1L6S
Crystal Structure of Porphobilinogen Synthase Complexed with the Inhibitor 4,7-Dioxosebacic Acid
Summary for 1L6S
Entry DOI | 10.2210/pdb1l6s/pdb |
Related | 1I8J 1L6Y |
Descriptor | PORPHOBILINOGEN SYNTHASE, ZINC ION, MAGNESIUM ION, ... (5 entities in total) |
Functional Keywords | dehydratase, lyase |
Biological source | Escherichia coli |
Total number of polymer chains | 2 |
Total formula weight | 71867.31 |
Authors | Jaffe, E.K.,Kervinen, J.,Martins, J.,Stauffer, F.,Neier, R.,Wlodawer, A.,Zdanov, A. (deposition date: 2002-03-13, release date: 2002-04-17, Last modification date: 2024-10-16) |
Primary citation | Jaffe, E.K.,Kervinen, J.,Martins, J.,Stauffer, F.,Neier, R.,Wlodawer, A.,Zdanov, A. Species-Specific Inhibition of Porphobilinogen Synthase by 4-Oxosebacic Acid J.Biol.Chem., 277:19792-19799, 2002 Cited by PubMed Abstract: Porphobilinogen synthase (PBGS) catalyzes the condensation of two molecules of 5-aminolevulinic acid (ALA), an essential step in tetrapyrrole biosynthesis. 4-Oxosebacic acid (4-OSA) and 4,7-dioxosebacic acid (4,7-DOSA) are bisubstrate reaction intermediate analogs for PBGS. We show that 4-OSA is an active site-directed irreversible inhibitor for Escherichia coli PBGS, whereas human, pea, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Bradyrhizobium japonicum PBGS are insensitive to inhibition by 4-OSA. Some variants of human PBGS (engineered to resemble E. coli PBGS) have increased sensitivity to inactivation by 4-OSA, suggesting a structural basis for the specificity. The specificity of 4-OSA as a PBGS inhibitor is significantly narrower than that of 4,7-DOSA. Comparison of the crystal structures for E. coli PBGS inactivated by 4-OSA versus 4,7-DOSA shows significant variation in the half of the inhibitor that mimics the second substrate molecule (A-side ALA). Compensatory changes occur in the structure of the active site lid, which suggests that similar changes normally occur to accommodate numerous hybridization changes that must occur at C3 of A-side ALA during the PBGS-catalyzed reaction. A comparison of these with other PBGS structures identifies highly conserved active site water molecules, which are isolated from bulk solvent and implicated as proton acceptors in the PBGS-catalyzed reaction. PubMed: 11909869DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M201486200 PDB entries with the same primary citation |
Experimental method | X-RAY DIFFRACTION (1.7 Å) |
Structure validation
Download full validation report