1IYC
Solution structure of antifungal peptide, scarabaecin
Summary for 1IYC
Entry DOI | 10.2210/pdb1iyc/pdb |
NMR Information | BMRB: 5491 |
Descriptor | scarabaecin (1 entity in total) |
Functional Keywords | antifungal peptide, antimicrobial peptide, beetle, chitin-binding, antifungal protein |
Cellular location | Secreted: Q86SC0 |
Total number of polymer chains | 1 |
Total formula weight | 4087.74 |
Authors | Hemmi, H.,Ishibashi, J.,Tomie, T.,Yamakawa, M. (deposition date: 2002-08-05, release date: 2003-06-24, Last modification date: 2024-11-13) |
Primary citation | Hemmi, H.,Ishibashi, J.,Tomie, T.,Yamakawa, M. Structural Basis for New Pattern of Conserved Amino Acid Residues Related to Chitin-binding in the Antifungal Peptide from the Coconut Rhinoceros Beetle Oryctes rhinoceros J.BIOL.CHEM., 278:22820-22827, 2003 Cited by PubMed Abstract: Scarabaecin isolated from hemolymph of the coconut rhinoceros beetle Oryctes rhinoceros is a 36-residue polypeptide that has antifungal activity. The solution structure of scarabaecin has been determined from twodimensional 1H NMR spectroscopic data and hybrid distance geometry-simulated annealing protocol calculation. Based on 492 interproton and 10 hydrogen-bonding distance restraints and 36 dihedral angle restraints, we obtained 20 structures. The average backbone root-mean-square deviation for residues 4-35 is 0.728 +/- 0.217 A from the mean structure. The solution structure consists of a two-stranded antiparallel beta-sheet connected by a type-I beta-turn after a short helical turn. All secondary structures and a conserved disulfide bond are located in the C-terminal half of the peptide, residues 18-36. Overall folding is stabilized by a combination of a disulfide bond, seven hydrogen bonds, and numerous hydrophobic interactions. The structural motif of the C-terminal half shares a significant tertiary structural similarity with chitin-binding domains of plant and invertebrate chitin-binding proteins, even though scarabaecin has no overall sequence similarity to other peptide/polypeptides including chitin-binding proteins. The length of its primary structure, the number of disulfide bonds, and the pattern of conserved functional residues binding to chitin in scarabaecin differ from those of chitin-binding proteins in other invertebrates and plants, suggesting that scarabaecin does not share a common ancestor with them. These results are thought to provide further strong experimental evidence to the hypothesis that chitin-binding proteins of invertebrates and plants are correlated by a convergent evolution process. PubMed: 12676931DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M301025200 PDB entries with the same primary citation |
Experimental method | SOLUTION NMR |
Structure validation
Download full validation report
