase structure, the biological function of which is unclear. Data for a complex soaked with the tetrasaccharide inhibitor acarbose, at 1.9 A, reveal a decasaccharide moiety, spanning the -7 to +3 subsites of the enzyme. The unambiguous presence of three unsaturated rings in the (2)H(3) half-chair/(2)E envelope conformation, adjacent to three 6-deoxypyranose units, clearly demonstrates synthesis of this acarbose-derived decasaccharide by a two-step transglycosylation mechanism. PubMed: 10924103DOI: 10.1021/BI0000317 PDB entries with the same primary citation |
Experimental method | X-RAY DIFFRACTION (1.7 Å) |
Structure validation
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