2f5v
From Proteopedia
Reaction geometry and thermostability mutant of pyranose 2-oxidase from the white-rot fungus Peniophora sp.
Structural highlights
FunctionP2OX_PENSG Catalyzes the oxidation of various aldopyranoses and disaccharides on carbon-2 to the corresponding 2-keto sugars concomitant with the reduction of O(2) to H(2)O(2). Plays an important role in lignin degradation of wood rot fungi by supplying the essential cosubstrate H(2)O(2) for the ligninolytic peroxidases, lignin peroxidase and manganese-dependent peroxidase (By similarity). Evolutionary ConservationCheck, as determined by ConSurfDB. You may read the explanation of the method and the full data available from ConSurf. Publication Abstract from PubMedPyranose 2-oxidase catalyzes the oxidation of a number of carbohydrates using dioxygen; glucose, for example, is oxidized at carbon 2. The structure of pyranose 2-oxidase with the reaction product 2-keto-beta-d-glucose bound in the active center is reported in a new crystal form at 1.41 A resolution. The binding structure suggests that the alpha-anomer cannot be processed. The binding mode of the oxidized product was used to model other sugars accepted by the enzyme and to explain its specificity and catalytic rates. The reported structure at pH 6.0 shows a drastic conformational change in the loop of residues 454-461 (loop 454-461) at the active center compared to that of a closely homologous enzyme analyzed at pH 4.5 with a bound acetate inhibitor. In our structures, the loop is highly mobile and shifts to make way for the sugar to pass into the active center. Presumably, loop 454-461 functions as a gatekeeper. Apart from the wild-type enzyme, a thermostable variant was analyzed at 1.84 A resolution. In this variant, Glu542 is exchanged for a lysine. The observed stabilization could be a result of the mutated residue changing an ionic contact at a comparatively weak interface of the tetramer. Reaction geometry and thermostable variant of pyranose 2-oxidase from the white-rot fungus Peniophora sp.,Bannwarth M, Heckmann-Pohl D, Bastian S, Giffhorn F, Schulz GE Biochemistry. 2006 May 30;45(21):6587-95. PMID:16716069[1] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. See AlsoReferences
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