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2DZY

Crystal structure of N392A mutant of yeast bleomycin hydrolase

Summary for 2DZY
Entry DOI10.2210/pdb2dzy/pdb
Related2DZZ 2E00 2E01 2E02 2E03
DescriptorCysteine proteinase 1 (2 entities in total)
Functional Keywordsbleomycin hydrolase, thiol protease, c1 protease, buried water, hydrolase
Biological sourceSaccharomyces cerevisiae (baker's yeast)
Cellular locationIsoform Cytoplasmic: Cytoplasm. Isoform Mitochondrial: Mitochondrion: Q01532
Total number of polymer chains1
Total formula weight52383.63
Authors
O'Farrell, P.A.,Joshua-Tor, L. (deposition date: 2006-09-30, release date: 2007-08-14, Last modification date: 2023-10-25)
Primary citationO'Farrell, P.A.,Joshua-Tor, L.
Mutagenesis and crystallographic studies of the catalytic residues of the papain family protease bleomycin hydrolase: new insights into active-site structure
Biochem.J., 401:421-428, 2007
Cited by
PubMed Abstract: Bleomycin hydrolase (BH) is a hexameric papain family cysteine protease which is involved in preparing peptides for antigen presentation and has been implicated in tumour cell resistance to bleomycin chemotherapy. Structures of active-site mutants of yeast BH yielded unexpected results. Replacement of the active-site asparagine with alanine, valine or leucine results in the destabilization of the histidine side chain, demonstrating unambiguously the role of the asparagine residue in correctly positioning the histidine for catalysis. Replacement of the histidine with alanine or leucine destabilizes the asparagine position, indicating a delicate arrangement of the active-site residues. In all of the mutants, the C-terminus of the protein, which lies in the active site, protrudes further into the active site. All mutants were compromised in their catalytic activity. The structures also revealed the importance of a tightly bound water molecule which stabilizes a loop near the active site and which is conserved throughout the papain family. It is displaced in a number of the mutants, causing destabilization of this loop and a nearby loop, resulting in a large movement of the active-site cysteine. The results imply that this water molecule plays a key structural role in this family of enzymes.
PubMed: 17007609
DOI: 10.1042/BJ20060641
PDB entries with the same primary citation
Experimental method
X-RAY DIFFRACTION (2.57 Å)
Structure validation

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数据于2024-10-30公开中

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