3OOD
Structure of OpdA Y257F mutant soaked with diethyl 4-methoxyphenyl phosphate for 20 hours.
Summary for 3OOD
Entry DOI | 10.2210/pdb3ood/pdb |
Descriptor | Phosphotriesterase, COBALT (II) ION, DIETHYL 4-METHOXYPHENYL PHOSPHATE, ... (4 entities in total) |
Functional Keywords | binuclear metallohydrolase, organophosphate hydrolysis, diethyl 4-methoxyphenyl phosphate, bioremediation, tim barrel, phosphotriesterase, binuclear metal ion binding, hydrolase |
Biological source | Agrobacterium tumefaciens (Agrobacterium tumefaciens) |
Total number of polymer chains | 1 |
Total formula weight | 36051.72 |
Authors | Ely, F.,Guddat, L.W.,Ollis, D.L.,Schenk, G. (deposition date: 2010-08-31, release date: 2011-11-02, Last modification date: 2023-12-06) |
Primary citation | Ely, F.,Hadler, K.S.,Gahan, L.R.,Guddat, L.W.,Ollis, D.L.,Schenk, G. The organophosphate-degrading enzyme from Agrobacterium radiobacter displays mechanistic flexibility for catalysis. Biochem.J., 432:565-573, 2010 Cited by PubMed Abstract: The OP (organophosphate)-degrading enzyme from Agrobacterium radiobacter (OpdA) is a binuclear metallohydrolase able to degrade highly toxic OP pesticides and nerve agents into less or non-toxic compounds. In the present study, the effect of metal ion substitutions and site-directed mutations on the catalytic properties of OpdA are investigated. The study shows the importance of both the metal ion composition and a hydrogen-bond network that connects the metal ion centre with the substrate-binding pocket using residues Arg254 and Tyr257 in the mechanism and substrate specificity of this enzyme. For the Co(II) derivative of OpdA two protonation equilibria (pKa1 ~5; pKa2 ~10) have been identified as relevant for catalysis, and a terminal hydroxide acts as the likely hydrolysis-initiating nucleophile. In contrast, the Zn(II) and Cd(II) derivatives only have one relevant protonation equilibrium (pKa ~4-5), and the μOH is the proposed nucleophile. The observed mechanistic flexibility may reconcile contrasting reaction models that have been published previously and may be beneficial for the rapid adaptation of OP-degrading enzymes to changing environmental pressures. PubMed: 20868365DOI: 10.1042/BJ20101054 PDB entries with the same primary citation |
Experimental method | X-RAY DIFFRACTION (1.89 Å) |
Structure validation
Download full validation report