4c5z
From Proteopedia
Crystal structure of A. niger ochratoxinase
Structural highlights
FunctionOTASE_ASPNA Carboxypeptidase that catalyzes the release of a C-terminal amino acid with specific catalytic activity for aromatic amino acids such as phenylalanine (PubMed:24947135, PubMed:33647354). Is able to degrade ochratoxin A, one of the five major mycotoxins most harmful to humans and animals that is produced by Aspergillus and Penicillium species and occurs in a wide range of agricultural products (PubMed:24947135).[1] [2] Publication Abstract from PubMedOchratoxin, with ochratoxin A as the dominant form, is one of the five major mycotoxins most harmful to humans and animals. It is produced by Aspergillus and Penicillium species and occurs in a wide range of agricultural products. Detoxification of contaminated food is a challenging health issue. Here we report the identification, characterization and crystal structure (at 2.2 A) of a novel, microbial ochratoxinase from Aspergillus niger. A putative amidase gene encoding a 480 amino acid polypeptide was cloned and homologously expressed in A. niger. The recombinant protein is N-terminally truncated, thermostable, has optimal activity at pH~6 and 66 degrees C, and is more efficient in ochratoxin A hydrolysis than carboxypeptidase A and Y, the two previously known enzymes capable of degrading this mycotoxin. The subunit of the homooctameric enzyme folds into a two-domain structure characteristic for a metal dependent amidohydrolase, with a twisted TIM-barrel and a smaller b-sandwich domain. The active site contains an aspartate residue for acid-base catalysis, and a carboxylated lysine and four histidine residues for binding of a binuclear metal center. Structural and functional characterization of ochratoxinase, a novel mycotoxin degrading enzyme.,Dobritzsch D, Wang H, Schneider G, Yu S Biochem J. 2014 Jun 20. PMID:24947135[3] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. References
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