5a7h
From Proteopedia
Comparison of the structure and activity of glycosylated and aglycosylated Human Carboxylesterase 1
Structural highlights
FunctionEST1_HUMAN Involved in the detoxification of xenobiotics and in the activation of ester and amide prodrugs. Hydrolyzes aromatic and aliphatic esters, but has no catalytic activity toward amides or a fatty acyl-CoA ester. Hydrolyzes the methyl ester group of cocaine to form benzoylecgonine. Catalyzes the transesterification of cocaine to form cocaethylene. Displays fatty acid ethyl ester synthase activity, catalyzing the ethyl esterification of oleic acid to ethyloleate.[1] [2] Publication Abstract from PubMedHuman Carboxylesterase 1 (hCES1) is the key liver microsomal enzyme responsible for detoxification and metabolism of a variety of clinical drugs. To analyse the role of the single N-linked glycan on the structure and activity of the enzyme, authentically glycosylated and aglycosylated hCES1, generated by mutating asparagine 79 to glutamine, were produced in human embryonic kidney cells. Purified enzymes were shown to be predominantly trimeric in solution by analytical ultracentrifugation. The purified aglycosylated enzyme was found to be more active than glycosylated hCES1 and analysis of enzyme kinetics revealed that both enzymes exhibit positive cooperativity. Crystal structures of hCES1 a catalytically inactive mutant (S221A) and the aglycosylated enzyme were determined in the absence of any ligand or substrate to high resolutions (1.86 A, 1.48 A and 2.01 A, respectively). Superposition of all three structures showed only minor conformational differences with a root mean square deviations of around 0.5 A over all Calpha positions. Comparison of the active sites of these un-liganded enzymes with the structures of hCES1-ligand complexes showed that side-chains of the catalytic triad were pre-disposed for substrate binding. Overall the results indicate that preventing N-glycosylation of hCES1 does not significantly affect the structure or activity of the enzyme. Comparison of the Structure and Activity of Glycosylated and Aglycosylated Human Carboxylesterase 1.,Arena de Souza V, Scott DJ, Nettleship JE, Rahman N, Charlton MH, Walsh MA, Owens RJ PLoS One. 2015 Dec 11;10(12):e0143919. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0143919., eCollection 2015. PMID:26657071[3] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. See AlsoReferences
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