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2ENG

ENDOGLUCANASE V

1ENG」から置き換えられました
2ENG の概要
エントリーDOI10.2210/pdb2eng/pdb
分子名称ENDOGLUCANASE V (2 entities in total)
機能のキーワードcellulose degradation, hydrolase (endoglucanase), glycosidase
由来する生物種Humicola insolens
タンパク質・核酸の鎖数1
化学式量合計22545.97
構造登録者
Davies, G.J.,Schulein, M. (登録日: 1995-06-29, 公開日: 1996-12-07, 最終更新日: 2024-11-20)
主引用文献Davies, G.J.,Tolley, S.P.,Henrissat, B.,Hjort, C.,Schulein, M.
Structures of oligosaccharide-bound forms of the endoglucanase V from Humicola insolens at 1.9 A resolution.
Biochemistry, 34:16210-16220, 1995
Cited by
PubMed Abstract: Cellulose, a polymer of beta-1,4-linked glucose residues, is the major polysaccharide component of plant cell walls and the most abundant biopolymer. The underlying mechanisms of the enzymatic degradation of cellulose are of increasing commercial and ecological significance. Endoglucanase V, from the cellulolytic soil hyphomycete Humicola insolens, is an endocellulase, the catalytic core of which consists of 210 amino acids and is known to hydrolyze the beta-1,4 links with inversion of configuration at the anomeric carbon. The major products of cellulose hydrolysis are cellobiose and cellotriose. The crystal structures of the endoglucanase V (EGV) from H. insolens, in native, product (cellobiose), inactive mutant (D10N), and oligosaccharide-bound [(D10N)-cellohexaose] forms, have been determined at resolutions of 1.9 A or better. EGV consists of a six-stranded beta-barrel domain with long interconnecting loops. A 40 A groove exists along the surface of the enzyme, and this contains the catalytic residues, Asp 10 and Asp 121. The two catalytic aspartates sit to either side of the substrate binding groove in an ideal conformation for facilitating cleavage by inversion, their carboxyl groups being separated by approximately 8.5 A. The complex between substrate and inactive mutant reveals excellent density for an oligosaccharide in six of the enzyme's seven substrate binding subsites. No sugar moiety, however, is seen bound to the -1 subsite at the point of cleavage. The geometry of the cleavage site suggests that the enzyme would favor the binding of sugars with an elongated glycosidic bond, as found in the transition state, as opposed to the binding of substrate. The oligosaccharide complexes reveal solvent water suitably placed for participation in a single displacement reaction as first suggested by Koshland in 1953 [Koshland, D. E. (1953) Biol. Rev. 28, 416-436]. A large conformational change takes place upon substrate binding. This "lid flipping" has the effect of increasing the hydrophobic environment of the catalytic proton donor, enclosing the active site at the point of cleavage, and bringing a third aspartate (Asp 114) in close proximity to the substrate. Site-directed mutagenesis of the catalytic residues has been used to confirm their significance in catalysis.
PubMed: 8519779
DOI: 10.1021/bi00049a037
主引用文献が同じPDBエントリー
実験手法
X-RAY DIFFRACTION (1.5 Å)
構造検証レポート
Validation report summary of 2eng
検証レポート(詳細版)ダウンロードをダウンロード

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件を2026-03-04に公開中

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